Hi,<br>I haven't tried the same things. What i've done was to burn on a cd-r the rescuecd image, then boot from it, and choose installation from hard drive, where i specified the location of the .iso file of the fedora image i had downloaded. but each time i tried this i got the same error message, so i gave up and installed from dvd...<br>but i am very curious to know why it didn't work. i thought it was because it was on a logical partition (ie, part of the extended partition containing my system files), but you're telling me that i'm wrong... is the logical partition you installed from part of the same extended partition that contains your os?<br><br>cyrill<br><br><br><b><i>Christophe T <christoph.t@gmail.com></i></b> wrote:<blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"> 2007/6/10, Cyrill <cduneauyahoo.com>:<br>> Hi,<br>> and thanks for the answers.<br>> I think my mistake was to assume that
the installation would work from<br>> another logical partition, while it should be done from another primary<br>> partition... Not sure, but it seems very likely to me...<br>><br>> Anyway, I have installed fc7 from a dvd-rw, and am right now "yuming" the<br>> planet-ccrma packages...<br>><br>> thanks again,<br>><br>> cyrill<br><br>Well, today I've installed the fedora7-x86-64 from a logical partition<br>sda6 (logical, and not lvm)...<br>Toi make it easier I have copied the iso file in the root of the<br>partition. I have just had to choose the right partition (/dev/sda6)<br>and install ran from it (much faster than from a cd or dvd moreover).<br>I've used a method I ve recently heard about, wich consists in copying<br>the /isolinux folder from the iso into /boot folder (no need to burn a<br>media, you can use mount for it) and then manually edit a new title in<br>grub.conf:<br>title Fedora Core 7 install #for example<br> root (hd0,0)
#adapt it to your own config<br> kernel /isolinux/vmlinuz<br> initrd /isolinux/initrd.img<br><br>Reboot on the new title. Then choose install from hard drive, indicate<br>the partition and the path of the iso in that partition (without a<br>"/"). And that's it! The only condition is to have the iso in a<br>partition you won't use during install.<br>Sorry if my explanation is a little off topic related to your problem<br>but I'm so enthousiastic with that new method...<br>I'm quite surprised it didn't work in your case...<br>Did you actually try to install with your iso file on a logical partition?<br><br>Best regards<br>-- <br>Christophe T<br><br>_______________________________________________<br>PlanetCCRMA mailing list<br>PlanetCCRMA@ccrma.stanford.edu<br>http://ccrma-mail.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/planetccrma<br></cduneauyahoo.com></blockquote><br><p> 
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