3 A suite of bootloaders for Linux
5 Copyright 1994-2011 H. Peter Anvin and contributors
7 This program is provided under the terms of the GNU General Public
8 License, version 2 or, at your option, any later version. There is no
9 warranty, neither expressed nor implied, to the function of this
10 program. Please see the included file COPYING for details.
12 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
14 Syslinux now has a home page at http://syslinux.zytor.com/
16 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
18 The Syslinux suite contains the following boot loaders
19 ("derivatives"), for their respective boot media:
21 SYSLINUX - MS-DOS/Windows FAT filesystem
22 PXELINUX - PXE network booting
23 ISOLINUX - ISO9660 CD-ROM
24 EXTLINUX - Linux ext2/ext3 filesystem
26 For historical reasons, some of the sections in this document applies
27 to the FAT loader (SYSLINUX) only; see pxelinux.txt, isolinux.txt and
28 extlinux.txt for what differs in these versions. The all-caps term
29 "SYSLINUX" generally refers to the FAT loader, whereas "Syslinux"
30 refers to the project as a whole.
32 Help with cleaning up the docs would be greatly appreciated.
37 These are the options common to all versions of Syslinux:
39 -s Safe, slow, stupid; uses simpler code that boots better
41 -r Raid mode. If boot fails, tell the BIOS to boot the next
42 device in the boot sequence (usually the next hard disk)
43 instead of stopping with an error message.
44 This is useful for RAID-1 booting.
46 These are only in the Windows version:
48 -m Mbr; install a bootable MBR sector to the beginning of the
50 -a Active; marks the partition used active (=bootable)
53 ++++ CREATING A BOOTABLE LINUX FLOPPY +++
55 In order to create a bootable Linux floppy using SYSLINUX, prepare a
56 normal MS-DOS formatted floppy. Copy one or more Linux kernel files to
57 it, then execute the DOS command:
59 syslinux [-sfrma][-d directory] a: [bootsecfile]
61 (or whichever drive letter is appropriate; the [] meaning optional.)
63 Use "syslinux.com" (in the dos subdirectory of the distribution) for
64 plain DOS (MS-DOS, DR-DOS, PC-DOS, FreeDOS...) or Win9x/ME.
66 Use "syslinux.exe" (in the win32 subdirectory of the distribution) for
69 Under Linux, execute the command:
71 syslinux [-sfr][-d directory][-o offset] /dev/fd0
73 (or, again, whichever device is the correct one.)
75 This will alter the boot sector on the disk and copy a file named
76 LDLINUX.SYS into its root directory (or a subdirectory, if the -d
79 The -s option, if given, will install a "safe, slow and stupid"
80 version of SYSLINUX. This version may work on some very buggy BIOSes
81 on which SYSLINUX would otherwise fail. If you find a machine on
82 which the -s option is required to make it boot reliably, please send
83 as much info about your machine as you can, and include the failure
86 The -o option is used with a disk image file and specifies the byte
87 offset of the filesystem image in the file.
89 For the DOS and Windows installers, the -m and -a options can be used
90 on hard drives to write a Master Boot Record (MBR), and to mark the
91 specific partition active.
93 If the Shift or Alt keys are held down during boot, or the Caps or Scroll
94 locks are set, Syslinux will display a LILO-style "boot:" prompt. The
95 user can then type a kernel file name followed by any kernel parameters.
96 The Syslinux loader does not need to know about the kernel file in
97 advance; all that is required is that it is a file located in the root
98 directory on the disk.
100 There are two versions of the Linux installer; one in the "mtools"
101 directory which requires no special privilege (other than write
102 permission to the device where you are installing) but requires the
103 mtools program suite to be available, and one in the "linux" directory
104 which requires root privilege.
107 ++++ CONFIGURATION FILE ++++
109 All options here apply to PXELINUX, ISOLINUX and EXTLINUX as well as
110 SYSLINUX unless otherwise noted. See the respective .txt files.
112 All the configurable defaults in SYSLINUX can be changed by putting a
113 file called "syslinux.cfg" in the root directory of the boot disk.
