Fedora 13
Installation Guide
Installing Fedora 13 on x86, AMD64, and Intel 64 architectures
Edition 1.0
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Abstract
Provides documentation for the installation process.
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1. Quick Start for Experts
- I. Preparing for Installation
-
- 2. Obtaining Fedora
- 3. Making Fedora Media
- 4. Steps to Get You Started
- 5. System Specifications List
- II. The installation process
-
- 6. Booting the Installer
- 7. Installing on Intel® and AMD Systems
-
- 7.1. Graphical and Text Interfaces
- 7.2. The Graphical Installation Program User Interface
- 7.3. The Text Mode Installation Program User Interface
- 7.4. Starting the Installation Program
- 7.5. Selecting an Installation Method
- 7.6. Installation Method
- 7.7. Verifying Media
- 7.8. Welcome to Fedora
- 7.9. Language Selection
- 7.10. Keyboard Configuration
- 7.11. Storage Devices
- 7.12. Assign Storage Devices
- 7.13. Initializing the Hard Disk
- 7.14. Upgrading an Existing System
- 7.15. Setting the Hostname
- 7.16. Time Zone Configuration
- 7.17. Set the Root Password
- 7.18. Disk Partitioning Setup
- 7.19. Encrypt Partitions
- 7.20. Creating a Custom Layout or Modifying the Default Layout
- 7.21. Write changes to disk
- 7.22. x86, AMD64, and Intel® 64 Boot Loader Configuration
- 7.23. Package Group Selection
- 7.24. Installing Packages
- 7.25. Installation Complete
- 8. Troubleshooting Installation on an Intel® or AMD System
-
- 8.1. You are unable to boot Fedora
- 8.2. Trouble Beginning the Installation
- 8.3. Trouble During the Installation
- 8.4. Problems After Installation
-
- 8.4.1. Trouble With the Graphical GRUB Screen on an x86-based System?
- 8.4.2. Booting into a Graphical Environment
- 8.4.3. Problems with the X Window System (GUI)
- 8.4.4. Problems with the X Server Crashing and Non-Root Users
- 8.4.5. Problems When You Try to Log In
- 8.4.6. Is Your RAM Not Being Recognized?
- 8.4.7. Your Printer Does Not Work
- 8.4.8. Apache-based
httpd
service/Sendmail Hangs During Startup
- III. Advanced installation options
-
- 9. Boot Options
- 10. Installing Without Media
- 11. Setting Up an Installation Server
- 12. Installing Through VNC
- 13. Kickstart Installations
-
- 13.1. What are Kickstart Installations?
- 13.2. How Do You Perform a Kickstart Installation?
- 13.3. Creating the Kickstart File
- 13.4. Kickstart Options
- 13.5. Package Selection
- 13.6. Pre-installation Script
- 13.7. Post-installation Script
- 13.8. Making the Kickstart File Available
- 13.9. Making the Installation Tree Available
- 13.10. Starting a Kickstart Installation
- 14. Kickstart Configurator
-
- 14.1. Basic Configuration
- 14.2. Installation Method
- 14.3. Boot Loader Options
- 14.4. Partition Information
- 14.5. Network Configuration
- 14.6. Authentication
- 14.7. Firewall Configuration
- 14.8. Display Configuration
- 14.9. Package Selection
- 14.10. Pre-Installation Script
- 14.11. Post-Installation Script
- 14.12. Saving the File
- IV. After installation
-
- 15. Firstboot
- 16. Your Next Steps
- 17. Basic System Recovery
- 18. Upgrading Your Current System
- 19. Removing Fedora
- V. Technical appendixes
-
- A. An Introduction to Disk Partitions
-
- A.1. Hard Disk Basic Concepts
-
- A.1.1. It is Not What You Write, it is How You Write It
- A.1.2. Partitions: Turning One Drive Into Many
- A.1.3. Partitions within Partitions — An Overview of Extended Partitions
- A.1.4. Making Room For Fedora
- A.1.5. Partition Naming Scheme
- A.1.6. Disk Partitions and Other Operating Systems
- A.1.7. Disk Partitions and Mount Points
- A.1.8. How Many Partitions?
- B. ISCSI disks
- C. Disk Encryption
-
- C.1. What is block device encryption?
- C.2. Encrypting block devices using dm-crypt/LUKS
- C.3. Creating Encrypted Block Devices in Anaconda
- C.4. Creating Encrypted Block Devices on the Installed System After Installation
-
- C.4.1. Create the block devices
- C.4.2. Optional: Fill the device with random data
- C.4.3. Format the device as a dm-crypt/LUKS encrypted device
- C.4.4. Create a mapping to allow access to the device's decrypted contents
- C.4.5. Create filesystems on the mapped device, or continue to build complex storage structures using the mapped device
- C.4.6. Add the mapping information to
/etc/crypttab
- C.4.7. Add an entry to
/etc/fstab
- C.5. Common Post-Installation Tasks
- D. Understanding LVM
- E. The GRUB Boot Loader
- F. Boot Process, Init, and Shutdown
- G. Other Technical Documentation
- H. Contributors and production methods
- I. Revision History
- Index
Go there...
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/13/html/Installation_Guide/
Don
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