2009-08-26 17:00:38 +02:00
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Installing Slackware using a bootable USB stick
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===============================================
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**WARNING:**
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The procedure outlined below will destroy all data that is currently
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stored on the USB stick you use to create a USB Slackware installer.
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Introduction
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------------
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With the release of Slackware 12.0, the era of floppy-boot came to
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a definite end. The reason is simple - the Linux 2.6 kernel will not
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fit on a single floppy, even in it's most condensed configuration.
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In this README, I will show you how to use a bootable USB stick to
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install Slackware. This method - creating the USB equivalent of a
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boot/root floppy pair - is easy to use and fast. It requires that your
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computer is able to boot from USB-HDD.
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Booting the Slackware installer from a USB stick
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------------------------------------------------
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The 'usbboot.img' file is a 25 MB small USB boot image that you can
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use to boot into the Slackware setup program. The mini image does not
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contain any installable Slackware package. In order to install Slackware
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you will need a local NFS/HTTP/FTP server or another Slackware package
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source like a prepared local harddisk partition. This small image file
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works great, especially when you can't or don't want to use CDROM media
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as the carrier for the Slackware packages.
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The image is transfered to a USB stick in a matter of seconds. Even the
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oldest and tiniest of USB drives is well suited for this purpose.
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The usual way of installing Slackware from a network server repository,
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is to boot the Slackware CDROM, and run the ('pcmcia' and) 'network' script
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that load the drivers for your network card. You need a working network
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card before running setup and go through the installation procedure.
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When you type 'pcmcia' and/or 'network', the Slackware installer would look
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for the appropriate driver files on an available CDROM, and if no CDROM
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is found it prompts you to insert floppy disks.
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Now, with a boot from our USB stick we are assuming there is no CDROM
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and no floppy drive available to us. So, this USB boot image contains
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all the drivers you need and will not prompt you for additional 'floppies'.
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A consequence of adding all the network and pcmcia drivers to the USB image
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is that using a bootable USB stick is not a suitable method to install
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Slackware on old PCs that are low on memory! The ramdisk will be more than
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30 MB in size, and you will need RAM for your kernel as well.
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Transfering the usbboot.img file to a USB device
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------------------------------------------------
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In order to create a bootable USB stick with the Slackware installer on it,
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copy the 'usbboot.img' file to a USB stick as follows:
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(1) In a Linux terminal if you're in X, or just from the console, change
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directory to where the file 'usbboot.img' is located - you may have to
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mount your Slackware CDROM or DVD first.
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(2) Insert a USB stick that is going to become your Slackware installer.
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Note that all data the stick contains will be erased in the next steps!
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You need to find out the device name for this USB stick. Sometimes it
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helps to run the command 'rescan-scsi-bus' if the USB stick is not
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being detected right away.
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On systems without SCSI or SATA disks, the USB stick will usually be
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assigned '/dev/sda' as the device name. If '/dev/sda' already is your
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SCSI or SATA hard drive, then '/dev/sdb' would become the device name
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for the USB stick. Be very convinced that you know which device name
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represents your stick before you advance to the next step!
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(3) Transfer the image file to the USB stick using the 'dd' program. In the
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example command line below, I am assuming that the USB stick is known as
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'/dev/sdx'.
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2013-11-04 18:08:47 +01:00
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dd if=usbboot.img of=/dev/sdx bs=1M
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2009-08-26 17:00:38 +02:00
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Be careful about the device name for your USB stick! The above 'dd'
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command will wipe out any existing data on the device, so you had better
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be sure that it is not the SATA hard disk you're targeting!
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Booting from the USB stick
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--------------------------
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Your computer BIOS must support booting from USB HDD.
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Plug the stick into your computers USB slot, and boot it up. Make
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sure you select boot from USB-HDD - how you do this is very dependent on
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the type of computer you have. Many computers will display a message
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during the initial stages of the booting that says something like
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"Press [F12] for a boot device list".
