Re: How are base disks created?
From: Rick Macdonald <rickm@vsl.com>
> Ah, so is the RAM disk on the rescue floppy "resc1440.bin" exactly the
> same as the root.bin file that goes on a separate disk of its own?
Yes.
> Is the root.bin is a separate file for those that have 1.2MB floppies
> because it can't fit on the 1.2MB rescue disk "resc1200.bin"?
Yes.
> The file sizes don't add up, so I'm not sure which of the guesses above
> are correct.
>
> -r--r--r-- 1 rickm 1228800 Jun 4 05:10 resc1200.bin
> -r--r--r-- 1 rickm 1474560 Jun 4 05:10 resc1440.bin
> -r--r--r-- 1 rickm 689987 Jun 4 05:10 root.bin
resc1200.bin is an uncompressed image of a MS-DOS filesystem containing
the kernel but not root.bin. resc1440.bin is an uncompressed image of an
MS-DOS filesystem containing both the kernel and root.bin . root.bin is
a compressed Minix filesystem image, and is uncompressed to 1.44MB when
it is loaded, even if it is loaded from a 1.2MB disk.
I could have compressed resc1200.bin and resc1440.bin in the FTP archive,
but that would have added a task for the person who is writing them from
a DOS system - they would have had to find and use the DOS gunzip program.
El Torrito format Bootable CDs store an image of resc1440.bin on the CD,
and BIOS emulates a floppy using this image while booting.
Bruce
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