115 Starting with version 3.35, the configuration file can also be in
116 either the /boot/syslinux or /syslinux directories (searched in that
117 order.) If that is the case, then all filenames are assumed to be
118 relative to that same directory, unless preceded with a slash or
121 The configuration file is a text file in either UNIX or DOS format,
122 containing one or more of the following items, each on its own line with
123 optional leading whitespace. Case is insensitive for keywords; upper
124 case is used here to indicate that a word should be typed verbatim.
130 Inserts the contents of another file at this point in the
131 configuration file. Files can currently be nested up to 16
132 levels deep, but it is not guaranteed that more than 8 levels
133 will be supported in the future.
135 DEFAULT kernel options...
136 Sets the default command line. If Syslinux boots automatically,
137 it will act just as if the entries after DEFAULT had been typed
138 in at the "boot:" prompt.
140 If no configuration file is present, or no DEFAULT entry is
141 present in the config file, an error message is displayed and
142 the boot: prompt is shown.
145 Selects a specific user interface module (typically menu.c32
146 or vesamenu.c32). The command-line interface treats this as a
147 directive that overrides the DEFAULT and PROMPT directives.
150 Add one or more options to the kernel command line. These are
151 added both for automatic and manual boots. The options are
152 added at the very beginning of the kernel command line,
153 usually permitting explicitly entered kernel options to override
154 them. This is the equivalent of the LILO "append" option.
159 The SYSAPPEND option was introduced in Syslinux 5.10; it is an
160 enhancement of a previous option IPAPPEND which was only
161 available on PXELINUX. bitmask is interpretted as decimal format
162 unless prefixed with "0x" for hexidecimal.
164 1: indicates that an option of the following format
165 should be generated and added to the kernel command line:
167 ip=<client-ip>:<boot-server-ip>:<gw-ip>:<netmask>
169 ... based on the input from the DHCP/BOOTP or PXE boot server.
171 NOTE: The use of this option is no substitute for running a
172 DHCP client in the booted system. Without regular renewals,
173 the lease acquired by the PXE BIOS will expire, making the
174 IP address available for reuse by the DHCP server.
176 This option is empty for non-PXELINUX.
178 2: indicates that an option of the following format
179 should be generated and added to the kernel command line:
181 BOOTIF=<hardware-address-of-boot-interface>
183 ... in dash-separated hexadecimal with leading hardware type
184 (same as for the configuration file; see pxelinux.txt.)
186 This allows an initrd program to determine from which
187 interface the system booted.
189 This option is empty for non-PXELINUX.
191 4: indicates that an option of the following format
192 should be generated and added to the kernel command line:
194 SYSUUID=<system uuid>
196 ... in lower case hexadecimal in the format normally used for
197 UUIDs (same as for the configuration file; see pxelinux.txt.)
198 This may not be available if no valid UUID is found on the
201 8: indicate the CPU family and certain particularly
202 significant CPU feature bits:
204 CPU=<family><features>
206 The <family> is a single digit from 3 (i386) to 6 (i686 or
207 higher.) The following CPU feature are currently reported;
208 additional flags may be added in the future:
210 P Physical Address Extension (PAE)
211 V Intel Virtualization Technology (VT/VMX)
212 T Intel Trusted Exection Technology (TXT/SMX)
213 X Execution Disable (XD/NX)
215 S AMD SMX virtualization
217 This was added in 5.10.
219 The following strings are derived from DMI/SMBIOS information
220 if available; these are all new in version 5.10:
222 Bit String Significance
223 -------------------------------------------------------------
224 0x00010 SYSVENDOR= System vendor name
225 0x00020 SYSPRODUCT= System product name
226 0x00040 SYSVERSION= System version
227 0x00080 SYSSERIAL= System serial number
228 0x00100 SYSSKU= System SKU
229 0x00200 SYSFAMILY= System family
230 0x00400 MBVENDOR= Motherboard vendor name
231 0x00800 MBVERSION= Motherboard version
232 0x01000 MBSERIAL= Motherboard serial number
233 0x02000 MBASSET= Motherboard asset tag
234 0x04000 BIOSVENDOR= BIOS vendor name
235 0x08000 BIOSVERSION= BIOS version
236 0x10000 SYSFF= System form factor
238 If these strings contain whitespace they are replaced with
241 The system form factor value is a number defined in the SMBIOS
242 specification, available at http://www.dmtf.org/. As of
243 version 2.7.1 of the specification, the following values are
249 4 Low profile desktop
262 17 Main server chassis
265 20 Bus expansion chassis
266 21 Peripheral chassis
270 25 Multi-system chassis
276 SENDCOOKIES bitmask [PXELINUX only]
278 When downloading files over http, the SYSAPPEND strings are
279 prepended with _Syslinux_ and sent to the server as cookies.
