Hi, The boot ISO is there, Just click on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server, Underneath that link there is a download link "Network Install and Recovery Disk" Regards, Vincent Vincent Van der Kussen System Engineer direct: +32 3 369 01 93 Vincent.VanderKussen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx BTR Services Groene Hofstraat 31 2850 Boom Belgium www.btr-services.be tel: +32 3 450 89 80 fax: +32 3 450 89 89 - DISCLAIMER - This message contains confidential information and is intended only for redhat-list@xxxxxxxxxxx If you are not redhat-list@xxxxxxxxxx, you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please notify Vincent.VanderKussen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx immediately by e-mail if you have received this e-mail by mistake and delete this e-mail from your system. E-mail transmission cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. Vincent Van der Kussen therefore does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message, which arise as a result of e-mail transmission. If verification is required please request a hard-copy version. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----Original Message----- From: redhat-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:redhat-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of lcf004 Sent: Thursday, November 18, 2010 6:54 PM To: General Red Hat Linux discussion list Subject: Re: Lots missing Barry Brimer wrote: > Red Hat does provide a boot iso in RHN. For (32-bit x86) servers it is called > rhel-server-6.0-i386-boot.iso and for (32-bit x86) workstations it is called > rhel-workstation-6.0-i386-boot.iso. Are you getting your media from RHN or > another source? I get it straight from RHN. I find it hard to believe that I have access to all the installation media they have to offer all the way back to RedHat 9 on every platform but I am not allowed to have the boot.iso. However, it is _not_ there. If someone can actually see it, please post a link to the RHN page and maybe I can get at it that way? > Installation numbers appeared in RHEL 5 and was used to > configure the installer to allow you to use the packages you were licensed to > use. RHEL 3 and 4 didn't have this because they were packaged/sold separately. > RHEL 2.1 included the license for it but was installed separately. In RHEL 6 > these are add-ons. I doubt it makes sense to have an installation number for > RHEL, I need to my new vendor supplied licenses are added into my volume licensing via RHN. Since I installed RHEL 6 instead of 5, they aren't registered, they don't show up under my licensing info for the university and there is no way via RHN's website to get them in there. and Resilient Storage and Load Balancing, etc. Forced TLS on LDAP while > it may differ from previous releases is a best practice. Sending unencrypted > credentials across the network is not a good idea. I've never had a problem > with installing software I need to use, and ksh is no exception. > The problem in a nutshell is this, and I am sure I am no real exception here: I have long time developed post installation packages, scripts and programs that set things up in standard ways to make RHEL installations here usable for a standard subset of users. This new release takes great pains to break what I (at least) thought was a very well thought out standard set of packages and services that RHEL 5 provided. At this point I am still finding things that are missing and broken as I plow through all this and the impression I am getting is that for an enterprise ready release, it's not very enterprise ready. For instance, people who do large volume server installs don't have time to use the GUI tools to configure their LDAP authentication, notwithstanding having to crawl around looking for why you can't auth the way you need to. I am not opposed to installing packages either, but there are some that certainly make sense to already be there that just aren't, not that ksh necessarily is one of them, but pam_ldap sure is and there are others I keep finding as well. -- Lincoln Fessenden Jeff-IT Linux Systems Administrator -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list