On Fri, 2005-03-18 at 07:44, Timothy Murphy wrote: > > I am trying to install Linux on a computer that does not have a CD drive, > > so how do I create a Linux boot disk from the ISO images? > I don't know why the Fedora people don't include a small kernel > on a floppy image - it would be perfectly simple. > In fact, if you compile your own kernel, > and don't choose too many modules, > the kernel and initrd _will_ fit on a floppy. The easy way now for most machines is to get one of those USB flash drives or a USB adapter for compact flash or SD cards. I use the latter with an old 8 MB card from a camera that is too small to be good for much else. Download the iso images to a directory that is NFS exported. Use 'mount -o loop ...' to mount the first disk image locally so you can see the contents. Copy the images/diskboot.img to the flash device. Then boot the target machine via USB and do an NFS install, filling in the details of your exported directory. As long as the machine will boot from USB, this is much easier than the multiple floppies you need to get both the kernel and network up. -- Les Mikesell les@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx