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Re: boot floppy doesn't work



Alvin

I have used dd in addtion to the cp command in my message. I always
rdev a kernel on floppy to make it know where root is. Swap too,
thought I think swap is set on boot up.

I have used sys linux, but that is SLOOOoooooooowwww booting. Grub
is hard for me because it uses strange disk numbering. I can't
seem to get it quite right.
 
Lilo == I can just write a boot sector to the first track of a
floppy, it reaches into the HD and finds the kernel which it boots.

I think Grub is supposed to do that too. I have had a little success
wtih Grub, prefer to use LILO.

Why won't the dd copy of kernel to floppy work? I'll try again,
being particularly careful of all details.

--david

On Mon, 24 Dec 2001, Alvin Oga wrote:

> 
> hi ya david
> 
> i don't know if the cp trick will work or not..
> or if oyu figured out your dd problems..
> ( i havent tried "cp" )
> 
> to make a bootable floppy..
> 	dd if=/boot/vmlinuz-2.4.x of=/dev/fd0 bs=1024
> 
> 	if you didnt compile that kernel yourself or if / is different
> 	than where it expects it .. you tell it where / is
> 	rdev /dev/fd0 /dev/hda1
> 
> 	- the above and the way you did your dd should always work..
> 	if not... try a different floppy ... you have to have a 100%
> 	clean floppy ( no bad tracks/sectors )
> 
> you can also use lilo and grub and syslinux to make boot floppies
> ( a better boot floppy... esp if you need to fix the disks ...
> 
> have fun booting..
> alvin
> 
> 
> On Sun, 23 Dec 2001, David Teague wrote:
> 
> > Hi
> > 
> > I tried to use the script mkboot that (if run as user, makes a boot
> > disk by dd the kernel to a floppy and then running rdev on the
> > floppy.) Boot floppy made that way esn't work.
> > 
> > If I do it barehanded
> >   cp kernel /dev/fd0 
> > then 
> >   rdev 
> > to set the root and swap doesn't work either.
> > 
> > Please ask me questions if you need more information. I will supply
> > data you ask for. 
> > 
> > I'm runing Woody, on 350MHz AMD, 390MB RAM. what else do you
> > need? Kernel is the Woody default 2.4 kernel. 
> > 
> > 
> > I'd like a boot floppy that has a kernel on the floppy. Right now
> > I'm using a floppy that has a Lilo track. 
> 
> 

--David
David Teague, dbt@cs.wcu.edu
Debian GNU/Linux Because software support is free, timely,
                 useful, technically accurate, and friendly.
                 (I hope this is all of the above.)



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