| EXTLINUX is a new Syslinux derivative, which boots from a Linux |
| ext2/ext3 filesystem. |
| |
| It works the same way as SYSLINUX (see doc/syslinux.txt), with a few |
| slight modifications. |
| |
| 1. The installer is run on a *mounted* filesystem. Run the extlinux |
| installer on the directory in which you want extlinux installed: |
| |
| extlinux --install /boot |
| |
| Specify --install (-i) to install for the first time, or |
| --update (-U) to upgrade a previous installation. |
| |
| NOTE: this doesn't have to be the root directory of a filesystem. |
| If /boot is a filesystem, you can do: |
| |
| mkdir -p /boot/extlinux |
| extlinux --install /boot/extlinux |
| |
| ... to create a subdirectory and install extlinux in it. |
| /boot/extlinux is the recommended location for extlinux. |
| |
| |
| 2. The configuration file is called "extlinux.conf", and is expected |
| to be found in the same directory as extlinux is installed in. |
| Since 4.00 "syslinux.cfg" is also tried if "extlinux.conf" is not |
| found. |
| |
| |
| 3. Pathnames can be absolute or relative; if absolute (with a leading |
| slash), they are relative to the root of the filesystem on which |
| extlinux is installed (/boot in the example above), if relative, |
| they are relative to the extlinux directory. |
| |
| extlinux supports subdirectories, but the total path length is |
| limited to 511 characters. |
| |
| |
| 4. EXTLINUX now supports symbolic links. However, extremely long |
| symbolic links might hit the pathname limit. Also, please note |
| that absolute symbolic links are interpreted from the root *of the |
| filesystem*, which might be different from how the running system |
| would interpret it (e.g. in the case of a separate /boot |
| partition.) Therefore, use relative symbolic links if at all |
| possible. |
| |
| |
| 5. EXTLINUX now has "boot-once" support. The boot-once information is |
| stored in an on-disk datastructure, part of extlinux.sys, called |
| the "Auxillary Data Vector". The Auxilliary Data Vector is also |
| available to COM32 modules that want to store small amounts of |
| information. |
| |
| To set the boot-once information, do: |
| |
| extlinux --once 'command' /boot/extlinux |
| |
| where 'command' is any command you could enter at the Syslinux |
| command line. It will be executed on the next boot and then |
| erased. |
| |
| To clear the boot-once information, do: |
| |
| extlinux --clear-once /boot/extlinux |
| |
| If EXTLINUX is used on a RAID-1, this is recommended, since under |
| certain circumstances a RAID-1 rebuild can "resurrect" the |
| boot-once information otherwise. |
| |
| To clear the entire Auxillary Data Vector, do: |
| |
| extlinux --reset-adv /boot/extlinux |
| |
| This will erase all data stored in the ADV, including boot-once. |
| |
| The --once, --clear-once, and --reset-adv commands can be combined |
| with --install or --update, if desired. The ADV is preserved |
| across updates, unless --reset-adv is specified. |
| |
| |
| Note that EXTLINUX installs in the filesystem partition like a |
| well-behaved bootloader :) Thus, it needs a master boot record in the |
| partition table; the mbr.bin shipped with Syslinux should work well. |
| To install it just do: |
| |
| cat mbr.bin > /dev/XXX |
| |
| ... where /dev/XXX is the appropriate master device, e.g. /dev/hda, |
| and make sure the correct partition in set active. |
| |
| |
| If you have multiple disks in a software RAID configuration, the |
| preferred way to boot is: |
| |
| - Create a separate RAID-1 partition for /boot. Note that the Linux |
| RAID-1 driver can span as many disks as you wish. |
| |
| - Install the MBR on *each disk*, and mark the RAID-1 partition |
| active. |
| |
| - Run "extlinux --raid --install /boot" to install extlinux. This |
| will install it on all the drives in the RAID-1 set, which means |
| you can boot any combination of drives in any order. |
| |
| |
| |
| It is not required to re-run the extlinux installer after installing |
| new kernels. If you are using ext3 journalling, however, it might be |
| desirable to do so, since running the extlinux installer will flush |
| the log. Otherwise a dirty shutdown could cause some of the new |
| kernel image to still be in the log. This is a general problem for |
| boot loaders on journalling filesystems; it is not specific to |
| extlinux. The "sync" command does not flush the log on the ext3 |
| filesystem. |
| |
| |
| The Syslinux Project boot loaders support chain loading other |
| operating systems via a separate module, chain.c32 (located in |
| com32/modules/chain.c32). To use it, specify a LABEL in the |
| configuration file with KERNEL chain.c32 and APPEND [hd|fd]<number> |
| [<partition>] |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| # Windows CE/ME/NT, a very dense operating system. |
| # Second partition (2) on the first hard disk (hd0); |
| # Linux would *typically* call this /dev/hda2 or /dev/sda2. |
| LABEL cement |
| KERNEL chain.c32 |
| APPEND hd0 2 |
| |
| See also doc/menu.txt. |
| |