An underlying and/or related question:
Explanation of the "whys" of the "whats" occurring when Linux is "installed".


_The Background of My Question_
Historically I've been interested in optimizing a minimal Debian install.
My method has been repeated clean installs, sometimes multiple installs in one 
day. I've made enough progress that use of preseed.cfg files improves the 
mechanics if the installation process.

Some have questioned why I do this. I've found it a productive learning 
experience. I attempt things the normal user wouldn't. My failures force me to 
ask questions.

_The Immediate Problem_
I've become annoyed with the physical mechanics of installing from a DVD *or* a 
flash drive. The installer should be in/on its own partition of the hard disk 
and recognizable to GRUB2.

The closest approximation to an acceptable solution I've found is described at 
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2/ISOBoot and related pages.

That page is unsatisfactory in at least two ways:
1. It is unclear what is Ubuntu specific and what applies to Linux generally.
2. Loop mounting an image of the installation CD/DVD obscures what's happening.
    [An underlying goal *IS* understanding how Linux works.]

That the loop mounted installer can be launched by GRUB2 indicates that the 
image has everything needed. That a LIVE CD can also launch the installer 
suggests that what I want is possible.

The only hint I've had of what needs to be done comes from observing the output 
of update-grub reporting:
Generating grub configuration file ...
Found background image: /usr/share/images/desktop-base/desktop-grub.png
Found linux image: /boot/vmlinuz-3.16.0-4-686-pae
Found initrd image: /boot/initrd.img-3.16.0-4-686-pae
done

Have not been able to correctly apply that hint.

What should I be reading?
Is there something simple I've missed?
Thank you.


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