280 The cookies are URL-encoded; whitespace is *not* replaced with
283 This command limits the cookies send; 0 means no cookies. The
284 default is -1, meaning send all cookies.
286 This option is "sticky" and is not automatically reset when
287 loading a new configuration file with the CONFIG command.
292 SYSAPPEND flag_val [5.10+]
293 IPAPPEND flag_val [5.10+ or PXELINUX only]
294 Indicates that if "label" is entered as the kernel to boot,
295 Syslinux should instead boot "image", and the specified APPEND
296 and SYSAPPEND options should be used instead of the ones
297 specified in the global section of the file (before the first
298 LABEL command.) The default for "image" is the same as
299 "label", and if no APPEND is given the default is to use the
300 global entry (if any).
302 Starting with version 3.62, the number of LABEL statements is
305 Note that LILO uses the syntax:
310 ... whereas Syslinux uses the syntax:
315 Note: The "kernel" doesn't have to be a Linux kernel; it can
316 be a boot sector (see below.)
318 Since version 3.32 label names are no longer mangled into DOS
319 format (for SYSLINUX.)
321 The following commands are available after a LABEL statement:
323 LINUX image - Linux kernel image (default)
324 BOOT image - Bootstrap program (.bs, .bin)
325 BSS image - BSS image (.bss)
326 PXE image - PXE Network Bootstrap Program (.0)
327 FDIMAGE image - Floppy disk image (.img)
328 COM32 image - COM32 program (.c32)
329 CONFIG image - New configuration file
330 Using one of these keywords instead of KERNEL forces the
331 filetype, regardless of the filename.
333 CONFIG means restart the boot loader using a different
334 configuration file. The configuration file is read, the
335 working directory is changed (if specified via an APPEND), then
336 the configuration file is parsed.
339 Append nothing. APPEND with a single hyphen as argument in a
340 LABEL section can be used to override a global APPEND.
343 Attempt a different local boot method. The special value -1
344 causes the boot loader to report failure to the BIOS, which, on
345 recent BIOSes, should mean that the next boot device in the
346 boot sequence should be activated. Values other than those
347 documented may produce undesired results.
349 On PXELINUX, "type" 0 means perform a normal boot. "type" 4
350 will perform a local boot with the Universal Network Driver
351 Interface (UNDI) driver still resident in memory. Finally,
352 "type" 5 will perform a local boot with the entire PXE
353 stack, including the UNDI driver, still resident in memory.
354 All other values are undefined. If you don't know what the
355 UNDI or PXE stacks are, don't worry -- you don't want them,
358 On ISOLINUX, the "type" specifies the local drive number to
359 boot from; 0x00 is the primary floppy drive and 0x80 is the
363 Starting with version 3.71, an initrd can be specified in a
364 separate statement (INITRD) instead of as part of the APPEND
365 statement; this functionally appends "initrd=initrd_file" to
366 the kernel command line.
368 It supports multiple filenames separated by commas.
369 This is mostly useful for initramfs, which can be composed of
370 multiple separate cpio or cpio.gz archives.
371 Note: all files except the last one are zero-padded to a
372 4K page boundary. This should not affect initramfs.
375 If flag_val is 0, do not load a kernel image unless it has been
376 explicitly named in a LABEL statement. The default is 1.
378 ALLOWOPTIONS flag_val
379 If flag_val is 0, the user is not allowed to specify any
380 arguments on the kernel command line. The only options
381 recognized are those specified in an APPEND statement. The
385 Indicates how long to wait at the boot: prompt until booting
386 automatically, in units of 1/10 s. The timeout is cancelled as
387 soon as the user types anything on the keyboard, the assumption
388 being that the user will complete the command line already
389 begun. A timeout of zero will disable the timeout completely,
390 this is also the default.
