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Install without cd or dvd drive?


Guest Rick
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Hi,

 

I have a dilemma. I need to install LE2007 but I don't have a working cd/dvd drive on the computer I wish to install to. I've downloaded the DVD as an iso thinking I could somehow mount it across the network, but I'm stuck. I do have another computer on my network that does have a working dvd drive. Would it be possible to use that to install from? What options do I have?

 

By the way, I don't think the old PIII supports network booting... I'll need to explore that.

 

Suggestions anyone?

 

Thanks,

Rick

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Welcome to the MUB B)

 

Does the computer you want to install Mandriva on have a floppy drive? If so, have a look here: http://club.mandriva.com/xwiki/bin/view/KB/NetworkInstall

 

I have no experience with this, but it is a place to start.

 

Also, there is no such thing as LE2007. It is simply Mandriva 2007. The last limited edition was LE2005, which was the same as Mandrake 10.2.

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If you have another machine you can do it over ftp, but it would require you burning a CD or making a floppy bootable so that you can then connect to the ftp to run the installer.

 

Mounting the iso in Linux is easy, just do:

 

mkdir /mnt/iso
mount -o loop /home/username/filename.iso /mnt/iso

 

then you can set up ftp on the Linux machine and make sure that /mnt/iso is accessible. You can always connect to the Linux machine using your username/password so as to save working out anonymous access rights, etc, etc. Then you can just browse to /mnt/iso after this and the rest will take place.

 

If in Windows, you need to install an app for mounting ISO images and it creates a VirtualCD drive that you can mount the ISO too. Then you can apply the same principals by installing FTP under Windows and making sure the Virtual CD-ROM is accessible to run the install from.

 

However, you still need a floppy drive or CD-ROM in the machine to boot and be able to connect. Most distros now only provide a 10MB or so CD ISO image that you can write and install from.

 

Maybe someone else can suggest another method if you really cannot get a CD drive in this machine.

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However, you still need a floppy drive or CD-ROM in the machine to boot and be able to connect. Most distros now only provide a 10MB or so CD ISO image that you can write and install from.

 

Maybe someone else can suggest another method if you really cannot get a CD drive in this machine.

You can also boot from a usb-stick (if the machine supports it)

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