From a057ec6a3e86e0bbbee528ee1b6ba200f27f4726 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Papoteur Date: Sun, 11 Jun 2023 15:20:04 +0200 Subject: Adding or refreshing installer in eo --- installer/9/eo/content/Select-and-use-ISOs.html | 116 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 116 insertions(+) create mode 100644 installer/9/eo/content/Select-and-use-ISOs.html (limited to 'installer/9/eo/content/Select-and-use-ISOs.html') diff --git a/installer/9/eo/content/Select-and-use-ISOs.html b/installer/9/eo/content/Select-and-use-ISOs.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..87d655ae --- /dev/null +++ b/installer/9/eo/content/Select-and-use-ISOs.html @@ -0,0 +1,116 @@ + + + + + Select and use ISOsghost

Select and use ISOs

Introduction

Mageia is distributed via ISO images. This page will help you to choose +which image best suits your needs.

There are three types of installation media:

  • Classical installer: Booting with this +media provides you with the maximum flexibility when choosing what to +install, and for configuring your system. In particular, you have a choice +of which Desktop environment to install.

  • LIVE media: This option allows you to try +out Mageia without having to actually install it, or make any changes to +your computer. However, the Live media also includes an Installer, which can +be started when booting the media, or after booting into the Live operating +system itself.

    Rimarko

    The Live Installer is simpler compared to the Classical Installer - but you +have fewer configuration options.

    Grava

    Live ISOs can only be used to create clean installations, +they cannot be used to upgrade previously installed Mageia releases.

  • Net Install: These are minimal ISO's +containing no more than that which is needed to start the DrakX installer +and find DrakX-installer-stage2 and other packages that +are needed to continue and complete the install. These packages may be on +the PC hard disk, on a local drive, on a local network or on the Internet.

    These media are very light (less than 100 MB) and are convenient if +bandwidth is too low to download a full DVD, or if you have a PC without a +DVD drive or is unable to boot from a USB stick.

More details are given in the next sections.

Media

Definition

Here, a medium (plural: media) is an ISO image file that allows you to +install and/or update Mageia and, by extension, any physical medium (DVD, +USB stick, ...) the ISO file is copied to.

You can find Mageia ISO's here.

Classical installation media

Common features
  • These ISOs use the Classical installer called DrakX

  • They are used for performing clean installs or to upgrade a previously +installed version of Mageia

  • Different media for 32 and 64-bit architectures

  • Some tools are available in the Installer Welcome screen: +Rescue System, Memory Test, and Hardware +Detection Tool

  • Each DVD contains many available desktop environments and languages

  • You'll be given the choice during the installation to add non-free software

Live media

Common features
  • Can be used to preview the Mageia operating system without having to install +it

  • The Live media also includes an Installer.

  • Each ISO contains only one desktop environment (Plasma, GNOME or Xfce)

  • Different media for 32 and 64-bit architectures

  • They contain non-free software

Live DVD Plasma
  • Plasma desktop environment only

  • All available languages are present

  • 64-bit architecture only

Live DVD GNOME
  • GNOME desktop environment only

  • All available languages are present

  • 64-bit architecture only

Live DVD Xfce
  • Xfce desktop environment only

  • All available languages are present

  • 32 or 64-bit architectures

Net install media

Common features
  • Different media for 32 and 64-bit architectures

  • First steps are English language only

netinstall.iso
  • Contains only free software, for those who prefer to not use non-free +software

netinstall-nonfree.iso
  • Contains non-free software (mostly drivers, codecs...) for those who need it

Downloading and Checking Media

Downloading

Once you have chosen your ISO file, you can download it using either http or +BitTorrent. In both cases, you are provided with some information, such as +the mirror in use and an option to switch to an alternative if the bandwidth +is too low.

If http is chosen you will also see some information regarding checksums.

md5sum, sha1sum and +sha512sum (the most secure) are tools to check the ISO +integrity. Copy one of the checksums (string of alphanumeric characters) for +use in the next section.

In the meantime, a window to download the actual ISO will open:

Click on Save File, then click OK.

Checking the integrity of the downloaded media

The checksums referred to earlier, are digital fingerprints generated by an +algorithm from the file to be downloaded. You may compare the checksum of +your downloaded ISO against that of the original source ISO. If the +checksums do not match, it means that the actual data on the ISO's do not +match, and if that is the case, then you should retry the download or +attempt a repair using BitTorrent.

