Bahn, William L Civ USAFA/DFCS wrote:
Thanks for the response. More questions below.
The easiest way to do it would be to pull the hard drive from a laptop,
boot from the Ubuntu CD, and plug in the thumb drive (should be the only
disk in the laptop in order to avoid accidentally overwriting the boot
sector of other drives). Then proceed with install.
Is accidentally overwriting the boot sector on the hard drive something that is
super easy to do? I would rather not get into tearing someone else's laptop
apart if I can avoid it.
To avoid this risk, you can do then is go into the bios, and turn off
everything except USB (and the CD) for the boot devices (and also for
other hard drives, not just the bootable ones, so you can guarantee that
your USB stick is found first). Record all the bios settings first, so
you can restore the laptop to it's original configuration.
Another approach is to actually use your PCI-104 platform and try to do
a network install rather than a CD based install. Some distros allow
this (at least they used to). Of course, the PCI-104 must be able to
give a network boot as an option (in the bios). In this case, the
kernel is actually being installed on the platform you want it to be on,
so it is more likely to get the right things configured correctly from
the start (drivers, etc.).
So what is the sequence I am looking at doing here? Is it something like:
1) Use a laptop that has a CD drive and install Ubuntu onto a thumb drive on
that machine.
2) Boot the PCI-104 machine using the thumb drive.
3) Install GnuRadio onto the thumbdrive on the PCI-104 machine.
If using Ubuntu, their package manager will install python and gnuradio
if you tell it to do so.
How do I handle the various drivers that are needed for the PCI-104 machine?
Can I create a boot thumbdrive on one machine and use it to boot a very
different machine?
This is why I suggested doing a network install. Maybe a non-network
install is doable if you use a USB cdrom drive, and hook it and the
thumb drive to the PC-104 directly, and do everything there.
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