Linux FAQ's & Manuals
- Linux Scripts
- Debian Install
- Bash For Beginners
- Bugzilla
- Consultants Guide
- GCC Manual
- Linux Command Line Tools
- Gnu Pascal Coding Standards
- Linux Installation Disk
- Labolatorium Linux(PL)
- Budowa systemu Linux(PL)
- Linux Dictionary
- Network Administrators
- Rescue Disk for Linux
- Red Hat Installation
- Red Hat Customization
- Red Hat Getting Started
- Red Hat Security
- Secure & Optimize
- Slackware Manual
- Suse Support
- Suse FAQ
They suggest that rather than wait for a half-baked new Windows operating system, consumer and enterprise users would have far better security with Linux...
Linux.com: FSFE's Fiduciary License Agreement is No Panacea
This week FSF Europe announced the release of its Fiduciary License Agreement, a form of copyright assignment in which a free software project can place its collective copyright under the control of a single organization or trustee...
Linux Kernel Monkey Log: Free Linux Driver Development Questions and Answers!
Due to all of the responses I've gotten for the Linux driver announcement I have gotten a lot of questions asked to me about this. Here is a list of some of the most common ones, and their answers...
internetnews.com: Linux Appliances Get New rPaths
The Linux appliance market for the most part has been more about building appliances than managing them. Today, rPath is taking care of both...
Reuters/CNET News: Eight Nations Set to Get $150 Laptops
From Brazil to Pakistan, some of the world's poorest children will peer across the digital divide this month--reading electronic books, shooting digital video, creating music and chatting with classmates online...
4.10. installing via http
the http dialog applies only if you are installing from an http server (if you selected http in the installation method dialog). this dialog prompts you for information about the http server from which you are installing red hat enterprise linux.
enter the name or ip address of the http site you are installing from, and the name of the directory containing the redhat/ installation files for your architecture. for example, if the http site contains the directory /mirrors/redhat/arch/redhat/, enter /mirrors/redhat/arch/ (where arch is replaced with the architecture type of your system, such as i386, ia64, ppc, or s390). if everything was specified properly, a message box appears indicating that base/hdlist is being retrieved.
next, the welcome dialog appears.
![]() | tip | |
|---|---|---|
you can save disk space by using the iso images you have already copied to the server. to accomplish this, install red hat enterprise linux using iso images without copying them into a single tree by loopback mounting them. for each iso image:
|