393 Indicates how long to wait until booting automatically, in
394 units of 1/10 s. This timeout is *not* cancelled by user
395 input, and can thus be used to deal with serial port glitches
396 or "the user walked away" type situations. A timeout of zero
397 will disable the timeout completely, this is also the default.
399 Both TIMEOUT and TOTALTIMEOUT can be used together, for
402 # Wait 5 seconds unless the user types something, but
403 # always boot after 15 minutes.
407 ONTIMEOUT kernel options...
408 Sets the command line invoked on a timeout. Normally this is
409 the same thing as invoked by "DEFAULT". If this is specified,
410 then "DEFAULT" is used only if the user presses <Enter> to
413 ONERROR kernel options...
414 If a kernel image is not found (either due to it not existing,
415 or because IMPLICIT is set), run the specified command. The
416 faulty command line is appended to the specified options, so
417 if the ONERROR directive reads as:
421 ... and the command line as entered by the user is:
425 ... Syslinux will execute the following as if entered by the
428 xyzzy plugh foo bar baz
430 SERIAL port [baudrate [flowcontrol]]
431 Enables a serial port to act as the console. "port" is a
432 number (0 = /dev/ttyS0 = COM1, etc.) or an I/O port address
433 (e.g. 0x3F8); if "baudrate" is omitted, the baud rate defaults
434 to 9600 bps. The serial parameters are hardcoded to be 8
435 bits, no parity, 1 stop bit.
437 "flowcontrol" is a combination of the following bits:
440 0x008 - Enable interrupts
441 0x010 - Wait for CTS assertion
442 0x020 - Wait for DSR assertion
443 0x040 - Wait for RI assertion
444 0x080 - Wait for DCD assertion
445 0x100 - Ignore input unless CTS asserted
446 0x200 - Ignore input unless DSR asserted
447 0x400 - Ignore input unless RI asserted
448 0x800 - Ignore input unless DCD asserted
450 All other bits are reserved.
454 0 - No flow control (default)
455 0x303 - Null modem cable detect
456 0x013 - RTS/CTS flow control
457 0x813 - RTS/CTS flow control, modem input
458 0x023 - DTR/DSR flow control
459 0x083 - DTR/DCD flow control
461 For the SERIAL directive to be guaranteed to work properly, it
462 should be the first directive in the configuration file.
464 NOTE: "port" values from 0 to 3 means the first four serial
465 ports detected by the BIOS. They may or may not correspond to
466 the legacy port values 0x3F8, 0x2F8, 0x3E8, 0x2E8.
468 Enabling interrupts (setting the 0x008 bit) may give better
469 responsiveness without setting the NOHALT option, but could
470 potentially cause problems with buggy BIOSes.
472 This option is "sticky" and is not automatically reset when
473 loading a new configuration file with the CONFIG command.
476 If flag_val is 1, don't halt the processor while idle.
477 Halting the processor while idle significantly reduces the
478 power consumption, but can cause poor responsiveness to the
479 serial console, especially when using scripts to drive the
480 serial console, as opposed to human interaction.
483 If flag_val is 0, disable output to the normal video console.
484 If flag_val is 1, enable output to the video console (this is
487 Some BIOSes try to forward this to the serial console and
488 sometimes make a total mess thereof, so this option lets you
489 disable the video console on these systems.
492 Load a font in .psf format before displaying any output
493 (except the copyright line, which is output as ldlinux.sys
494 itself is loaded.) Syslinux only loads the font onto the
495 video card; if the .psf file contains a Unicode table it is
496 ignored. This only works on EGA and VGA cards; hopefully it
497 should do nothing on others.
500 Install a simple keyboard map. The keyboard remapper used is
501 *very* simplistic (it simply remaps the keycodes received from
502 the BIOS, which means that only the key combinations relevant
503 in the default layout -- usually U.S. English -- can be
504 mapped) but should at least help people with AZERTY keyboard
505 layout and the locations of = and , (two special characters
506 used heavily on the Linux kernel command line.)
508 The included program keytab-lilo.pl from the LILO distribution
509 can be used to create such keymaps. The file keytab-lilo.txt
510 contains the documentation for this program.
