I don't quite understand what you're saying. You wouldn't be able to mount the partition unless it was formatted as ext2 either by you or slack install. Here's my quick and dirty slack install instructions. 1) If you have a bootable CD-ROM drive and a bootable Slack image, boot from the CD and skip to step 3 2) Create the boot and root disks. In Win/DOS put the slack CD in and run rawrite.exe (it's on the CD in one of those directories) with 2 different floppies, once each for color.gz and bare.i: rawrite.exe a: d:\bootdsks.144\bare.i rawrite.exe a: d:\rootdsks\color.gz (I don't know for sure that that's the proper syntax for rawrite, I haven't used it in awhile) 3) Your system should have booted to linux and be at the login prompt. Login as root 4) Partition using fdisk. Make at least a swap which should be 1.5 or 2 times the size of your system memory (in general, my opinion) and a root partition. This is kind of the simplest case. Here's an example: fdisk /dev/hda /dev/hda1 swap 256M /dev/hda2 / 6000M (use the rest for your / partition) You may want to make seperate partitions for /, /usr, /home, /tmp, /var but it takes some practice to now how big to make each in relation to a given hard drive size and the application. The above will work fine. 5) After you partition, (w)rite in fdisk, then type "setup" at the prompt. 6) Go through the main menu line by line. Addswap will initialize the swap partition. Next you'll format your partitions and name which ones are used as mountpoints for various places. Then you need to choose the source for packages, choose the CD-ROM, nowadays any IDE CD should autodetect fine. 7) Select your packages, install them. 8) Do Post-Install Configuration 9) Reboot Slack setup will automagically format your partitions that you created with fdisk. Once those are formatted then you just need to install the packages, and you're home free. If you want more help I'm happy to offer it, and I'm sure the other Slackware goons would be too. Adam Maloney Systems Administrator Sihope Communications On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, John J. Trammell wrote: > Yay, a new problem to fix! :-) > > "Stephen B Knewtson" <KNEWTSON at prodigy.net> wrote: > > > I am trying to install Slackware 7.1 on a HP Pavillion. I think I > > partioned the drive ok but I am having problems installing. > > So what partition types/sizes did you settle on? Is this a dual > boot system? > > > I need the CDROM to install. Unfortunately I was booting from the > > CDROM and was (apparently) unable to change disks because I guess > > it won't let go of the boot drive. > > This is odd. Can you get a "base" install from a single CD, then > add packages from the other CDROM(s) once you have the system up? > I would be surprised if two whole CDs were absolutely necessary. > > > I did partion the hard-drive using fdisk though. When I boot from > > the floppy should I be able to mount the drive? > > You should at least have all the tools you will need to mount the > drive. > > > I tried to mount /dev/hda1 but somehow it jumped the tracks and I > > got a 'kernel panic' message. > > That is pretty intense. What did that mount command look like? > > > I also tried using the 'root disk' floppy but then I was unable > > to login, (when I give my login as 'root' it just reprompts for > > the login.)... > > That's a new one on me. I'd guess the Slack experts on the list > might know what that means. > > Good luck, > J > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: tclug-list-unsubscribe at mn-linux.org > For additional commands, e-mail: tclug-list-help at mn-linux.org > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: tclug-list-unsubscribe at mn-linux.org For additional commands, e-mail: tclug-list-help at mn-linux.org