Ken Wolman wrote:
I don't know if it was this list, but these issues drew a reply of "RYFM" and "Check the archives." As far as I can determine, there isn't A manual, and I have no idea where in the archives to look, so I'm thrown back to asking basic installation questions.
I have a somewhat oldish system, a Dell Dimension with a 10GB hard drive installed, and no internal expansion capabilities. I added a 40GB USB drive. The main disk is broken into unequal partitions. E: is for data only, C: has the OS (Win2K) and essential software. To start Fedora, I partitioned the C: drive for about 200MB dedicated to /boot, just as I had done with earlier flavors of Redhat up to 8.0. The USB drive I set up through Partition Magic as "unformatted." Upon booting Fedora from the CD, the USB drive was not recognized.
I picked up that I have to mount the drive. But how can I mount a drive when there's no system from which to mount it? I KNOW this is an idiot question, but there is nothing I can find in the online documentation that tells me anything even close to the situation in which I find myself.
Any help will of course be appreciated.
KW
While you're installing Fedora, switch to another console when the partitioning part comes up, and see if you can get the USB modules to load manually.
I'm not sure which console has the command prompt, but I remember having to do this way back in Redhat 5.2 or something to force SCSI modules to load.
Once the modules are loaded, the partitioning software should be able to pick up sdxx.
Regards, Ed.