Welcome to the new location of Alien's Wiki, sharing a single dokuwiki install with the SlackDocs Wiki.

Welcome to Eric Hameleers (Alien BOB)'s Wiki pages.

If you want to support my work, please consider a small donation:

no way to compare when less than two revisions

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.


Previous revision
Last revision
wiki:talk:slackware:usbboot [2009/10/04 03:22] 201.81.109.139
Line 1: Line 1:
 +===== USB booting - discussion page =====
 +
 +Please feel free to leave comments, suggestions.. you name it.
 +
 +Eric 
 +---------------------------------------------------------------
 +
 +You can also install from a usb pendrive. This is particularly useful if you have a high speed usb 2 port and a fast pendrive. After booting with the pendrive inserted, check that it is recognized with the dmesg command. 
 +
 +The device file will most likely not be in the /dev directory. To create the device file, first find out what the major and minor numbers are by looking at the partitions present:
 +
 +<code>cat /proc/partitions</code>
 +
 +If you have sata, you might get something like this:
 +<code>
 +        244198584 sda
 +          7166848 sda1
 +...
 +      80    3923456 sdf
 +      81    3923440 sdf1</code>
 +
 +Create the device file with mknod:
 +
 +<code>mknod /dev/sdf1 b 8 81</code>
 +
 +Then create a directory to mount on (NOT in the /mnt directory) and mount the pendrive:
 +
 +<code>mkdir /install
 +mount /dev/sdf1 /install</code>
 +
 +Partition your harddrive, and run setup. When asked what source, choose to install from a mounted directory....
 +
 +(You can place this in the article if you think it relevant)
 +
 +Jim Doepp
 +
 +==================================
 +
 +> Thank you for your article, but, can you please make a quick attempt to include a tutuorial 'for the rest of us' (ie.- simple enough for the win savvy but linux beginner) that explains method two; booting slackware from one location. The method given above by Jim shed some light on the matter, but I want to be able to do so in a win environment if possible, otherwise I am going to need to interpret how to do it from a linux environment in a win environment.... enough, I'm not going io try to sound smart. 
 +
 +> Jeromy Boyd
 +
 +Hi! What do you mean by "//booting slackware from one location//"?\\ 
 +--- //Eric (Tue Nov 18 19:46:02 UTC 2008)//
 +
 +
 +==================================
 +
 +Hi Alien!
 +I wrote a simple script that installs lilo into a USB stick with several partitions. One of them can have the Slackware tree.
 +Here is a nano-HOWTO: 
 +[[http://stoa.usp.br/oda/weblog/63591.html]]
 +Oda
 +2009-10-04 00:01
  
 USB booting - discussion page ()
SlackDocs