5. How to boot a Umsdos system
5.1 Loadlin
The package lodlin15.tgz available from sunsite.unc.edu
in /pub/Linux/system/Bootutils
. This utility
is particularly suited to boot a Umsdos system. Generally
all you need to do is
Boot DOS
C:>loadlinx zimage root=D:
where zimage is a normal kernel image (compressed) simply copied
somewhere in the DOS drive. D:
is the DOS drive where you
have installed Linux.
5.2 From a floppy
Booting a Umsdos system from a floppy is not different from
booting a Ext2 system. You need a kernel zImage file properly
initialize to locate your root Umsdos partition. This
is generally achieved using the command rdev
. The following
sequence will initialize a zImage and put it on a floppy.
rdev zImage /dev/hda1
rdev -R zImage 0
dd if=zImage bs=8192 of=/dev/fd0
If this looks confusing, just format a boot-able DOS floppy and put the following component on it.
- loadlin.exe
- loadlinx.exe
- zimage
and setup the autoexec.bat like this
loadlinx zimage rw root=C:
5.3 LILO
LILO, the official Linux boot loader can also be used to boot a Umsdos system. I have no experience with it though. Since 1.1.60, it should work. Please email if you know something.
5.4 How to defragment a Umsdos partition
It can be done using any popular DOS tool. There is nothing particular about file produced by Umsdos. And Umsdos do not expect anything particular (directory layout, directory entry sequence, etc...) from the file system under it.
As far as I know, there is no Linux tool to achieve this.
5.5 Advance tricks
Umsdos rely on the --linux-.---
which rely on the
DOS directory. Some users may want to experiment
a bit. The utility udosctl
part of the umsdos_progs
package (containing umssync
and umssetup
) allows
basic directory operation (listing, deletion) independently
on the --linux-.---
and the DOS directory.
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