To generate the checksum for your downloaded ISO, open a console, (no need +to be root), and:

  • To use the md5sum, type: md5sum +path/to/the/image/file.iso

  • To use the sha1sum, type: sha1sum +path/to/the/image/file.iso

  • To use the sha512sum, type: sha512sum +path/to/the/image/file.iso

Example:

then compare the result (you may have to wait for a while) with the ISO +checksum provided by Mageia.

Burn or dump the ISO

The verified ISO can now be burned to a CD/DVD or dumped to a +USB stick. This is not a standard copy operation, as a bootable medium will +actually be created.

Burning the ISO to a CD/DVD

Whichever software you use, ensure that the option to burn an +image is used. Burn data or +files is NOT correct. See the the Mageia +wiki for more information.

Dump the ISO to a USB stick

All Mageia ISOs are hybrids, which means you can dump them to a USB stick +and then use that to boot and install the system.

Averto

Dumping an image onto a flash device destroys any previous file-system on +the device and all existing data will be lost.

Rimarko

Also, the only partition on the flash device will then just be the Mageia +ISO partition.

So, if an ISO of about 4GB is written to an 8GB USB stick, the stick will +then only show up as 4GB. This is because the remaining 4GB is no longer +formatted - hence not currently available for use. To recover the original +capacity, you must reformat and repartition the USB stick.

Using a graphical tool within Mageia

You can use a graphical tool like IsoDumper

Using a graphical tool within Windows

You could try:

Using the Command line within a GNU/Linux system

Averto

It is potentially *dangerous* to do this by hand. You risk overwriting +potentially valuable existing data if you specify the wrong target device.

  1. Open a console

  2. Become a root (Administrator) user with the command +su - (don't forget the - )

  3. Plug in your USB stick - but do not mount it (this also means do not open +any application or file manager that could access or read it)

  4. Enter the command fdisk -l

  5. Find the device name for your USB stick (by its size), for example +/dev/sdb in the screenshot above, is an 8GB USB stick.

    Alternatively, you can find the device name with the command +dmesg. Towards the end of the following example, you can +see the device name starting with sd, and in this case, +sdd is the actual device. You can also see that its +size is 2GB:

    [72594.604531] usb 1-1: new high-speed USB device number 27 using xhci_hcd
    +[72594.770528] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=8564, idProduct=1000
    +[72594.770533] usb 1-1: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=3
    +[72594.770536] usb 1-1: Product: Mass Storage Device
    +[72594.770537] usb 1-1: Manufacturer: JetFlash
    +[72594.770539] usb 1-1: SerialNumber: 18MJTWLMPUCC3SSB
    +[72594.770713] usb 1-1: ep 0x81 - rounding interval to 128 microframes, ep desc says 255 microframes
    +[72594.770719] usb 1-1: ep 0x2 - rounding interval to 128 microframes, ep desc says 255 microframes
    +[72594.771122] usb-storage 1-1:1.0: USB Mass Storage device detected
    +[72594.772447] scsi host8: usb-storage 1-1:1.0
    +[72595.963238] scsi 8:0:0:0: Direct-Access     JetFlash Transcend 2GB    1100 PQ: 0 ANSI: 4
    +[72595.963626] sd 8:0:0:0: [sdd] 4194304 512-byte logical blocks: (2.14 GB/2.00 GiB)
    +[72595.964104] sd 8:0:0:0: [sdd] Write Protect is off
    +[72595.964108] sd 8:0:0:0: [sdd] Mode Sense: 43 00 00 00
    +[72595.965025] sd 8:0:0:0: [sdd] No Caching mode page found
    +[72595.965031] sd 8:0:0:0: [sdd] Assuming drive cache: write through
    +[72595.967251]  sdd: sdd1
    +[72595.969446] sd 8:0:0:0: [sdd] Attached SCSI removable disk
  6. Enter the command: dd if=path/to/the/ISO/file +of=/dev/sdX bs=1M

    Where X=your device name eg: +/dev/sdd

    Example: dd if=/home/user/Downloads/Mageia-6-x86_64-DVD.iso +of=/dev/sdd bs=1M

    Sugesto

    It might be helpful to know that if stands +for input file and of stands +for output file

  7. Enter the command: sync

  8. This is the end of the process, and you may now unplug your USB stick.


Uploaded on 11/06/2023
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