So again
Thank you for attention.What should be the grub entry for grub1 (menu.lst) and the one for grub2 (grub.cfg)?
Thank you for attention.What should be the grub entry for grub1 (menu.lst) and the one for grub2 (grub.cfg)?
It might just mean that nobody has used grub1/2 for that.ikke wrote:Am wondering : no reaction after such a long time. It means nobody has ever done a poor man's install of Salixlive.
Maybe you are right.gapan wrote:It might just mean that nobody has used grub1/2 for that.
That's OK if you have installed several linuxes or even BSD or MS on the same hard disk.wayne wrote:I used grub legacy to multi-boot OSes
and the stanza for booting Salix 13.1 (not SalixLive) is in my post earlier
http://www.salixos.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=1360
So using chainloading, grub legency's stanza for booting Salix is very simple:
Yes, that's - in my eyes - the best way to use Salixlive : boot the iso from hardisk or usb-stick. In the past all went well with the previous Salix versions up to Salix 3.1 test.wayne wrote: For now I am learning the 'poor-man install', that is directly boot iso from hard disk.
I had success today on some other distros.
May be someday I would try out Salix to boot from Hard Disk also to save DVD/CD
Nice! Kindly tell me how. Are you using grub as well?wayne wrote:Ok, I manage to do a poorman install on the latest Salix kde-beta4 LiveCD.
If I understand you well, you were able to copy the salix-kde-13.1.1-beta4.iso to an hard disk and were able to boot it from the hard disk. That's very nice.wayne wrote:Ok, I manage to do a poorman install on the latest Salix kde-beta4 LiveCD.
Kind of nice, boot very fast.. Save one more DVD.
Been seeing a lot of DVD/CD stack up and now better do more boot iso directly from hard disk.