513 Displays the indicated file on the screen at boot time (before
514 the boot: prompt, if displayed). Please see the section below
517 NOTE: If the file is missing, this option is simply ignored.
520 Prints the message on the screen.
523 If flag_val is 0, display the boot: prompt only if the Shift or Alt
524 key is pressed, or Caps Lock or Scroll lock is set (this is the
525 default). If flag_val is 1, always display the boot: prompt.
528 If flag_val is set to 1, ignore the Shift/Alt/Caps Lock/Scroll
529 Lock escapes. Use this (together with PROMPT 0) to force the
530 default boot alternative.
533 If flag_val is set to 1, the Tab key does not display labels
543 Displays the indicated file on the screen when a function key is
544 pressed at the boot: prompt. This can be used to implement
545 pre-boot online help (presumably for the kernel command line
546 options.) Please see the section below on DISPLAY files.
548 When using the serial console, press <Ctrl-F><digit> to get to
549 the help screens, e.g. <Ctrl-F><2> to get to the F2 screen.
550 For F10-F12, hit <Ctrl-F><A>, <Ctrl-F>B, <Ctrl-F>C. For
551 compatibility with earlier versions, F10 can also be entered as
555 Specify a colon-separated (':') list of directories to search
556 when attempting to load modules. This directive is useful for
557 specifying the directories containing the lib*.c32 library
558 files as other modules may be dependent on these files, but
559 may not reside in the same directory. The list of directories
560 is searched in order. Please see the section below on PATH
563 Blank lines are ignored.
565 Note that the configuration file is not completely decoded. Syntax
566 different from the one described above may still work correctly in this
567 version of Syslinux, but may break in a future one.
570 ++++ DISPLAY FILE FORMAT ++++
572 DISPLAY and function-key help files are text files in either DOS or UNIX
573 format (with or without <CR>). In addition, the following special codes
576 <FF> <FF> = <Ctrl-L> = ASCII 12
577 Clear the screen, home the cursor. Note that the screen is
578 filled with the current display color.
580 <SI><bg><fg> <SI> = <Ctrl-O> = ASCII 15
581 Set the display colors to the specified background and
582 foreground colors, where <bg> and <fg> are hex digits,
583 corresponding to the standard PC display attributes:
585 0 = black 8 = dark grey
586 1 = dark blue 9 = bright blue
587 2 = dark green a = bright green
588 3 = dark cyan b = bright cyan
589 4 = dark red c = bright red
590 5 = dark purple d = bright purple
592 7 = light grey f = white
594 Picking a bright color (8-f) for the background results in the
595 corresponding dark color (0-7), with the foreground flashing.
597 Colors are not visible over the serial console.
599 <CAN>filename<newline> <CAN> = <Ctrl-X> = ASCII 24
600 If a VGA display is present, enter graphics mode and display
601 the graphic included in the specified file. The file format
602 is an ad hoc format called LSS16; the included Perl program
603 "ppmtolss16" can be used to produce these images. This Perl
604 program also includes the file format specification.
606 The image is displayed in 640x480 16-color mode. Once in
607 graphics mode, the display attributes (set by <SI> code
608 sequences) work slightly differently: the background color is
609 ignored, and the foreground colors are the 16 colors specified
610 in the image file. For that reason, ppmtolss16 allows you to
611 specify that certain colors should be assigned to specific
614 Color indicies 0 and 7, in particular, should be chosen with
615 care: 0 is the background color, and 7 is the color used for
616 the text printed by Syslinux itself.
618 <EM> <EM> = <Ctrl-Y> = ASCII 25
619 If we are currently in graphics mode, return to text mode.
621 <DLE>..<ETB> <Ctrl-P>..<Ctrl-W> = ASCII 16-23
622 These codes can be used to select which modes to print a
623 certain part of the message file in. Each of these control
624 characters select a specific set of modes (text screen,
625 graphics screen, serial port) for which the output is actually
628 Character Text Graph Serial
629 ------------------------------------------------------
630 <DLE> = <Ctrl-P> = ASCII 16 No No No
631 <DC1> = <Ctrl-Q> = ASCII 17 Yes No No
632 <DC2> = <Ctrl-R> = ASCII 18 No Yes No
633 <DC3> = <Ctrl-S> = ASCII 19 Yes Yes No
634 <DC4> = <Ctrl-T> = ASCII 20 No No Yes
635 <NAK> = <Ctrl-U> = ASCII 21 Yes No Yes
636 <SYN> = <Ctrl-V> = ASCII 22 No Yes Yes
637 <ETB> = <Ctrl-W> = ASCII 23 Yes Yes Yes
641 <DC1>Text mode<DC2>Graphics mode<DC4>Serial port<ETB>
643 ... will actually print out which mode the console is in!
