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Ubuntu 6.06 Dapper Drake (and others I'm sure) do support this. These instructions are intended for a USB Harddrive but they have worked for me for a 2GB Flash Drive.
There are a few complications to fix if you were to go with this solution.
To do this, you would go about installing as usual until you reached the partitioning dialogue. Instead of choosing an internal IDE HD, you would choose the SCSI drive the system detected. [This should look like SCSI (0,0,0) (sda)] If you have more than one SCSI drive, it's probably the last one.
When the installation reaches the GRUB bootloader stage, it will ask you if you want to install on the internal hard drive, Say no then enter /dev/sda in the next screen.
When prompted to reboot the system press Alt+F2 to get a basic console, and press enter to activate it. Type the following commands:
mount -t proc /target/proc
chroot /target
vim /etc/mkinitramfs/modules
Add the following to the end of the file
ehci-hcd
usb-storage
scsi-mod
sd-mod
If the drive is on IEEE1394 you also need to add:
ieee1394
ohci1394
sbp2
Save and close the file
Next:
vim /etc/mkinitramfs/initramfs.conf
At the very beginning of the file add:
WAIT=10 (This will stall the GRUB long enough for the drive to mount)
mkinitram -o /boot/initrd.img-2.6.15-16-386 /lib/modules/2.6.15-16-386
The paths should match the kernel version of your installation
Almost Done
vim /boot/grub/menu.1st
find the lines that look like:
## default grub root device
## e.g. groot=(hd0,0)
# groot=(hd1,0)
Change the final line to read 'groot=(hd0,0)' instead.
Find another section which looks like:
title Ubuntu, kernel x.x.x-x-x
root (hd1,0)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-x.x.x-x-x root=/dev/sda1/ ro quiet splash
initrd /boot/initrd.img-x.x.x-x-x
boot
title Ubuntu, kernel x.x.x-x-x
root (hd1,0)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-x.x.x-x-x root=/dev/sda1/ ro single
initrd /boot/initrd.img-x.x.x-x-x
boot
title Ubuntu, memtest86+
root (hd1,0)
kernel /boot/memtest86+.bin
boot
Change all instances of (hd1,0) in this section to read (hd0,0).
Save and close.
Type exit in the console and press Alt+F1 to return to the main screen. Reboot the system.
Alternately, mount your thumb drive. (This is specifically for running from an Ubuntu 6.06 Live CD with a USB drive. The Live CD looks for a volume labled casper-cow at startup and theoretically you can take your Computer with you anywhere using this technique. It has never worked for me.)
Enter df -h to list mounted volumes.
Your thumb drive will most likely be /dev/sda1 (or sda0)
sudo mkfs.ext3 -b 4096 -L caper-cow /dev/sda1 (Or you could use mkfs.vfat if you prefer the FAT filesystem)
Reboot the machine and quickly insert the Live CD, if it does not load automatically on your machine, F2 at bios will probably allow you to choose for it to do so. Press F4 at the First Screen, add a space to the end of the list of arguments that appeared and type persistent. With fingers crossed, this will work and you can install programs, change settings, create files, shut down, go to your buddies house and stick the CD in his box, reboot, and see your system all without altering his OS.
There are a few complications to fix if you were to go with this solution.
To do this, you would go about installing as usual until you reached the partitioning dialogue. Instead of choosing an internal IDE HD, you would choose the SCSI drive the system detected. [This should look like SCSI (0,0,0) (sda)] If you have more than one SCSI drive, it's probably the last one.
When the installation reaches the GRUB bootloader stage, it will ask you if you want to install on the internal hard drive, Say no then enter /dev/sda in the next screen.
When prompted to reboot the system press Alt+F2 to get a basic console, and press enter to activate it. Type the following commands:
mount -t proc /target/proc
chroot /target
vim /etc/mkinitramfs/modules
Add the following to the end of the file
ehci-hcd
usb-storage
scsi-mod
sd-mod
If the drive is on IEEE1394 you also need to add:
ieee1394
ohci1394
sbp2
Save and close the file
Next:
vim /etc/mkinitramfs/initramfs.conf
At the very beginning of the file add:
WAIT=10 (This will stall the GRUB long enough for the drive to mount)
mkinitram -o /boot/initrd.img-2.6.15-16-386 /lib/modules/2.6.15-16-386
The paths should match the kernel version of your installation
Almost Done
vim /boot/grub/menu.1st
find the lines that look like:
## default grub root device
## e.g. groot=(hd0,0)
# groot=(hd1,0)
Change the final line to read 'groot=(hd0,0)' instead.
Find another section which looks like:
title Ubuntu, kernel x.x.x-x-x
root (hd1,0)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-x.x.x-x-x root=/dev/sda1/ ro quiet splash
initrd /boot/initrd.img-x.x.x-x-x
boot
title Ubuntu, kernel x.x.x-x-x
root (hd1,0)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-x.x.x-x-x root=/dev/sda1/ ro single
initrd /boot/initrd.img-x.x.x-x-x
boot
title Ubuntu, memtest86+
root (hd1,0)
kernel /boot/memtest86+.bin
boot
Change all instances of (hd1,0) in this section to read (hd0,0).
Save and close.
Type exit in the console and press Alt+F1 to return to the main screen. Reboot the system.
Alternately, mount your thumb drive. (This is specifically for running from an Ubuntu 6.06 Live CD with a USB drive. The Live CD looks for a volume labled casper-cow at startup and theoretically you can take your Computer with you anywhere using this technique. It has never worked for me.)
Enter df -h to list mounted volumes.
Your thumb drive will most likely be /dev/sda1 (or sda0)
sudo mkfs.ext3 -b 4096 -L caper-cow /dev/sda1 (Or you could use mkfs.vfat if you prefer the FAT filesystem)
Reboot the machine and quickly insert the Live CD, if it does not load automatically on your machine, F2 at bios will probably allow you to choose for it to do so. Press F4 at the First Screen, add a space to the end of the list of arguments that appeared and type persistent. With fingers crossed, this will work and you can install programs, change settings, create files, shut down, go to your buddies house and stick the CD in his box, reboot, and see your system all without altering his OS.
Install Atmel Flip Ubuntu Live Cd Download
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Ubuntu Live Cd Root Password
Booting Ubuntu on the Asus Transformer Book T100. Swipe from the right side of the screen to bring up the Charms menu. Tap “Settings.” 3. Choose the “Change PC settings” option at the bottom. On the following screen tap “Update and recovery.” 5. At the next screen, choose “recovery.” 6. I am unable to boot from USB/CD into a live Ubuntu session to proceed with install. Esc or F12 didn't work and I can't seem to be able to enter the bios settings.