Boot Loader Help

Welcome to &product;

Use this menu to select the desired function. If you have problems navigating in this help system, press F1 to enter the description of the help system. The main functions in this menu are:

Boot from Hard Disk: This selection will not do anything to the system. It only starts a previously installed operating system.

Installation: This installation mode works on most machines. If you experience a system freeze during boot or problems with detection of your hardware components, such as disk controllers or network cards, try one of the following installation options.

Installation -- ACPI Disabled: Many of the currently-sold computers have incomplete or faulty ACPI implementations. This selection disables ACPI support in the kernel, but still enables many performance features, like DMA for IDE hard disks.

Installation -- Safe Settings: If you were not successful with Installation, this selection might solve the issue.

Rescue System: This boot image starts a small Linux system in RAM. This is useful if the system does not start properly. After booting this system, log in as root.

Memory Test: Memory testing is useful for more than checking installation of new memory modules. It is a stress test for a big part of your computer system and may indicate hardware problems.

Boot Options: The boot options may change the behavior of your system completely. They are settings for the kernel.

F1 Help: This is context sensitive. It will show different screens depending on the active element of the boot screen. There is also a description of this help system available.

F2 Video Mode: Here, choose between different screen resolutions while installing. If you encounter problems with the graphical installation, the text mode may be a work-around for you.

F3 Installation Source: Choose the installation source.

F4 Language: Set language and keyboard mapping used by the boot loader.

F5 Driver Update: For very new machines, a driver update may be needed to install the system.


Using the Help System

The boot loader online help is context sensitive. It gives information about the selected menu item or, if you are editing boot options, it tries to look up information about the option in which the cursor is positioned.

Navigation Keys

Up Arrow: highlight previous link
Down Arrow: highlight next link
Left Arrow, Backspace: return to previous topic
Right Arrow, Enter, Space: follow link
Page Up: scroll up one page
Page Down: scroll down one page
Home: go to page start
End: go to page end
Esc: leave help


Return to Start Page

Driver Update

If you need a driver update floppy or CD-ROM, press F5. The boot loader asks you to insert the driver update medium after loading the Linux kernel.

A driver update is typically a floppy with new versions of hardware drivers or bug fixes needed during installation.

Return to Start Page

Video Mode Selection

Press F2 to get the list of video modes your graphics card supports. The highest mode your monitor can display is preselected.

It is possible that your monitor cannot be detected automatically. In that case, select your preferred mode manually.

If your system has problems with the graphics card during the installation, the text mode may be a usable work-around.

Return to Start Page

Language and Keyboard Layout Selection

Press F4 to change language and keyboard layout the boot loader uses.

Return to Start Page

Installation Source

Press F3 to choose an installation source.

This is the same as using the install boot option.

Return to Start Page

Installation

Select Installation to start the default installation. The boot options entered are used in the start-up. This item activates many features of commonly available hardware.



Return to Start Page

Boot from Hard Disk

Select Boot Installed OS to start the system installed on your local hard disk. This system must be installed properly, because only the MBR (Master Boot Record) on the first hard disk is started. The device ID of the first hard disk is provided by the BIOS of the computer.

Use this if you forgot to remove the CD or DVD from your drive and want to start the computer from the hard disk.



Return to Start Page

Installation -- ACPI Disabled

Very new hardware sometimes requires ACPI to control the interrupt handling. ACPI completely replaces the old APM system.

Select Installation -- ACPI Disabled if you encounter problems during boot of the kernel. Known problems with machines that have problems with ACPI are:

* kernel freezes when booting
* PCI Cards are not detected or initialized properly



Return to Start Page

Installation -- Safe Settings

Select Installation -- Safe Settings if you encounter hangs while installing or irreproducible errors. This option disables DMA for IDE drives and all power management features. See also the kernel options for acpi and ide.

Return to Start Page

Rescue System

The Rescue System is a small RAM disk base system. From there, it is possible to make all kinds of changes to an installed system. Because only low-level tools are available in this system, it is intended for experts.



Return to Start Page

Memory Test

The included Memory Test provides good possibilities to stress test the hardware of a system. Its main purpose is to detect broken RAM, but it also stresses many other parts of the system.
There is no guarantee that the memory is good if no errors are found, although most of memory defects will be found.


Return to Start Page

Boot Options

There are two types of boot options available. First, there are options that affect the installer. Second, there are kernel options. Some of the more common options are:

a) installer options

install -- select an installation source
network options -- the network options


b) kernel options

splash -- influence the behavior of the splash screen
acpi -- advanced configuration and power interface
ide -- control the IDE subsystem


Return to Start Page

Installer Options: install

By default, the local CD-ROMs are searched for the installation source. For a network install, select the install option. Possible installation protocols are
* FTP
* NFS
* HTTP
The syntax to use is just like standard URLs. For example, if your server is found at 192.168.0.1 and you want to do an NFS-based install from the directory /install on this server, specify the source as follows:

install=nfs://192.168.0.1/install

The network card will either be configured with dhcp or you must specify the parameters yourself as described in the network options.


Return to Boot Options

Kernel Options: splash

The splash screen is the picture shown during system start-up.

splash=0

The splash screen is switched off. This may be useful with very old monitors or if some error occurs.

splash=verbose

Activates splash, kernel and boot messages are still shown.

splash=silent

Activates splash, but no messages. Instead a progress bar is drawn.

Return to Boot Options

Installer Options: Network Options

It is possible to configure the network interface right now. The hardware will be detected later by DrakX. The minimum set of options to configure your network card consists of host IP and netmask. For example:

hostip=192.168.0.10 netmask=255.255.255.0

or in a shorter form:

hostip=192.168.0.10/24

If you specified a network-based install and do not specify both of these options, the installer tries to configure the network interface with dhcp. If you need a default gateway, specify this with the option gateway. For example:

gateway=192.168.0.8


Return to Boot Options

Kernel Options: acpi

ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface) is a standard that defines power and configuration management interfaces between an operating system and the BIOS. By default, acpi is switched on when a BIOS is detected that is newer than from year 2000. There are several commonly used parameters to control the behavior of ACPI:

pci=noacpi -- do not use ACPI to route PCI interrupts acpi=oldboot -- only the parts of ACPI that are relevant for booting remain activated
acpi=off -- switch off ACPI completely
acpi=force -- switch on ACPI even if your BIOS is dated before 2000



Return to Boot Options

Kernel Options: ide

IDE is, unlike SCSI, commonly used in most desktop workstations. To circumvent some hardware problems that occur with IDE systems, use the kernel parameter:

ide=nodma -- switch off DMA for IDE drives


Return to Boot Options.

Software Type Selection

You have the choice to install the 32-bit or 64-bit version of Mandriva Linux.

Return to Start Page