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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Reading a UNIX floppy on a PC ? HELP! Post 525 by Neo on Tuesday 12th of December 2000 04:15:42 PM
Old 12-12-2000
Hmmmm. This is difficult because Microsoft does not easily support other file systems. If you had a Microsoft floppy disk and needed to put the info on a UNIX box; that is pretty easy with many UNIX/MSDOC utilities such as MCOPY, MFORMAT, etc.

Actually, there is 'no such thing' as a "UNIX formatted floppy" because UNIX is a computing environment, not a file system structure. If you have no other choice, you need to find out how the file was created. It is unlikely that a file system was created on the floppy (it could have been, but not the normal approach).

When someone sends a floppy, normally they provide the information on how the disk was created, i.e. was it a TARFILE and what were the flags, etc. Or you could ask the people who created the disk to send one that is formatted to work with DOS-based systems.

Maybe someone else has a better approach or knows of a special DOS utility that will do a raw-read on a floppy to examine its contents?
 

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MKBOOTDISK(8)						      System Manager's Manual						     MKBOOTDISK(8)

NAME
mkbootdisk - creates a stand-alone boot floppy for the running system SYNOPSIS
mkbootdisk [--version] [--noprompt] [--verbose] [--device devicefile] [--size size] [--kernelargs <args>] [--iso] kernel DESCRIPTION
mkbootdisk creates a boot floppy appropriate for the running system. The boot disk is entirely self-contained, and includes an initial ramdisk image which loads any necessary SCSI modules for the system. The created boot disk looks for the root filesystem on the device sug- gested by /etc/fstab. The only required argument is the kernel version to put onto the boot floppy. OPTIONS
--device devicefile The boot image is created on devicefile. If --device is not specified, /dev/fd0 is used. If devicefile does not exist mkinitrd cre- ates a 1.44Mb floppy image using devicefile as the filename. --noprompt Normally, mkbootdisk instructs the user to insert a floppy and waits for confirmation before continuing. If --noprompt is specified, no prompt is displayed. --verbose Instructs mkbootdisk to talk about what it's doing as it's doing it. Normally, there is no output from mkbootdisk. --iso Instructs mkbootdisk to make a bootable ISO image as devicefile. --version Displays the version of mkbootdisk and exits. --kernelargs args Adds args to the arguments appended on the kernel command line. If this is not specified mkbootdisk uses grubby to parse the argu- ments for the default kernel from grub.conf, if possible. --size size Uses size (in kilobytes) as the size of the image to use for the boot disk. If this is not specified, mkbootdisk will assume a standard 1.44Mb floppy device. SEE ALSO
grubby(8) dracut(8) AUTHOR
Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com> 4th Berkeley Distribution Tue Mar 31 1998 MKBOOTDISK(8)
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