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<!-- retain these comments for translator revision tracking -->
<!-- $Id$ -->
<sect3 id="iso-scan">
<title>Looking for the &debian; Installer ISO Image</title>
<para>
When installing via the <emphasis>hd-media</emphasis> method, there
will be a moment where you need to find and mount the &debian; Installer
iso image in order to get the rest of the installation files. The
component <command>iso-scan</command> does exactly this.
</para><para>
At first, <command>iso-scan</command> automatically mounts all block
devices (e.g. partitions and logical volumes) which have some known
filesystem on them and sequentially searches for filenames ending with
<filename>.iso</filename> (or <filename>.ISO</filename> for that
matter). Beware that the first attempt scans only files in the root
directory and in the first level of subdirectories (i.e. it finds
<filename>/<replaceable>whatever</replaceable>.iso</filename>,
<filename>/data/<replaceable>whatever</replaceable>.iso</filename>,
but not
<filename>/data/tmp/<replaceable>whatever</replaceable>.iso</filename>).
After an iso image has been found, <command>iso-scan</command> checks
its content to determine if the image is a valid &debian; iso image or
not. In the former case we are done, in the latter
<command>iso-scan</command> seeks for another image.
</para><para>
In case the previous attempt to find an installer iso image fails,
<command>iso-scan</command> will ask you whether you would like to
perform a more thorough search. This pass doesn't just look into the
topmost directories, but really traverses whole filesystem.
</para><para>
If <command>iso-scan</command> does not discover your installer iso
image, reboot back to your original operating system and check if the
image is named correctly (ending in <filename>.iso</filename>), if it is
placed on a filesystem recognizable by &d-i;, and if it is not
corrupted (verify the checksum). Experienced Unix users could do this
without rebooting on the second console.
</para><para>
Note that the partition (or disk) hosting the ISO image can't be reused during the
installation process as it will be in use by the installer. To work-around
this, and provided that you have enough system memory, the installer can copy
the ISO image into RAM before mounting it. This is controlled by the low
priority <literal>iso-scan/copy_iso_to_ram</literal> debconf question (it is
only asked if the memory requirement is met).
</para>
</sect3>
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