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SlackwareHowTo
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<Gniarf> You can make your own Slackware image for coLinux if you follow those steps : * get the ZipSlack version (small UMSDOS release of Slackware) * install it on your d: disk (second hard drive, you need one of course, formatted as FAT32) * boot it at least once to create the various /dev files * from your working coLinux image, mount your d: as umsdos and copy your d:\zipslack in a new filesystem image * create the necessary /dev/cobd0 files ..., edit its /etc/fstab... You can install the usual Slackware package like X, perl, python, gcc, KDE, VNC...
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<Gniarf> You can make your own Slackware image for coLinux if you follow those steps : * get the ZipSlack version (small UMSDOS release of Slackware) * install it on your d: disk (second hard drive, you need one of course, formatted as FAT32) * boot it at least once to create the various /dev files * from your working coLinux image, mount your d: as umsdos and copy your d:\zipslack in a new filesystem image * create the necessary /dev/cobd0 files ..., edit its /etc/fstab... You can remove some sound and CD related software, since they are useless under coLinux. So there are some software that make this image more of a demo image than of a really minimal image. At least one other coLinux user besides me has been using this image with success - and pleasure. It may be interesting with people very familiar with Slackware and willing to stay with their familar distro. Most core and base applications and network packages A,N. wget and ssh are working fine, but there are no X and no development tools - unless you install them. You can install the usual Slackware package like X, perl, python, gcc, KDE, VNC... (symptom : swaret and slackpkg act silly, installpkg and other act weirdly . ok, you need to use the later versions of swaret or slackpkg, NOT the version you can find in ftp://ftp.slackware.at/slackware-9.1/extra/ . get more recent versions. trust me on that)