Knoppix Boot Only Isolation
Contents • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Knoppix for the first time [ ] “The most important design issue is that Linux is supposed to be fun.” -- Linus Torvalds Overview [ ] The purpose of this section is to get you started into Knoppix for the very first time. This section skips nearly all of the options for starting Knoppix. The options for starting Knoppix are explained later.
May 16, 2017. Knoppix Boot Only Isolation. Ultimate Boot CD - Version History. Added expert mode for booting images. Thanks to Erwin Veermans for inspiring the feature in his dynamic scripts. Then when you launch any of the apps, a menu will appear that allows you to change the boot method (memdisk, diskemu,. May 31, 2013. I just saw some new files in the knoppix release/download area which are much much smaller and was curious does anyone know what they are useful for? KNOPPIX_V7.0.4bootonly-2012-08-20-EN.iso which is just 11M. Going by the name of the file i would have to speculate that it is.
Hardware requirements [ ] The recommended hardware is as follows: • Pentium I 350 MHz processor (recommended minimum). • 128 Mb RAM.
• Either: IDE or SCSI bootable CD-ROM or DVD drive • Or: 3.5' floppy drive plus non-bootable CD-ROM or DVD drive. • SVGA compatible graphics card (most cards supported). • Monitor capable of 800x600 pixel resolution. • Serial mouse, or PS/2 mouse, or USB mouse. Starting Knoppix [ ] There are two stages to starting Knoppix: The first stage [ ] The first stage is to get to the boot prompt. The boot prompt lets you customise the Knoppix startup process. For example, you can specify at the boot prompt what screen resolution you want Knoppix to use.
To reach the boot prompt, you use either the CD/DVD or the floppy disk. What about some instructions for use with USB??? The second stage [ ] The second stage is to run Knoppix itself. This requires the CD/DVD. Knoppix follows the instructions given at the boot prompt to complete the startup process. The first stage [ ] Getting to the boot prompt [ ] To get to the boot prompt, follow these steps: • If the computer is already on, insert the Knoppix CD/DVD.
If the CD/DVD drive is set to auto-run, information explaining about Knoppix will appear. Restart the computer. • If the computer is off, turn it on, then immediately insert the Knoppix CD/DVD.
To play for time, press the Pause/Break key immediately after turning your computer on. On many PCs and laptops, this will the BIOS, giving you more time to insert the CD/DVD.
Then press the Pause/Break key again to resume startup. • Most newer computers will automatically check for a bootable CD/DVD in the first drive.
The Knoppix boot prompt should then appear. The prompt is the last three lines at the bottom of the screen. If your computer can't display the white and blue Knoppix logo, you will get a blue background instead. • On some computers, you must press a key for the “”.
The boot device menu is used to tell the computer which drive to boot from. A prompt saying which key will display the boot menu will appear on the screen just after you turn the computer on. For example, on some Dell desktop PCs, press F12 when prompted, press the Down Arrow key until “Boot from IDE-CDROM” is highlighted, then press Enter. • At the boot prompt, press Enter to boot Knoppix accepting all the defaults (including the German keyboard/language.) If you do nothing for 60 seconds, Knoppix boots automatically. To boot Knoppix with another keyboard/language, see the section “Which language?” below. Tip If you have two CD/DVD drives, and one of them is a CD/DVD Re-Writable drive, put the Knoppix CD/DVD in the other drive.
Keep your writable drive empty if you can. This will let you try out the CD/DVD writing features in Knoppix easily at a later time. Help at the boot prompt [ ] Press F2 for the. The help screen is a summary of the boot prompt options.
Pressing F2 or any other key cancels the timer, so Knoppix will not automatically boot. Quick help [ ] Question: How do I get out of the boot prompt? Take the disc out of the drive, then restart your computer. Question: How do I use the boot floppy? Turn off the computer. Insert the Knoppix boot floppy disk. Turn the computer back on.
The computer should boot from the floppy drive. Then the Knoppix boot prompt should appear. If that doesn't work, enter your computer's Basic In/Out System (BIOS) setup. The key to press that takes you into the BIOS setup is usually shown on the screen just after you turn the computer on. Visit the screen (it may have another name such as boot device menu). Set the BIOS to boot from the CD/DVD or floppy drive before the hard disk drive. If unsure, check with your motherboard or computer manufacturer.
