Maybe new ones, but many system, even though they have newer processors, the general system design and bios is older and have issues with usb HD boots.
I have seen this quite a bit firsthand. Particularly when dealing with semi-embedded type systems, running low voltage versions of CPU's or SOC's rather than the latest top speed heat generators. We do most of our test booting/configuration off of USB sticks during configuration, for later deployment on IDE-Flash modules. We often have to format our usb sticks to mimic zip cylinder count etc before being able to successfully boot them. A handy utility to do this is the USB key formating program available for download from HP (windows program). Most of the same BIOSes have no problem booting smaller USB sticks (512 mb and smaller) as it seem they were mostly designed at the time these BIOSes were designed and are already formatted this way. Mikael Ostensson On 3/5/07, MobileLinux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Not too many BIOS boot from USB HDs. Wrong. In the Wintel-PC world of today, most BIOSes are Award Phoenix or somesuch. There are but a handful of BIOS vendors and they've handled USB for years. Yaboot on PowerPC can also do it. More obscure architectures, I don't know. Lacking BIOS support, you can use kexec from CD to switch kernel/systems to USB, like chroot but actually switching kernels. Google for docs. Another interesting link, http://advancemame.sourceforge.net/boot-readme.html If you are not developing T2, but just want a rescue system on USB "right now" without fiddling around, grml.org is an excellent choice. Depending on drive size you want grml2hd (for USB > 2 gig or so) or grml2usb (for smaller USB devices or anything flash). ----------------------------------------------------------- If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of: unsubscribe t2
----------------------------------------------------------- If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing, send mail to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of: unsubscribe t2
