On Tuesday 26 August 2003 11:11, Eli Billauer wrote: > As I mentioned, I'm not talking about adding an rpm or two, but making a > single computer work really nice, and then duplicate it.
Basically, that is what all installation kits are striving for! The problem is that "image" install is almost never good: 1. Different hardware (e.g: configuring X11) 2. Different partitioning. I've read your post and know that you talked about manual partitioning, but this is one of the things that the installer has to do per-computer! 3. A complication of (2.) is that the typical installee, already has a "sacred" windows install -- Need to partition for him, then edit his fstab to mount the win* partition. Most installers already have facilities for this. BTW: The best solution I've seen so far in the industry to the problem of "redployable-image" is the HPUX install system. You can create a "golden-image" of a working system (therebye assuring all dependencies are good). However, during later install, you may install it on different hardware (with some limitations), totaly change partitioning, host, timezone etc. (golden-image installs are of course much faster than normal installs and by default require no human intervention). What is possible I think is: 1. Place an NFS/HTTP/FTP install trees so people who have network cards can install through the network and don't wait for CD's. (This is in *addition* for the normal CD method!) 2. Place on the same server a set of RPMS/SRPMS for Israeli/Hebrew software. E.g: latest culmus, fribidi, bidiv, hspell, etc. This should be done/checked against the chosen distro. Last, but not least: What is the chosen distro? I failed to reach the meeting but would like to help if I can. -- Oron Peled Voice/Fax: +972-4-8228492 [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.actcom.co.il/~oron The day Microsoft makes something that doesn't suck is probably the day they start making vacuum cleaners - Ernst Jan Plugge ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]