645 <SUB> <SUB> = <Ctrl-Z> = ASCII 26
646 End of file (DOS convention).
648 <BEL> <BEL> = <Ctrl-G> = ASCII 7
652 ++++ COMMAND LINE KEYSTROKES ++++
654 The command line prompt supports the following keystrokes:
656 <Enter> boot specified command line
657 <BackSpace> erase one character
658 <Ctrl-U> erase the whole line
659 <Ctrl-V> display the current Syslinux version
660 <Ctrl-W> erase one word
661 <Ctrl-X> force text mode
662 <Tab> list matching labels
663 <F1>..<F12> help screens (if configured)
664 <Ctrl-F><digit> equivalent to F1..F10
665 <Ctrl-C> interrupt boot in progress
666 <Esc> interrupt boot in progress
667 <Ctrl-N> display network information (PXELINUX only)
670 ++++ OTHER OPERATING SYSTEMS ++++
672 This version of Syslinux supports chain loading of other operating
673 systems (such as MS-DOS and its derivatives, including Windows 95/98).
675 Chain loading requires the boot sector of the foreign operating system
676 to be stored in a file in the root directory of the filesystem.
677 Because neither Linux kernels, nor boot sector images have reliable
678 magic numbers, Syslinux will look at the file extension.
679 The following extensions are recognized (case insensitive):
681 none or other Linux kernel image
682 .0 PXE bootstrap program (NBP) [PXELINUX only]
683 .bin "CD boot sector" [ISOLINUX only]
684 .bs Boot sector [SYSLINUX only]
685 .bss Boot sector, DOS superblock will be patched in [SYSLINUX only]
686 .c32 COM32 image (32-bit ELF)
687 .img Disk image [ISOLINUX only]
689 For filenames given on the command line, Syslinux will search for the
690 file by adding extensions in the order listed above if the plain
691 filename is not found. Filenames in KERNEL statements must be fully
694 If this is specified with one of the keywords LINUX, BOOT, BSS,
695 FDIMAGE, COM32, or CONFIG instead of KERNEL, the filetype is
696 considered to be the one specified regardless of the filename.
699 ++++ BOOTING DOS (OR OTHER SIMILAR OPERATING SYSTEMS) ++++
701 This section applies to SYSLINUX only, not to PXELINUX or ISOLINUX.
702 See isolinux.txt for an equivalent procedure for ISOLINUX.
704 This is the recommended procedure for creating a SYSLINUX disk that
705 can boot either DOS or Linux. This example assumes the drive is A: in
706 DOS and /dev/fd0 in Linux; for other drives, substitute the
707 appropriate drive designator.
709 ---- Linux procedure ----
711 1. Make a DOS bootable disk. This can be done either by specifying
712 the /s option when formatting the disk in DOS, or by running the
713 DOS command SYS (this can be done under DOSEMU if DOSEMU has
714 direct device access to the relevant drive):
720 2. Boot Linux. Copy the DOS boot sector from the disk into a file:
722 dd if=/dev/fd0 of=dos.bss bs=512 count=1
724 3. Run SYSLINUX on the disk:
728 4. Mount the disk and copy the DOS boot sector file to it. The file
729 *must* have extension .bss:
731 mount -t msdos /dev/fd0 /mnt
734 5. Copy the Linux kernel image(s), initrd(s), etc to the disk, and
735 create/edit syslinux.cfg and help files if desired:
740 6. Unmount the disk (if applicable.)
744 ---- DOS/Windows procedure ----
746 To make this installation in DOS only, you need the utility copybs.com
747 (included with Syslinux) as well as the syslinux.com installer. If
748 you are on an WinNT-based system (WinNT, Win2k, WinXP or later), use
749 syslinux.exe instead.
