On Fri Aug 27 1999 at 07:41, "Billingham, Jason" wrote:

>       I've recently been screwing around, and installing different
> versions and distributions of Linux on my laptop, just to see the
> differences. (IBM 380 ED, 166Mhz, 80MB Ram, Internal IDE CD-Rom)  Its
> actually been quite informative...from the more complex installation
> (Slakware) to the easier Setup program related distributions (Red
> Hat/Mandrake).  My one question, which I haven't really come across until
> now, is how can you view all the information that prints on the screen when
> Linux is booting?  Is that information written to a file somewhere so that I
> can view it and see what it says?  I wanted to get those files, (find a
> modem that works with my laptop) and upload them to my other machine.  I
> just want to compare the info, from one dist to the next....just for the
> heck of it.  I'm not exactly the most experienced user, but I'm learning :)

My experience is with RedHat, but I've got experience with slugware
and will never touch it again with a ten-foot pole...

First thing to do is to "linux vga=ask" at the lilo boot prompt, then
choose the highest resolution possible.  (For 2.2.x kernels, for some
very nice framebuffer resolutions, try vga=773 or vga=775 -- if your
monitor can handle it).

Then edit /etc/inittab and do this for the getty running on the first
console:

1:12345:respawn:/sbin/mingetty --noclear


This should be the getty running on redhat and mandrake, similar for
other distributions.  If it's running /sbin/mgetty or /sbin/agetty,
then check the man page for the syntax to stop the screen clearing.

Cheers
Tony

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