Once upon a time, I heard Phil Howard say > > it. REMOVE it or RENAME it. then boot as usual, you might need to edit some > > files in /etc by hand since you start unpack it manually :) > > Since there is no documentation covering this, I need to find out just what > things Debian might need to have configured beyond the what I could presume. > I'm sure I can manually start the networking. Configuring Debian's own > network files would be new to me, so I'd have to go exploring to do that. > > Anyone have a list or some other document about this? There is a brief doc in
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~jonh/lppc-serve/cache/572.html Basically what you need to do is to 1. remove /sbin/unconfigure.sh 2. fix /etc/fstab 3. fix /etc/hostname 4. fix /etc/resolv.conf 5. fix /etc/network/interfaces (apt-get get upgrade will give you new example) 6. fix /etc/modules 7. fix /etc/localtime 8. may be more .. you will find out :) I think that's almost everything you didn't do when you skip using boot floppy. Chanop -- ,-----------------------------------------------------------------------------. | Chanop Silpa-Anan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | | Australian National University | | got sparetime ? | | http://kenji.anu.edu.au/ | | Debian GNU/Linux GPG key on request | `-----------------------------------------------------------------------------'
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