On Tue, 2005-04-12 at 11:04 -0500, Aleksandar Milivojevic wrote:
Mickael Maddison wrote:
Hello Gerald,
I've thought about that approach, but found it easier to use the stock CD1 and simply put the rest of the CD's on an http server within the network. Basically, the CDROM is only a boot disk. The command to get the kickstart file is linux ks=http://192.168.0.99/anaconda.cfg
What I usually do is place ks.cfg on a floppy or USB stick and then do "linux ks=floppy". That way I can use standard installation CD, and Anaconda does not prompt me for network parameters (they are part of ks.cfg). Another solution would be to completely boot from the network.
BTW, it would be nice feature if distribution contained separate rescue and boot CD images in iso directory. Like those in Fedora Core 3. That way folks that install directly from mirrors would need to download only ~80 meg (rescue CD) if they want to be able to boot into rescue mode when something goes wrong, instead of having to download ~650 megs (the first CD). Boot CD is already present for those that know where to find it (in unpacked files under "os" tree), but something tells me you can't boot into rescue mode with it.
There is a boot.iso that is the CentOS distribution it is in the images directory. See, for example, boot.iso in
http://centos.cs.ucr.edu/centos/centos/4.0/os/i386/images/
Sean