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Because of their small or non-existent footprint, micro-Linuxes are especially suited to run on laptops -- particularly if you use a company-provided laptop running Windows9x/NT. Or for installation purposes using another non Linux machine. There are several micro Linux distributions out there that boot from one or two floppies and run off a ramdisk.
See
http://www.linuxhq.com or
http://www.txdirect.net/users/mdfranz/tinux.html for details. You may find a FAQ and a mailing list about boot-floppies at
http://os.inf.tu-dresden.de/~sr1/boot-floppies/faq.html . Also a BootDisk-HOWTO is available. Thanks to Matthew D. Franz maintainer of Trinux for this tips and collecting most of the following URLs.
- MuLinux
http://www4.pisoft.it/~andreoli/mulinux.html by Michele Andreoli
- tomsrtbt
http://www.toms.net/~toehser/rb/ "The most Linux on one floppy. (distribution or panic disk)." by Tom Oehser
- Trinux
http://www.trinux.org "A Linux Security Toolkit" by Matthew D. Franz
- LRP "Linux Router Project"
http://www.psychosis.com/linux-router/
- hal91
http://home.sol.no/~okolaas/hal91.html
- floppyfw
http://www.zelow.no/floppyfw/ by Thomas Lundquist
- minilinux
http://alberti.crs4.it/softw are/mini-linux/ (seems no more valid) or
http://www.kiarchive.ru/pub/linux/mini-linux/
- monkey
http://www.spsselib.hiedu.cz/monkey/docs/english.htm
- DLX
http://www.wu-wien.ac.at/usr/h93/h9301726/dlx.html by Erich Boem
- C-RAMDISK
http://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/kernel/images/
- BABEL
http://celsius-software.hypermart.net/babel/ "A mini-distribution to run games"
- Xdenu
http://xdenu.tcm.hut.fi/
- LOAF
http://www.ecks.org/loaf/
- pocket-linux
http://pocket-linux.coven.vmh.net/
- FLUF
http://www.upce.cz/~kolo/fluf.htm
- YARD
http://www.croftj.net/~fawcett/yard/
- TLinux
http://members.xoom.com/ror4/tlinux/
- ODL
http://linux.apostols.org/guru/wen/
- SmallLinux by Steven Gibson
http://smalllinux.netpedia.net/ Three disk micro-distribution of Linux and utilities. Based on kernel 1.2.11. Root disk is ext2 format and has
fdisk
and mkfs.ext2
so that a harddisk install can be done. Useful to boot up on old machines with less than 4MB of RAM.
- cLIeNUX by Rick Hohensee client-use-oriented Linux distribution
ftp://ftp.blueznet.com /pub/colorg
- linux-lite by Paul Gortmaker for very small systems with less than 2MB RAM and 10MB harddisk space (1.x.x kernel)
http://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/kernel
- See also the packages at MetaLab formerly known as SunSite
http://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/recovery/!INDEX.html and the Boot-Disk-HOWTO
- You may also consider some of the boot floppies provided by various distributions falling into this category, e.g. the boot/rescue floppy of Debian/GNU Linux.
- If you like to build your own flavour of a boot floppy you may do so manually, as described in the BootDisk-HOWTO or using some helper tools, for instance
mkrboot
(provided at least as a Debian/GNU Linux package) or pcinitrd
, which is part of the PCMCIA-CS package by David Hinds.
- Also you might try to build your Linux system on a ZIP drive. This is described in the ZIP-Install-mini-HOWTO.
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