O. Hartmann wrote: > Does anyone do have an idea? Ah, the disproportionate march of progress...
The easy way out would be to procure a USB floppy drive. If the machines support booting from a USB stick, they can handle booting a USB floppy in legacy mode. If you're really bent on using a USB thumbdrive, you're in for quite a ride. Due to the way DOS is designed, it needs a pretty nonstandard (nowadays) method of booting. You could 'format' the thumbdrive with FAT12 or FAT16 and put the files on there, but you would need to find a way to do so from within DOS itself, as neither Linux nor FreeBSD can create FAT filesystems that boot DOS. Your best bet is to use an already existing bootable DOS floppy image, loading the files onto there (using mdconfig to mount it), and using GRUB (or another modern boot loader) and memdisk (part of syslinux) to boot the floppy image off the thumbdrive. This worked for me when building a thumbdrive capable of booting Norton Ghost, PM8, FreeDOS, and a few other DOS-only utility diskettes. I believe it's also the method used by the Ultimate Boot CD. Good luck! -- Fuzzy love, -CyberLeo Technical Administrator CyberLeo.Net Webhosting http://www.CyberLeo.Net <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Furry Peace! - http://wwww.fur.com/peace/ _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"