I pasted the wrong command. The freedos.img does exist and I use it in the command. The FLOPPY.img also exist and I downloaded it from the freedos.org site.
My raspberry is a 3+ With a PNY Elite CLass 10 64gb sd card. I think the thread you may be referencing may be the one where the user receives a lot of ‘opcode’ errors and he added ‘raw’ at the end of the command after boot by pressing tab to fix. I have tried it with the same results. On Wed, Sep 25, 2019 at 10:20 AM Jim Hall <jh...@freedos.org> wrote: > On Wed, Sep 25, 2019 at 10:09 AM Jim Hall <jh...@freedos.org> wrote: > > > [..] > > I have two suggestions for you: > > > > (1) > > Your "hda" image file is different in the two commands. You created a > hard disk image named dos.img but you tried to reference a hard disk image > named freedos.img. Does the freedos.img image file exist? Try re-running > the qemu-system-i386 command with the dos.img image file you created in > your earlier qemu-img command. > > > > (2) > > You have an extra parameter to define a floppy disk image named > FLOPPY.img. Does this image file exist? How did you create it? Try > re-running the qemu-system-i386 command without the floppy drive defined. > You don't need it anyway for the install. > > > > > > However, neither of my two suggestions would point to the installer > being unable to find the installation packages. But I'd try these steps > anyway to see if that fixes it. If it's still broken after that, we can try > to debug further. > > > > > > I have two other quick thoughts that I'll add as (3) and (4) > > > (3) > I remember something that another user had reported problems > installing FreeDOS on the new Raspberry Pi (model 4?) using the same > QEMU command line I wrote about in the article. Sounds like there's a > difference in the new Raspberry Pi that needed a new QEMU option? I > can't remember the details, and a quick search in the freedos-user > email list archives didn't locate the discussion thread I remembered. > But maybe someone else here will remember and be able to point to the > right discussion thread. [However, you said you are doing this on > Raspberry Pi model 3, and that's the same model I have. I have the > Raspberry Pi model 3+.] > > (4) > When you are finally able to start the installation, be prepared for > the install process to take a looooooooooooooong time. This is because > installing all the FreeDOS packages requires a lot of disk I/O to the > virtual freedos.img drive. And unless you bought a top-of-the-line SD > card for your Raspberry Pi, the SD card's I/O speed isn't very fast. > The installation takes a very *very* long time. But once you install > FreeDOS, things are mostly fine after that. I think only a few games > were noticeably slow to start after that. Booting and running FreeDOS, > and running most DOS applications, was fine. > > > Jim > > > _______________________________________________ > Freedos-user mailing list > Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user >
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