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Refining the question - was [Re: Wanted: an internet free minimal Debian install]



Thank you for the replies received. They made clear that I had not adequately separated background information, physical constraints, preferences, and ideas on what solution should look like [for want of better term - the aesthetics of the solution].

I will take my cue from Brian's reply which began "I'll respond to what is in the subject line."

The strongest physically imposed constraint - no networking capability for target machine. This has three sub-categories. Some machines have no networking hardware installed. In other cases no network infrastructure exists. Connectivity on my home machines is via a 56k modem.

The next next issue is CPU and memory. My home machines are GHz dual core with GBytes of ram etc. However there are donated machines at church that I wish to migrate from OSes as old as Win95. I know I'll have to deal with 486 machines. There may be some 386 machines (dealing with those on a case by case basis would be feasible).

How to define "minimal install"?   ;/

There's a motivational component. My first exposure to Linux was thru Ubuntu and Debian Live CD's. Using them or installing from them provided a cluttered system with lots of programs which I would never use and CRITICAL software not available [neither could connect to internet via dial-up so relevant software being in repository was irrelevant]. I investigated several Live CD's promoted as being small and friendly. They were that and demonstrated that what I wanted was feasible but they lacked support and applications I wanted. But they got me asking some of the right questions.

There is the philosophical component. Smaller tends to be better. Don't install what will not be used. At one point it was suggested that I just remove undesired applications. I noticed that "removing" did not reproduce "never installed". Seems a guarantee of getting bit later.

Some the replies have prompted me to reinvestigate starting from the netinst. It may be much more feasible than I though when it was first suggested months ago. I've since done 15-20 installs on my "for experimentation only" machine. I purposely do some things "the hard way" as my intention is to learn the guts of Linux.



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