I just did a Google search on Debian Squeeze and pre-seed files and found a document describing what all can be placed in to such a file. What I did not see yet is a mechanical description of how to introduce the file to the installation process. I think it can be introduced on a USB stick or possibly even a floppy although the USB stick method would work on just about any P.C. made in the last 15 years. I understand that the installer looks for drives plugged in to the USB ports and that the pre-seed file must have a certain name.
If this is how the process works, it is a great leap forward. I imagine one can configure the serial console and there appear to be directives in a pre-seed file to set up a safe ssh server that one could also use over one's network. I must admit that I have been using Debian since about 2001 or so and the installation process just keeps getting better but I was not aware of the idea of the pre-seed file until recently. This should make it easier to configure or misconfigure multiple systems exactly the same way. One person on this list was trying to do a remote headless install and had to custom-configure a CD for this purpose. I imagine that if you are not in the same room as the actual hardware, you may be forced to do that, but the pre-seed file could fix all that. One would just plug in the thumb drive, install the CDROM and boot Please tell me if I am wrong and also where there is a good document on the nuts and bolts of what media one can put the pre-seed file on and what you call it so the live CD finds it and incorporates it in to the boot process. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201107011447.p61elqix064...@x.it.okstate.edu