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The Slackware installer will start just like when you had booted from
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a CDROM (maybe somewhat faster even). Log in as root. Start the install
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by partitioning your hard drive as usual, and running 'setup'. If you want
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to install from a network server such as a NFS, HTTP or FTP server, you
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should run the commands 'pcmcia' (if your network card is a PCMCIA type)
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and/or 'network' prior to running 'setup' in order to load a driver for
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your network card. If you want to install Slackware using a local hard
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disk partition in case you copied the content of the Slackware CDROMs/DVD
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there already, that is also an option.
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It would not make much sense to opt for the third install method to
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"use a CDROM" since we just abandoned the use of a CDROM medium :-)
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A remark about fdisk warnings
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-----------------------------
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After writing the 'usbboot.img' to the USB stick, if you run fdisk -l
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you will see alarming output like this:
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This doesn't look like a partition table
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Probably you selected the wrong device.
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Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
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/dev/sda1 ? 8563200 8326647 2088818490 1 FAT12
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Partition 1 has different physical/logical beginnings (non-Linux?):
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phys=(124, 38, 11) logical=(8563199, 1, 16)
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Partition 1 has different physical/logical endings:
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phys=(344, 195, 26) logical=(8326646, 0, 49)
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Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary.
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... and so on, for partitions 2, 3 and 4 as well.
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This is actually harmless. The 'usbboot.img' file was copied to the
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raw device, it did not create partitions at all. Fdisk reads the information
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in the first sector and incorrectly interprets that as a messed-up device.
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2011-04-25 15:37:00 +02:00
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Create a bootable USB stick non-destructively
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---------------------------------------------
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If you do not want to sacrifice a USB thumb drive for this (note that
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dumping the image file on the USB stick will destroy all data already
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present on the stick), there is a solution: Slackware also ships with a
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script usbimg2disk.sh since the 13.0 release (actually, it is the file
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/usb-and-pxe-installers/usbimg2disk.sh ). This script extracts the content
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from the 'usbboot.img' image file and uses this to transform a regular USB
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thumb drive into a bootable Slackware installer non-destructively (i.e. any
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existing files on the stick will not be touched). The only requirement is,
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that there is at least 30 MB of available free space on the stick.
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The usbimg2disk.sh script is also convenient if your computer refuses to
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boot from a USB stick loaded with the usbboot.img file. The BIOS of some
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computers will not understand the format of the default Slackware USB
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image. Using the usbimg2disk.sh script, you create an alternative bootable
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USB stick that will be recognized by your computers BIOS.
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Restoring a USB stick to its original state (empty VFAT partition)
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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2009-08-26 17:00:38 +02:00
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When you have used the small 25 MB image to create a USB installer,
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your USB stick is no longer useful for anything else. Any remaining
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space on the stick (assuming you used a larger-than 25 MB stick for it)
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is inaccessible. Fortunately, it is easy to re-create a FAT partition on
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the stick (thereby removing the Slackware installer of course) so that
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the USB stick again becomes available for carrying around your data.
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Take care about which device actually is your USB stick !!! The next
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command will render all data on /dev/sdx inaccessible !!!
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(1) First, wipe the bootsector of the USB stick:
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dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdx bs=512 count=1
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(2) Then, create a new FAT32 partition on the stick and write a FAT32
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filesystem on it (vfat or type b in fdisk terminology):
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fdisk /dev/sdx <<EOF
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n
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p
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1
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t
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b
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w
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EOF
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mkdosfs -F32 /dev/sdx1
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The 10 lines starting with 'fdisk /dev/sdx <<EOF' and ending with the
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single word 'EOF' is actually one single command spread over ten lines,
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including the two empty lines in the middle. This format is called a
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'here-document'. It allows you to use a command which expects interactive
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input in a non-interactive way. If you're uncomfortable with the above
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command you can just run
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fdisk /dev/sdx
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and create a partition interactively :-)
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==========================================================
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2011-04-25 15:37:00 +02:00
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Author: Eric Hameleers <alien@slackware.com> 17-feb-2011
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Blog post: http://alien.slackbook.org/blog/installing-slackware-using-usb-thumb-drive/
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2009-08-26 17:00:38 +02:00
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Wiki URL: http://www.slackware.com/~alien/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=slackware:usbboot
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