Question: The computer has two CD-ROM drives. Why does the Knoppix disc boot in one drive but not the other?
Some BIOSes can only boot the first CD-ROM/DVD drive. To work around the problem, start up from the Knoppix boot floppy disk. Then you can put the Knoppix CD/DVD in either CD-ROM/DVD drive. If you are really determined, switch the CD-ROM/DVD so the drive you want to boot from is the first drive. The second stage [ ] Starting Knoppix proper [ ] To start Knoppix with the United Kingdom keyboard/language: • Type this at the boot prompt: knoppix lang=uk • Press the Enter key on the keyboard. • Knoppix will begin loading with the UK keyboard/language. Which keyboard/language?
[ ] The most important option at the boot prompt is the /. More correctly, the keyboard/language option sets the.
A locale is a collection of regional settings including keyboard layout, language, time format, date format, currency format and paper size. Some language translations may be incomplete. The locale options are named using the International Standards Organisation two-letter country codes (ISO 3166 and ISO 639). The locale options are: Code Keyboard/language de German (default) be Belgian bg Bulgarian ch Swiss cn Simplified Chinese cs or cz Czech dk or da Dansk es Spanish fi Finnish (incomplete) fr French he or il Hebrew it Italian jp Japanese (limited) nl Dutch pl Polish ru Russian sl Slovenian tr Turkish tw Traditional Chinese uk United Kingdom us United States Automatic hardware detection [ ] Knoppix will then try to detect the various items of hardware in your computer. How long it takes depends upon the speed of your machine. Here are some examples to give you an idea of what to expect: Processor RAM CD-ROM speed Time needed Intel Pentium 4 (2.6 GHz) 512 Mb 48x 40 seconds AMD Duron (1 GHz) 256 Mb 32x 45 seconds AMD Athlon (600 MHz) 128 Mb 24x 1 min 30 seconds The X Window System [ ] Next, it will briefly say “INIT: Entering runlevel 5” and then Knoppix will try to start the.
The X Window System is the graphics display. If you have a supported graphics card, you will see a black cross on a grey stippled background. This means the X Window System started successfully. The K Desktop Environment [ ] Knoppix will begin loading the K Desktop Environment.
KDE runs on top of the X Window System. The progress of loading KDE will be shown in the middle of the screen. When KDE has finished loading, the welcome page will be loaded. When the welcome page appears, congratulations! You have started Linux, the X Window System, and the K Desktop Environment successfully.
Quick help [ ] Question: Why does KDE come up in German? You need to specify the / at the boot prompt.
For example, for the UK locale, enter knoppix lang=uk at the boot prompt. Question: It says 'cloop: read error', what does that mean? There is a problem reading the Knoppix CD. You either have a faulty CD-ROM drive or a damaged CD.
To test the Knoppix CD, enter at the boot prompt: knoppix testcd This will make Knoppix check the media for errors. If you know that the Knoppix CD is good, this error usually means a faulty CD-ROM drive.
Question: I get a blank screen when the X Window System comes up, why? Knoppix is trying to use a that your monitor doesn't support. For example, Knoppix may have detected your graphics card is capable of 1024x768 pixel resolution, but your monitor can't cope with that. Try setting a lower resolution at the boot prompt.
For example, enter: knoppix lang=uk screen=800x600 This will make Knoppix use a screen resolution of 800 by 600 pixels when it starts the X Window System. Question: Why does the screen go blank when the kernel boots? This problem usually occurs with low cost TFT (flat screen) monitors. The kernel is using a framebuffer console, but the monitor is incompatible with it. Turn off the framebuffer console.
Free Download Angst Is Not A Weltanschauung Rar Programs. At the boot prompt, use the option “ vga=normal”. For example, type: knoppix lang=uk vga=normal This will turn off the framebuffer console and the penguin logo. Question: Why doesn't the mouse work? This could mean you are trying to use a PS/2 mouse in a 9-pin serial port through a PS/2-to-serial adapter. Some PS/2 mice do not work when plugged into a 9-pin serial port. Try a real serial mouse. Question: It says “Initrd extends beyond end of memory”.
Your motherboard is reporting the RAM size incorrectly. Specify the amount of physical RAM in your computer at the boot prompt.
