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- [This is an introductory README with meta-information for people
- who have not yet booted the CD-ROM. The full documentation,
- after booting, is available as "CREDITS-README.txt" after booting,
- or "CREDITS.TXT" in this directory.]
-
- Gentle Reader,
-
- This CD-ROM is the Linuxcare Bootable Business Card. You are most
- likely seeing these files because, instead of booting this CD-ROM
- in a computer, you have accessed it under some other operating
- system. This tiny marvel contains around 100 megabytes of software.
- You can take advantage of only a small fraction of it under any
- other operating system other than Linux.
-
- The Linuxcare Bootable Business Card has a number of uses, many of
- which are related to the recovery or repair of a damaged or
- malfunctioning Linux system. It also has some utility for
- diagnosing or repairing problems with installations of other
- operating systems, for general PC maintenance, for network
- diagnosis and administration, and for getting a minimal functioning
- system running on a computer in a pinch. Familiarity with Linux
- system administration is assumed, and users are cautioned that
- the software included on this CD-ROM is very powerful.
-
- Unlike a traditional floppy-based rescue system, this system
- contains many dozens of megabytes of software, and is thus much more
- complete and frequently more comfortable to use for a repair job.
- In particular, the Linuxcare Bootable Business card has extensive
- networking support, which is not a common feature of single-floppy
- rescue systems.
-
- All of the nifty functionality of this system is NOT AVAILABLE BY
- BROWSING IT THIS WAY UNDER ANOTHER OPERATING SYSTEM, and you will
- not get very much use out of the CD unless you actually boot it!
- (The main contents of the CD are all contained within the large file
- "singularity", which cannot normally be read by other systems.)
-
- Booting this ordinarily requires an IDE or PCI SCSI CD-ROM drive, or
- a CD-ROM drive which can be made to emulate one of these. Usually,
- you'll want to make your CD-ROM drive bootable using your BIOS
- setup program.
-
- [If you don't have a bootable CD-ROM drive, but your CD-ROM drive is
- IDE or PCI SCSI, you might still be able to use this CD-ROM for
- rescue purposes. You will need a bootable floppy drive and a spare
- floppy disk; you will also need a working computer. Use the other
- computer to write the file "lnx.img" from this directory onto the
- floppy (using "dd" under Unix, or "RAWRITE2.EXE" under DOS or
- Windows) onto the floppy. For instance, "dd if=lnx.img of=/dev/fd0"
- might work under Linux. Then boot from that floppy with this
- CD-ROM in your CD-ROM drive, and this disk should be detected and
- mounted normally. Once the system has booted, you may remove the
- floppy disk from the drive.]
-
- Most of the documentation, disclaimers, and copyright notices for
- this system are available after it has booted, so booting it is
- necessarily a high priority if you want to understand more about
- what it is, what it does, what the terms for its use are, etc.
-
- The web site for the Linuxcare Bootable Business Card is located
- at
-
- http://www.linuxcare.com/bootable_cd/
-
- and may contain some documentation, news about errata, and
- information about joining a mailing list for discussion and
- _informal_ support for this CD-ROM.
-
- Once again: If you want to see what this system can do, please
- actually boot it on a computer! Thanks.
-
- Best regards,
-
- The Linuxcare Bootable
- Business Card Team
-
- APPENDIX I
-
- For those who are especially curious about the "singularity" file: it
- is a compressed loopback filesystem, which may be read under Linux by
- Paul "Rusty" Russell's cloop.c compressed loopback filesystem kernel
- driver.
-
- This driver was originally written for this project, and is not yet
- available in the standard Linux kernel, but you can find it on this
- CD-ROM. The program "extract_compressed_fs" will allow you to
- decompress and view the contents of the "singularity" file under an
- ordinary Linux system.
-
-
- APPENDIX II
-
- The copyright notice for RAWRITE2.EXE is as follows:
-
- Version 2.0 Copyright 1992 Guy Helmer
- Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and
- its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted,
- provided that the above copyright notice appears in all copies and
- that both the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear
- in supporting documentation. This software is made available "as is",
- and
- GUY HELMER DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WITH
- REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION ALL IMPLIED
- WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE,
- AND IN NO EVENT SHALL GUY HELMER BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT
- OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS
- OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT
- (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE) OR STRICT LIABILITY, ARISING OUT OF OR IN
- CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
-
- The copyright notice for Tom's Root/Boot is as follows:
-
- *******************************************************************************
- * If you base something on it, use any of the scripts, distribute binaries or *
- * libraries from it, or distribute customized versions of it: You must credit *
- * tomsrtbt and include a pointer to http://www.toms.net/rb/ and tom@toms.net, *
- * and include this notice verbatim. Copyright Tom Oehser 1999. This notice in *
- * no way supercedes or nullifies any other protections on the component parts *
- * such as the BSD and GPL copyrights which apply to practically everything!!! *
- * Within these strictures you may redistribute, incorporate, copy, modify, or *
- * do anything else to it or with it that you like. Tomsrtbt has no warranties *
- * not even implied fitness or usefulness. If it breaks you keep both pieces. *
- *******************************************************************************
-
-
-
- CD-ROM: Built Sun Jan 16 05:47:54 PST 2000 by Linuxcare BBC team.
-