Toasted Pentiums

Group: Members
Posts: 3
Joined: Nov. 2004 |
 |
Posted: Nov. 24 2004,22:13 |
 |
I used this to install DSL on my Toshiba Tecra 5100CDT. I did not have the external floppy drive, and the internal CD-ROM does not boot. I had Windows 98 installed on the harddisk. This is how I coaxed DSL into booting from the CD. It should work on most other systems.
Step 1: Download loadlin (http://elserv.ffm.fgan.de/~lermen/) and place it into your "C:\Windows" directory. This utility boots Linux from a DOS command line. It works under Windows 95/98. I do not know about ME. For Windows NT-based systems, look into Grub for NT.
Step 2: Copy the files "linux24" and "minirt24.gz" to a folder on your harddisk from the "\boot\isolinux" folder on the CD.
Step 3: Reboot into MS-DOS mode and "cd" into the directory containing the files you copied from the cd.
Step 4: Insert the Damnsmall CD into the drive. Then, at the command line, enter the command "loadlin linux24 initrd=minirt24.gz"
This should boot the CD. You can now begin a harddisk install.
|