John Aldrich <john <at> chattanooga.net> writes: > > I thought F9 was supposed to have CD ISO images. Instead all I see are the > JIGDO files. Did plans change? I've got a relatively modern machine, but for > some reason it refuses to boot off a DVD, but it will boot off a CD or a > floppy. > > I can do the JigDo thing, but I'd rather not download the DVD ISO only to have > to turn around and spend time to reprocess it to build the CD ISO images. There is a good way to do it without burning any disks at all... Download the DVD iso to your machine and place it somewhere NOT in the partition that you want to install into. i.e. have a partition such as /opt and put it in there and not in the / partition. then as root: 1) make a mount point, eg /mnt/tmp 2) mount -o loop path/to/DVD/iso /mnt/tmp 3) cd /boot 4) cp -a /mnt/tmp/isolinux/vmlinuz install.F9 5) cp -a /mnt/tmp/isolinux/initrd.img install.F9.img 6) cd /boot/grub 7) add a section to grub.conf like the following: title Fedora 9 Install root (hd0,5) <-- change as needed by your partition arrangement kernel /boot/install.F9 initrd /boot/install.F9.img 8) umount /mnt/tmp At this point you have all the ingredients to run the install from files already in your machine without the need to point at a physical DVD or CD. 8) Now reboot and select the Fedora 9 Install line instead of your normal kernel... and when the install begins select a hard disk install and choose the appropriate path to where you stored the iso on the non-root partition - and install to the root partition - so long as you do not format the partition where the iso is stored this will work fine. I do it for every install and have done to since early in the Fedora series. (You might want to burn the netinst.iso as a rescue disc in case things go awry though) -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list