Next I tried to follow this recipe to boot from Alpine 2.1.4 iso. When I tried to install Alpine from the LiveCD to this card, which is listed as a hard drive by the BIOS, it complained of insufficient space. Pnin 05:43, 8 February 2011 (UTC)Ĭurrent system is a 2.8 Prescott Pentium IV with 2MB RAM, booting from a 1GB CF plugged into the IDE interface, with an attached 500GB SATA HDD for data. Should anyone disagree, do feel free to delete. However, I still believe a simple 'boot from iso' procedure could do wonders for Alpine, so I'm leaving this here for future reference. I did find a page here at the wiki, under the heading ' Install Alpine cd-rom image on hard disk' where a somewhat related solution is provided, but it involves extracting the distro files from the iso, something that unetbootin does in a rather more easy and straightforward way - at least, that's what I used to get Alpine to boot from a USB pendrive (plenty of recipes for that around). Couldn't make the intended setup work with my meager Linux knowledge. iso files placed in the /boot/images directory. In addition to standard partitions or drives, the Debian package grub-imageboot allows booting. Using an installed Bootloader grub-imageboot apkovl customizations are booted with a virtual machine. The QEMU page shows how an ISO image and.
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