On Sun, Jul 11, 2010 at 8:03 PM, Henry Wyatt <hewjr1000@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Need link or instructions on how to install from HDD. > > Currently have F13 86x64 but want to install 32 bit instead > Copy the DVD iso onto a non-root partition on your machine, as an iso file. eg if you have a / and a /home partition then put the iso onto the /home partition. Or if you have a /opt partition that won't be altered during the install then you can put it in there instead. Then make a directory such as /mnt/tmp and then loop mount the iso onto that mount point by doing as root: # mount -o loop /path/to/Fedora-13-i386-DVD.iso /mnt/tmp Now copy the images directory from the /mnt/tmp area to the same directory that you stored your DVD iso on i.e. /path/to/ in the line above. Now as root still, copy the two key boot files from the iso into the /boot area: # cd /boot # cp /mnt/tmp/isolinux/vmlinuz f13.install # cp /mnt/tmp/isolinux/initrd.img f13.install.img Now you have these two files in /boot Now add a suitable grub stanza to your grub.conf by doing # cd /boot/grub # vim grub.conf Once in the editor add a set of lines after the last normal stanza in this file that boots Fedora, in the form: title Fedora 13 Install root (hd0,5) kernel /boot/f13.install initrd /boot/f13.install.img Make sure that the line with root (hd0,5) matches the line in the previous stanza in your grub/conf file so that it picks the correct partition to boot from. i.e. select the correct drive and partition. Making it the same as the values from another stanza that boots your normal previous Fedora should be fine. Exit vim using the "esc" button followed by ":" to get a command prompt and then "wq" to write the changed file to disk. Now check the partition and path to the Fedora install iso file that you have on disk and write it down. eg Let's say that you have /opt mounted on /dev/sda7 (check using "df -h") and the path was /opt/isos/Fedora-13-i386-DVD.iso You need to remember /dev/sda7 and the "relative" path will be /isos/Fedora-13-i386-DVD.iso Now all you need to do is to reboot the machine and interrupt grub so that you can select "Fedora 13 Install" to boot instead of the normal boot process. If all has gone well you should now start to boot the Fedora 13 installer - and be able to start off the install. If you select a hard drive install, then select /dev/sda7 (or whatever it is on your machine for the partition containing your iso) and your correct relative path, then the install should proceed as normal. Note that you will not be able to format the partition containing your iso during the install. Note that you should select custom partitioning and make sure that the root partition (/) is formatted during the install - and ensure that /opt and /home are not formatted but selected to be mounted after the install completes. If you use LVM then you will have to modify this approach accordingly. This approach allows a full normal install. It is the way I normally do my "upgrades" from one version of Fedora to the next. I hope this helps. -- mike c -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines