From 325e7229b079ce8367df7a7571aad8bfc8e1e5a9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Frans Pop Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2009 15:52:14 +0000 Subject: Remove all untranslated documents for Danish --- da/howto/installation-howto.xml | 325 ---------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 325 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 da/howto/installation-howto.xml (limited to 'da/howto') diff --git a/da/howto/installation-howto.xml b/da/howto/installation-howto.xml deleted file mode 100644 index fc7612447..000000000 --- a/da/howto/installation-howto.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,325 +0,0 @@ - - - - -Installation Howto - - - -This document describes how to install &debian; &releasename; for -the &arch-title; (&architecture;) with the -new &d-i;. It is a quick walkthrough of the installation process -which should contain all the information you will need for most installs. -When more information can be useful, we will link to more detailed -explanations in the &debian; -Installation Guide. - - - - - Preliminaries - - - -The debian-installer is still in a beta state. - -If you encounter bugs during your install, please refer to - for instructions -on how to report them. If you have questions which cannot be -answered by this document, please direct them to the debian-boot -mailing list (&email-debian-boot-list;) or ask on irc (#debian-boot -on the freenode network). - - - - - - Booting the installer - - - -For some quick links to CD images, check out the -&d-i; home page. - -The debian-cd team provides builds of CD images using &d-i; on the -Debian CD page. -For more information on where to get CDs, see . - - - -Some installation methods require other images than CD images. - -The &d-i; home page has links to -other images. - - explains how to find images on Debian -mirrors. - - - -The subsections below will give the details about which images you should -get for each possible means of installation. - - - - - CDROM - - - -There are two different netinst CD images which can be used to install -&releasename; with the &d-i;. These images are intended to boot from CD -and install additional packages over a network, hence the name 'netinst'. -The difference between the two images is that on the full netinst image -the base packages are included, whereas you have to download these from -the web if you are using the business card image. If you'd rather, you can -get a full size CD image which will not need the network to install. You -only need the first CD of the set. - - - -Download whichever type you prefer and burn it to a CD. -To boot the CD, you may need to change your BIOS -configuration, as explained in . - -To boot a PowerMac from CD, press the c key while booting. See - for other ways to boot from CD. - - - - - - - Floppy - - -If you can't boot from CD, you can download floppy images to install -Debian. You need the floppy/boot.img, the -floppy/root.img and possibly one of the driver disks. - - - -The boot floppy is the one with boot.img on it. -This floppy, when booted, will prompt you to insert a second floppy — -use the one with root.img on it. - - - -If you're planning to install over the network, you will usually need -the floppy/net-drivers.img, which contains additional -drivers for many ethernet cards, and support for PCMCIA. - - - -If you have a CD, but cannot boot from it, then boot from floppies and use -floppy/cd-drivers.img on a driver disk to complete the -install using the CD. - - - -Floppy disks are one of the least reliable media around, so be prepared for -lots of bad disks (see ). Each -.img file you downloaded goes on a single floppy; -you can use the dd command to write it to /dev/fd0 or some other means -(see for details). -Since you'll have more than one floppy, it's a good idea to label them. - - - - - - USB memory stick - - -It's also possible to install from removable USB storage devices. For -example a USB keychain can make a handy Debian install media that you -can take with you anywhere. - - - -The easiest way to prepare your USB memory stick is to download -hd-media/boot.img.gz, and use gunzip to extract the 128 MB -image from that file. Write this image directly to your memory stick, which -must be at least 128 mb in size. Of course this will destroy anything already -on the memory stick. Then mount the memory stick, which will now have a FAT -filesystem on it. Next, download a Debian netinst CD image, and copy that file -to the memory stick; any filename is ok as long as it ends in ".iso". - - - -There are other, more flexible ways to set up a memory stick to use the -debian-installer, and it's possible to get it to work with smaller memory -sticks. For details, see . - - - -Some BIOSes can boot USB storage directly, and