suse 9,0
do you know where can i download suse 9. 0?.
do you know where can i download suse 9.0?
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download availible at ftp://213.131.224.196
thank you very much
Hi, with what label i have to burn de suse 9 cds?
Thanks.
Thanks.
do you know any ftp address. i can not download from there
Quote:do you know any ftp address. i can not download from there
Im downloading it now, be patient, because the ftp has users limit
Do you now something aboutthe label or how to burn them?
Im downloading it now, be patient, because the ftp has users limit
Do you now something aboutthe label or how to burn them?
Can you explain me how to do the boot floppydisk??
I have found a boot folder on cd1, and an archive called bottdisk, but is 1.474.560 bytes and the floppydisk 1.457.664 bytes, how can i do it?
Thx
PD: I have to do it in winxp
I have found a boot folder on cd1, and an archive called bottdisk, but is 1.474.560 bytes and the floppydisk 1.457.664 bytes, how can i do it?
Thx
PD: I have to do it in winxp
Here how you can make all the floppy disk you need 6 disk
Create a boot disk
------------------
All kernels are modularized. This means that almost all drivers are loaded as kernel modules.
You can create a new boot/install floppy if you have access to either a running Linux box or a running DOS box.
Under DOS, write it to a formatted (i.e. error-free) 1.44MB-floppy using
CD1:/dosutils/rawrite/rawrite.exe. For Windows systems there is
CD1:/dosutils/rawwritewin/rawwritewin.exe.
Under Linux, use a command like
cd /where_CD1_is_mounted/boot
dd if=bootdisk of=/dev/fd0u1440
Now you have a new boot/install floppy which you can use to boot either the installed system or the rescue system from CD.
In addition to a boot disk you will also need modules disk 1!
Create a modules disk
----------------------
Only a few modules fit on the bootdisk. Therefore four modules floppies exist. If you do not find the driver for your hardware on the normal disk, just insert the appropriate modules disk as soon as linuxrc starts.
Choose one of the modules disk images in this directory according to the list below.
Under Windows/DOS, use rawrite as descibed in 'Create a boot disk'. Under Linux, use a command like
cd /where_CD1_is_mounted/boot
dd if=modules1 of=/dev/fd0u1440
Of course you would replace 'modules1' with the image name you want.
modules1: USB and FireWire (IEEE1394) modules.
modules2: IDE/RAID/SCSI modules.
modules3: Network modules.
modules4: PCMCIA and file system modules and old (non-ATAPI) CDROM drivers.
modules5: More IDE/RAID/SCSI modules.
See modules[12345].txt for a detailed listing.
Create a boot disk
------------------
All kernels are modularized. This means that almost all drivers are loaded as kernel modules.
You can create a new boot/install floppy if you have access to either a running Linux box or a running DOS box.
Under DOS, write it to a formatted (i.e. error-free) 1.44MB-floppy using
CD1:/dosutils/rawrite/rawrite.exe. For Windows systems there is
CD1:/dosutils/rawwritewin/rawwritewin.exe.
Under Linux, use a command like
cd /where_CD1_is_mounted/boot
dd if=bootdisk of=/dev/fd0u1440
Now you have a new boot/install floppy which you can use to boot either the installed system or the rescue system from CD.
In addition to a boot disk you will also need modules disk 1!
Create a modules disk
----------------------
Only a few modules fit on the bootdisk. Therefore four modules floppies exist. If you do not find the driver for your hardware on the normal disk, just insert the appropriate modules disk as soon as linuxrc starts.
Choose one of the modules disk images in this directory according to the list below.
Under Windows/DOS, use rawrite as descibed in 'Create a boot disk'. Under Linux, use a command like
cd /where_CD1_is_mounted/boot
dd if=modules1 of=/dev/fd0u1440
Of course you would replace 'modules1' with the image name you want.
modules1: USB and FireWire (IEEE1394) modules.
modules2: IDE/RAID/SCSI modules.
modules3: Network modules.
modules4: PCMCIA and file system modules and old (non-ATAPI) CDROM drivers.
modules5: More IDE/RAID/SCSI modules.
See modules[12345].txt for a detailed listing.
Oh, thanks for the answer, now i know how to do
Thanksss
Thanksss
here is a great place to get gentoo, redhat9, slackware, suse9 live cds etc...
http://frontier.eas.asu.edu/
http://frontier.eas.asu.edu/
Hi, i have a problem, iwhen i put the disk into floopy it says taht the boot failed.
I have run the rawwrite in windows, and write the bootimage it appears at the boot folder of the cd1.
Can anyone help me?
Thanks
I have run the rawwrite in windows, and write the bootimage it appears at the boot folder of the cd1.
Can anyone help me?
Thanks
the people at suse said they don't aprove of the bittorrent release but they amited there is really not much they can do about it. Linux being free and all.
http://www.super-serv.com/~supr/torrents/450/SuSe_Linux_9.0_Complete_5_CDs.torrent
http://www.super-serv.com/~supr/torrents/450/SuSe_Linux_9.0_Complete_5_CDs.torrent