Why cannot "*bootonly.iso" find "*disc1.iso" ?

I have extracted FreeBSD-9.0-RELEASE-i386-disc1.iso into a FAT32 partition (d:\FreeBSD-9.0-RELEASE-i386-disc1) .

Then I boot FreeBSD-9.0-RELEASE-i386-bootonly.iso and all seems ok, but it cannot find d:\FreeBSD-9.0-RELEASE-i386-disc1 and cannot install.


Sincerely!
 
bsdinstall(8), or maybe the install script running it, looks for an ISO label. But bootonly probably doesn't even look for that.

Since you already have the full disc1 ISO, why not just put that on a CD and boot from it?
 
wblock@ said:
bsdinstall(8), or maybe the install script running it, looks for an ISO label. But bootonly probably doesn't even look for that.

Since you already have the full disc1 ISO, why not just put that on a CD and boot from it?
Because the machine has no CD drive. I use grub4dos to start bootonly:

Code:
title install FreeBSD 9.0
find --set-root /FreeBSD-9.0-RELEASE-i386-bootonly.iso
map --mem /FreeBSD-9.0-RELEASE-i386-bootonly.iso (hd32)
map --hook
chainloader (hd32)
boot

disc1 ISO is too big for grub4dos to start it directly as it maps the ISO to memory .
 
FreeBSD doesn't use drive letters such as D:. You need to mount the partition. Or, simply choose FTP and install via the Internet. That is how the bootonly disc is typically used.
 
dave said:
FreeBSD doesn't use drive letters such as D:. You need to mount the partition. Or, simply choose FTP and install via the Internet. That is how the bootonly disc is typically used.
How to mount the FAT32 partition in bootonly?
 
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