From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Sun, 26 Jul 2009 20:09:50 +0100 From: Ethan Grammatikidis To: 9fans@9fans.net Message-Id: <20090726200950.de7c9bbd.eekee57@fastmail.fm> In-Reply-To: <51ce22e8ab90475811d16daa6bde028f@quanstro.net> References: <4ecada1e0907252311r386a7291q5c4dfe976a045a10@mail.gmail.com> <51ce22e8ab90475811d16daa6bde028f@quanstro.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Subject: Re: [9fans] installation on SATYA disk failed Topicbox-Message-UUID: 2e25fff6-ead5-11e9-9d60-3106f5b1d025 On Sun, 26 Jul 2009 10:08:25 -0400 erik quanstrom wrote: > On Sun Jul 26 02:12:21 EDT 2009, bvalek2@gmail.com wrote: > > I suggest that you keep the floppy-install option. If Plan 9 is > > installed, its normally on a virtual machine, or on an older computer > > somewhere in the garage, often with floppy-drives only. But if its > > time consuming to support it... > > do you have such a machine? (i have a pentium ii and a 386 dx, > and both have cd rom drives) > > supposing you do, do you have one that doesn't have a pata port? > cd rom drives are really cheep. if you come to iwp9 i'll give you > a few. If I hadn't had to downsize I'd still have half a dozen machines incapable of booting from CD-ROM, I vaguely recall CD-ROM boot being an unusual feature at some point. Having said that, if I had a machine which wouldn't boot from CD-ROM I'd install in another machine and copy the installation to the target drive. I've done it many times with Linux in the past, once or twice with Windows 98 if I remember right, and the hardest part was usually transfering the target drive between machines. Actually sometimes the hardest part with Linux was that daft LILO bootloader, it was quite a puzzle but a solvable one. I'm pretty sure 9load won't give quite the same trouble, but it may need a bit of care to set up right. Hmm... One issue with the above could be old drives not working in a newer machine. I guess some intermediate machine might help. Another way would be to keep the destination drive in the destination machine and find some way of writing to the disk over the network. This should be possible with an old floppy-bootable Linux distro, I'm sure there are still some suitable floppy images out there. Quite likely there are also old floppy-bootable editions of BSD and Minix which could work just as well. -- Ethan Grammatikidis Those who are slower at parsing information must necessarily be faster at problem-solving.