10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
I have a .dmg file which was created from a disk consisting of two partitions. When I mount the dmg both partitions pop up, so I know the imaging worked properly. One partition is HFS+ and the other is FAT32.
So far, I've been unable to find a way to restore the dmg to a flash drive where both... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: paulcristo
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2. Red Hat
Hi All
On one of my sandbox machine, I want to replace RHEL 6.2 to RHEL 7.3.
I am using both developer editions.
rhel-server-7.3-x86_64-dvd.iso ... This is what I have downloaded from
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Download | Red Hat Developers
My understanding is this file would work as a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: videsh77
1 Replies
3. Red Hat
Hi All,
I have one query on creating bootable ISO.
I have installed Centos 5.6 and done few configuration changes which is needed for deploying my App. Later I have deployed my app. Now Centos is up and running in a dedicated box along with my app.
Now I want to create the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kalpeer
3 Replies
4. Red Hat
Hello Everyone,
Can anyone let me know how to make minimal boot.iso from rhl6 installation dvd iso image. I have a dvd image with me but i want to make just a minimal boot media. Somehow it is not shipped with dvd iso. I know we can download boot.iso from redhat site but is there any anyway we... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rohit Bhanot
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5. Red Hat
Hi All,
I want to create kick start bootable ISO file. I have Centos 5.4 ISO and customized ks.cfg file. Now I need to recreate ISO with ks.cfg and content of existing ISO.
During installation, it automatically should pick the kick start file and need to proceed with the installation.
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kalpeer
0 Replies
6. Fedora
I need to boot the ultimate boot cd from an usb stick. Do I just copy the iso image to the usb key?
How do I make the usb stick bootable? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: locoroco
4 Replies
7. Linux
I just tried to run the command
kexec memtest86-4.0.iso
To boot into memtest86 using kexec.
This is the output:
Cannot determine the file type of memtest86-4.0.iso
How am I supposed to do this? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: locoroco
2 Replies
8. Linux
Hi everyone,
I want to run on VMWare the Linux XP 2010 Desktop 4.0.31 distro, Iīve downloaded the latest realese from its website (Trustverse Desktop 4.0 RC1 -build 31)-->http://www.linux-xp.com/desktop/download/.
Itīs 4.47 GB in size, but when I mount on an ISO software, the size is 2.75GB... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: cgkmal
0 Replies
9. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
In our HP/Unix system, our master scsi drive was bootable and our mirrored drive was non-bootable. Are any of these alternatives possible:
1) Make the non-bootable scsi drive bootable? How?
2) Create a bootable scsi drive, then copy the mirrored data to the newly created scsi drive?
I seek... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bfisk
1 Replies
10. Solaris
Hey all,
I'm a newbie to iso files and I just downloaded
the 2 iso files for *cough* ms2003 R2 *cough*
trial software. After I downloaded the iso files
I just dragged them to my burn software gui
and sure enough it burned to dvd 2 iso files.
When I attempted to boot the image using VMware... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: bdsffl
0 Replies
RARP(8) Linux Programmer's Manual RARP(8)
NAME
rarpd - Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP) daemon
SYNOPSIS
rarpd [-aAvde] [-b bootdir ] [ interface ]
DESCRIPTION
Rarpd is a daemon which responds to RARP requests. RARP is used by some machines at boot time to discover their IP address. They provide
their Ethernet address and rarpd responds with their IP address if it finds it in the ethers database (either /etc/ethers file or NIS+
lookup) and using DNS lookup if ethers database contains a hostname and not an IP address. By default rarpd also checks if a bootable
image with a name starting with the IP address in hexadecimal uppercase letters is present in the TFTP boot directory (usually /tftpboot )
before it decides to respond to the RARP request.
OPTIONS
-a Do not bind to the interface.
-A Respond to ARP as well as RARP requests.
-v Tell the user what is going on by being verbose.
-d Debugging mode. Do not detach from the tty.
-e Skip the check for bootable image in the TFTP boot directory. If not present, then even if the Ethernet address is present in the
ethers database but the bootable image for the resolved IP does not exist, rarpd will not respond to the request.
-b bootdir
Use bootdir instead of the default /tftpboot as the TFTP boot directory for bootable image checks.
OBSOLETES
This rarpd obsoletes kernel rarp daemon present in Linux kernels up to 2.2 which was controlled by the rarp(8) command.
FILES
/etc/ethers,
/etc/nsswitch.conf,
/tftpboot
SEE ALSO
ethers(5)
AUTHORS
Alexey Kuznetsov, <kuznet@ms2.inr.ac.ru>
Jakub Jelinek, <jakub@redhat.com>
rarpd 7 April 2000 RARP(8)