Boot Disk Creation

A boot disk can be handy in several situations, including:

To create a boot disk, you should now insert a blank, formatted diskette into your floppy drive (see Figure 5-23).

After a short delay, your boot disk will be created; remove it from your floppy drive and label it clearly. Note that if you would like to create a boot disk after the installation, you'll be able to do so. For more information, please see the mkbootdisk man page, by typing man mkbootdisk at the shell prompt.

If you make changes to your kernel, and you boot your system with the boot disk (instead of LILO), make sure you create a new boot disk.

Figure 5-23. Creating Your Boot Disk

Notes

[1]

LILO (the LInux LOader) is automatically set up during a workstation installation. LILO enables you to boot Red Hat Linux without having to use a diskette.