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authorGuillaume Cottenceau <gc@mandriva.com>2003-04-04 14:33:25 +0000
committerGuillaume Cottenceau <gc@mandriva.com>2003-04-04 14:33:25 +0000
commit0b2bdbc228eca817f0f001b07d5b4f41a273b95e (patch)
treed25f1fd6483ffcd7da69a6052911bc95ce74d40d /docs
parent59d0fc2b23f6c6aafb3e74759f02989ad01b2d90 (diff)
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some fixes and improvements
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r--docs/README61
1 files changed, 52 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/docs/README b/docs/README
index 79c62f6bb..ed156dd1b 100644
--- a/docs/README
+++ b/docs/README
@@ -250,8 +250,9 @@ be minimalistic)
in stage2.
-To install a module, use modprobe which is in /usr/bin. It's a perl wrapper
-around /usr/bin/insmod. It uses the dependencies found in
+To manually install a module during install, switch to console #2
+and type "modprobe <modulename>". The modprobe program is a perl
+wrapper around /usr/bin/insmod. It uses the dependencies found in
/modules/modules.dep (stage1).
/usr/bin/insmod is a wrapper around /usr/bin/insmod_. It just extracts the
@@ -271,6 +272,43 @@ then, on another computer:
% DISPLAY=test_machine:0 xwd -root | convert - screenshot.png
********************************************************************************
+* Auto install *****************************************************************
+********************************************************************************
+A powerful auto-install system is available. It allows performing
+an install without any human interaction.
+
+To feed automatic parameters to the stage1 part (the textmode
+part - might not be necessary for you if you plan to do
+cdrom-based auto-installs, but mostly highly needed when doing
+network installs), please refer to ../mdk-stage1/doc/TECH-INFOS.
+
+About the stage2 part (the actual installer, at the time you're
+(usually) running in graphical mode), please refer to the nice
+documentation written by David Eastcott. Either install the
+package "drakx-autoinstall-doc" from contrib, or browse:
+
+http://members.shaw.ca/mandrake/drakx/9.0/HTML/
+
+The previous document will explain you how to setup the contents
+of the auto_inst.cfg file. Note that you have 3 alternatives for
+providing this file:
+- from a floppy disk; use "kickstart=floppy" as kernel parameter,
+ as explained in the document
+- from the installation volume itself; put the file in the
+ "Mandrake/base" directory of the installation volume; use
+ "kickstart" only, or "kickstart=filename" to specify another
+ filename than auto_inst.cfg
+- specified by the network; setup your DHCP server to provide the
+ "bootfile" parameter, this file will be used as the
+ "auto_inst.cfg" file, in the case you also provide the
+ "netauto" boot parameter
+
+In any case, if the specified file ends with -IP or -IP.pl, IP
+will be substituted by the IP address of the machine, when doing
+a network install. Might be useful so that you can control all
+your auto installs from your server.
+
+********************************************************************************
* Miscellaneous ****************************************************************
********************************************************************************
> o Media access methods: nfs, ftp, http, hd, cdrom
@@ -278,22 +316,27 @@ then, on another computer:
> - What exactly each stage does
init loads stage1
-stage1 loads stage2, on various medium type
+stage1 loads stage2, from various medium type
stage2 is too big to fit on a floppy, that's why stage1 exists
> - How each stage relates to the various media access methods
-stage1 knows only how to access to the media is compiled for. It contains only
-the kernel modules needed for that media. For eg, the nfs/ftp/http stage1
-doesn't contain scsi modules nor ide.
+stage1 knows only how to access to the media is compiled for. It
+contains only the kernel modules needed for that media. For eg,
+the nfs/ftp/http stage1 (network.img floppy) doesn't contain scsi
+modules nor ide.
> - How one stage terminates and another begins. i.e., How does
> stage1 find, mount, and launch stage2?
-/sbin/init just starts /sbin/stage1
-/sbin/stage1 takes care of mounting stage2 (in ramdisk if necessary)
- then it runs /usr/bin/runinstall2
+ /sbin/init just starts /sbin/stage1, and monitors its
+execution; it's here to cleanly umount the partitions when stage1
+or stage2 dies/finished
+
+ /sbin/stage1 takes care of mounting stage2 (in ramdisk if
+necessary) then it execs /usr/bin/runinstall2 (thus, stage2
+replaces stage1, and init then monitors stage2)
> o Text and Graphic mode installers
> - Architectural overview of each