roberts
Group: Members
Posts: 4983
Joined: Oct. 2003 |
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Posted: Feb. 27 2006,20:13 |
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First of all, I agree with cbagger01, in that installing to pendrive from a liveCD is by far the easiest way to do it. Those install scripts have been improved over time and work well for natively booting DSL either USB-HDD or the older USB-ZIP.
However, for those you use Windows OS then...
There are two ways to install DSL to a pendrive from Windows without burning a cdrom.
The first way: From windows, download the dsl-embedded version and unzip to your pendrive. Try it out. You may not need to do anything further your pendrive may already be boot enabled. If not then you may need to first format your pendrive with the manufactures utility and select the option to make it bootable. Or you can try to manually make it bootable by using syslinux. You then need to grab syslinux version for windows and run the syslinux.exe to install the boot loader onto the pendrive. It may not work with your bios. It may work if you have boot from usb-zip.
The second way: Download and install the free Vmware player for Windows. Download the dsl-vmx version and unzip on Windows. Plug you pendrive into your computer.
Double click the dsl.vmx icon and startup DSL vmware version. You should see the usb pendrive device shown at the top of the vmplayer status line. Click the status line to connect the usb pendrive to the virtual machine. Next click in the main area of DSL to enter the DSL system. Navigate the menu to find the install to pendrive scripts. Use usb-zip or usb-hdd as appropriate for your system. The pendrive device is DSL is usually sda, change if needed. Also select install from (L)iveCD as this is emulating the live CD
This works with vmware as their virtual machine allows direct access to the pendrive. Qemu does not.
Note dsl-embedded allows dual booting, natively and within Windows. The VMware way allows a native DSL pendrive using the standard pendrive scripts as mentioned above.
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