some cannot. You may need to -configure your BIOS to boot from a "removable drive" or even a "USB-ZIP" to -get it to boot from the USB device. If it doesn't, you can boot from one -floppy and use the USB stick for the rest of the install. For helpful hints -and details, see . - - - - - - Booting from network - - -It's also possible to boot &d-i; completely from the net. The -various methods to netboot depend on your architecture and netboot setup. -The files in netboot/ can be used to netboot &d-i;. - - - -The easiest thing to set up is probably PXE netbooting. Untar the -file netboot/pxeboot.tar.gz into -/var/lib/tftpboot or -wherever is appropriate for your tftp server. Set up your DHCP server to pass -filename /pxelinux.0 to clients, and it with luck -everything will just work. -For detailed instructions, see - - - - - - Booting from hard disk - - -It's possible to boot the installer using no removable media, but just an -existing hard disk, which can have a different OS on it. Download -hd-media/initrd.gz, hd-media/vmlinuz, -and a Debian CD image to the top-level directory of the hard disk. Make sure -that the CD image has a filename ending in ".iso". Now it's just a matter of -booting linux with the initrd. - - explains one way to do it. - - - - - - - -Installation - - -Once the installer starts, you will be greeted with an initial screen. Press -&enterkey; to boot, or read the instructions for other boot -methods and parameters (see ). - -If you want a 2.6 kernel, type linux26 at the -boot: prompt. - - -The 2.6 kernel is available for most boot methods, but not when booting from -a floppy. - - - - - - -After a while you will be asked to select your language. Use the arrow keys -to pick a language and press &enterkey; to continue. Next you'll be asked to -select your country, with the choices including countries where your -language is spoken. If it's not on the short list, a list of all the -countries in the world is available. - - - -You may be asked to confirm your keyboard layout. Choose the default unless -you know better. - - - -Now sit back while debian-installer detects some of your hardware, and -loads the rest of itself from CD, floppy, USB, etc. - - - -Next the installer will try to detect your network hardware and set up -networking by DHCP. If you are not on a network or do not have DHCP, you -will be given the opportunity to configure the network manually. - - - -Now it is time to partition your disks. First you will be given the -opportunity to automatically partition either an entire drive, or free -space on a drive. This is recommended for new users or anyone in a hurry, -but if you do not want to autopartition, choose manual from the menu. - - - -On the next screen you will see your partition table, how the partitions -will be formatted, and where they will be mounted. Select a partition to -modify or delete it. If you did automatic partitioning, you should just be -able to choose "Finished partitioning" from the menu to use what it set up. -Remember to assign at least one partition for swap space and to mount a -partition on /. has more information -about partitioning. - - - -Now &d-i; formats your partitions and starts to install the base system, -which can take a while. That is followed by installing a kernel. - - - -The last step is to install a boot loader. If the installer detects -other operating systems on your computer, it will add them to the boot menu -and let you know. -By default GRUB will be installed to the master boot -record of the first harddrive, which is generally a good choice. You'll be -given the opportunity to override that choice and install it elsewhere. - - - - -&d-i; will now tell you that the installation has -finished. Remove the cdrom or other boot media and hit &enterkey; -to reboot your machine. It should boot up into the next stage of the install -process, which is explained in . - - - -If you need more information on the install process, see -. - - - - - - Send us an installation report - - -If you successfully managed an installation with &d-i;, -please take time to provide us with a report. There is a template -named install-report.template in the -/root directory of a freshly -installed system. Please fill it out and file it as a bug against the -package installation-reports, as explained in -. - - - -If you did not reach base-config or ran into other trouble, you -probably found a bug in debian-installer. To improve the installer it -is necessary that we know about them, so please take the time to -report them. You can use an installation report to report problems; -if the install completely fails, see . - - - - - - And finally.. - - -We hope that your Debian installation is pleasant and that you find Debian -useful. You might want to read . - - - - -- cgit v1.2.3