install without CD-ROM/DVD

Hi all:

my pc dosen't have any CD/DVD reader.
USB is o.k.
How can I install the system without CD/DVD reader??
Pls. help.
Thanks.
 
yes
You can format usb flash with UFS, set active, copy CD_ROM content to flash drive.
Boot from flash and install manualy.
 
swmok said:
Pls. help.
Alternatively you can install from an ftp server.
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/handbook/install-media.html
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/handbook/install-diff-media.html

media.png
 
Floppy drive installed? Internet connection?
Write floppy image, then boot system from this floppy and set installation from FTP server.
 
Daemony said:
Floppy drive installed? Internet connection?
Write floppy image, then boot system from this floppy and set installation from FTP server.

This solution, even if it's annoying, works, you can just dd the flopy images into a USB and boot. Of course you have 3 floppies, so you have to do it 3 times.

I gonna try the script to convert iso in ufs, it may be a good solution for the future...maybe.
 
I normally just install FreeBSD in another machine, then dump entire system to a file, take the laptop HDD out, hook it up in that machine (by adapter) and restore the dump file into that laptop HDD
 
No removable-media drives?

NO REMOVABLE-MEDIA DRIVES?​
  • If your soon-to-be-FreeBSD machine lacks both a CD drive and a floppy, doesn’t have the power cables or physical space to install a CD drive, cannot boot off a USB device for whatever reason, and you don’t yet have the knowledge to set up a PXE nstaller (this is a lot of “ifs,” but a whole slew of older small rackmount servers fit this description), don’t despair. You can get a CD drive on your computer for the install.
  • The safest thing to do is remove your hard drive and install it on a system with a removable-media drive. Unlike some other operating systems, FreeBSD will let you install on one machine and run on another. If that’s not an option, here’s a trick I’ve used more than once. (It might electrocute the hardware or yourself, and will certainly invalidate your warranty. The author is not responsible for barbecued hardware or system administrators!)
  • Find an old computer running any operating system with an IDE CD drive. Put the old machine next to your FreeBSD box, unplug it, and open the case. Open the case of your FreeBSD machine. On the old computer, detach the CD drive’s IDE cable at the controller end. Leave the power attached to the CD drive. Attach the dangling IDE cable from the old machine to an open port on your FreeBSD system’s IDE controller. Turn on the old computer; the CD will power up even though it’s not attached to the old computer’s IDE controller. Now turn on the new computer, and it will pick up the CD as an attached device.
  • After the install, put everything back just the way you found it, and nobody will ever know.

extract from Book Absoulute FreeBSD 2nd Edition page 46 .
 
First, I would like to say "Thank you" as all you guys are so helpful. I ask the same question in other forum and get no reply. Thanks again.

Actually, my case quite is stupid and complicated. Here is my situation:
I've got an old notebook computer (10-year-old).
The CD-ROM doesn't work.
Floppy drive and USB are OK.
No built-in ethernet.
PCMCIA slot plus 3M PCMCIA network card works well in Win98 NOW.
I've check the hardware list. The 3M card is workable in FreeBSD 7.
No UNIX machines around ==> cannot format the USB drive to UFS.

My Task:
Change this OLD Win98 notebook computer to FreeBSD 7 file/web server.

Pls. HELP!!
 
How about installing via serial port? I have never done it and have no idea how to do it, but I remember that our ISP once did it with our old mail server.

A quick Google search turned up this which looks useful, YMMV.
 
I installed on a 2,5" HDD with a 2,5" to 3,5" adapter several times. That's no big problem.
You only need to change fstab after the installation finished if you leave your PC's hard drives in the PC while installing. Then probably the 2,5" HDD is ad1 and not ad0 which it will be in your notebook.

BTW I bet you can't boot from USB on a 10 year old notebook, so the adapter seems to be the only chance to install FreeBSD on the notebook.
 
Run UNetbootin and let it download automatically the FreBSD image and install it on your USB key.
Then if you can boot on your key, you can install FreeBSD by FTP, or from the key itself as explained here (2.13.4 Installing from an MS-DOS® Partition). If I remember correctly I had to replace “e: \bin” by “e: \base” and so on (without the space character).
 
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