For example, if you have 128 Mb of RAM, enter at the boot prompt: knoppix lang=uk mem=128M Question: It says “Could not find the KNOPPIX filesystem, sorry. Dropping you to a (very limited) shell.” Try booting with: knoppix ide2=0x180 nopcmcia If that doesn't work, it means your PCMCIA CD-ROM drive is not supported. There is a workaround.
In Windows, copy the directory called “KNOPPIX” from the Knoppix CD to the root of a local FAT formatted hard drive partition ( eg: drive “C:”). The copy will take some time to complete. Then start Knoppix and specify the partition that you copied the KNOPPIX directory to, using the “ fromhd=” boot parameter.
For example, boot with: knoppix fromhd=/dev/hda1 If Windows is not available, use a single-floppy Linux such as “tomsrtbt” to do the copy, however that is beyond the scope of this book. Getting out [ ] Now that you've got Knoppix up and running, feel free to have a poke around. Everything is read-only, so you're unlikely to do any harm to your computer. To Knoppix: • Click the “K” menu in the bottom left corner. • Click “Logout”. • Knoppix will begin shutting down.
• The Knoppix CD will be ejected. • Remove the CD and close the tray.
• Press Enter on the keyboard. • Knoppix will attempt to turn off the computer automatically. If it doesn't turn off automatically, it is now safe to turn off the computer yourself using the power button.
Tip For a quick exit, press Ctrl+Alt+Backspace. This “three finger salute” kills the. Killing the X Window System takes down KDE and all its open applications. Knoppix will then shut down automatically.
I run Debian Lenny 64-bit on an HP server with an Intel Core 2 Duo processor. It boots with LILO rather than GRUB because it has an XFS root partition. Up until today it had 3 GB (2x 512MB and 2x 1GB) of ECC RAM. I have been getting ECC errors from EDAC occasionally on a single slot but since I had no crashes I wasn't too worried. Today I tried to do a Seagate firmware update which Seagate recommended for two of the drives (data only, not /) which are in a RAID-1 in mdadm on that machine.
I didn't manage to do this, or even get to the README for that disc as the it was taking forever to boot. I got fed up and tried to reboot the system. It hung after three lines of.s from LILO. I thought that I probably had some bad RAM due to the ECC errors, so I tried many different configurations (with 6 DIMMs, the four mentioned plus 2 non-ECC DIMMs, obviously not at the same time) but couldn't get it to boot. I ran memtest86, hoping to isolate the bad RAM. This resulted in the exact same error every time in Test #2 of memtest86, no matter which DIMM I used and no matter which slot. It always returned 3 errors on the first occupied RAM slot.
I cannot make sense of the errors it returned but can produce them here if it's relevant. Attempting to boot Debian off the main disk after this did not even show the word 'LILO'. It just hangs with a blinking cursor. This, together with the fact that there were memory errors every time, caused me to believe there was something wrong with the motherboard or with the CPU.
However, very oddly, Knoppix boots up happily and runs with no problems. I cannot run lilo because Knoppix is 32-bit and the system is 64-bit. But this makes me question some of the above stuff -- surely Knoppix can't run with RAM errors or a bad processor? I agree a lot with David's analysis. Have used the (right out of a Ubuntu LiveCD too) to isolate RAM errors.
These are also a good read. • memtest86+ has a focus on the memory stability • if changing the modules around still gives you an error in the same address locations, the memory slots are very likely culprit • you can concentrate testing on the problem error addresses with simple controls at the bottom of the memtest86 screen to quicken your testing cycle • if memtest86 shows errors, other higher layer checks are not worthwhile, focus on memory path. Memory errors are very 'iffy'. That is why software can sometimes still run even with faulty RAM. Sometimes, the error bits are such that they do not cause errors. Wd Western Digital Hdd Repair Tool Version 4.0. One example would be if those locations merely stored extra stuffed data bits that were there in order to ensure memory alignment but are not actually used by the software. Even if it was used for storing actual programmes, it may be just those bits of an instruction that are not actually essential or decoded by the processor.
Most modern PCs will have a memory management unit (MMU) that translates between physical and virtual memory locations. So, although the RAM that is faulty is the initial part of memory, it may not essentially be used by software that is addressing that particular block of RAM. However, as others have said, it is most likely a faulty slot. Avoid using that slot if it is found to be faulty. If it is a fixed area of RAM, you may even be able to avoid using it by marking the BADMEM area in the Linux kernel. RAM errors will come back and bite you sooner or later.