751 1. Make a DOS bootable disk. This can be done either by specifying
752 the /s option when formatting the disk in DOS, or by running the
759 2. Copy the DOS boot sector from the disk into a file. The file
760 *must* have extension .bss:
764 3. Run SYSLINUX on the disk:
768 4. Copy the Linux kernel image(s), initrd(s), etc to the disk, and
769 create/edit syslinux.cfg and help files if desired:
775 ++++ NOVICE PROTECTION ++++
777 Syslinux will attempt to detect booting on a machine with too little
778 memory, which means the Linux boot sequence cannot complete. If so, a
779 message is displayed and the boot sequence aborted. Holding down the
780 Ctrl key while booting disables this feature.
782 Any file that SYSLINUX uses can be marked hidden, system or readonly
783 if so is convenient; SYSLINUX ignores all file attributes. The
784 SYSLINUX installed automatically sets the readonly/hidden/system
785 attributes on LDLINUX.SYS.
788 ++++ NOTES ON BOOTABLE CD-ROMS ++++
790 SYSLINUX can be used to create bootdisk images for El
791 Torito-compatible bootable CD-ROMs. However, it appears that many
792 BIOSes are very buggy when it comes to booting CD-ROMs. Some users
793 have reported that the following steps are helpful in making a CD-ROM
794 that is bootable on the largest possible number of machines:
796 a) Use the -s (safe, slow and stupid) option to SYSLINUX;
797 b) Put the boot image as close to the beginning of the
798 ISO 9660 filesystem as possible.
800 A CD-ROM is so much faster than a floppy that the -s option shouldn't
801 matter from a speed perspective.
803 Of course, you probably want to use ISOLINUX instead. See isolinux.txt.
806 ++++ BOOTING FROM A FAT FILESYSTEM PARTITION ON A HARD DISK ++++
808 SYSLINUX can boot from a FAT filesystem partition on a hard disk
809 (including FAT32). The installation procedure is identical to the
810 procedure for installing it on a floppy, and should work under either
811 DOS or Linux. To boot from a partition, SYSLINUX needs to be launched
812 from a Master Boot Record or another boot loader, just like DOS itself
815 Under DOS, you can install a standard simple MBR on the primary hard
816 disk by running the command:
820 Then use the FDISK command to mark the appropriate partition active.
822 A simple MBR, roughly on par with the one installed by DOS (but
823 unencumbered), is included in the SYSLINUX distribution. To install
824 it under Linux, simply type:
826 cat mbr.bin > /dev/XXX
828 ... where /dev/XXX is the device you wish to install it on.
830 Under DOS or Win32, you can install the SYSLINUX MBR with the -m
831 option to the SYSLINUX installer, and use the -a option to mark the
832 current partition active:
836 Note that this will also install SYSLINUX on the specified partition.
839 ++++ HARDWARE INFORMATION +++
841 I have started to maintain a web page of hardware with known
842 problems. There are, unfortunately, lots of broken hardware out
843 there; especially early PXE stacks (for PXELINUX) have lots of
846 A list of problems, and workarounds (if known), is maintained at:
848 http://syslinux.zytor.com/hardware.php
851 ++++ BOOT LOADER IDS USED ++++
853 The Linux boot protocol supports a "boot loader ID", a single byte
854 where the upper nybble specifies a boot loader family (3 = Syslinux)
855 and the lower nybble is version or, in the case of Syslinux, media:
862 In recent versions of Linux, this ID is available as
863 /proc/sys/kernel/bootloader_type.
868 The current working directory is *always* searched first, before PATH,
869 when attempting to open a filename. The current working directory is
870 not affected when specifying a file with an absolute path. For
871 example, given the following file system layout,
880 assuming that the current working directory is /boot/foo, and assuming
881 that libls.c32 is a dependency of ls.c32, executing /boot/bin/ls.c32
882 will cause /boot/foo/libls.c32 to be loaded, not /boot/bin/libls.c32,
883 even if /boot/bin is specified in the PATH directive of a config file.
885 The reason that things work this way is that typically a user will
886 install all library files in the Syslinux installation directory, as
887 specified with the --directory installer option. This method allows
888 the user to omit the PATH directive from their config file and still
889 have things work correctly.
892 ++++ BUG REPORTS ++++
894 I would appreciate hearing of any problems you have with Syslinux. I
895 would also like to hear from you if you have successfully used Syslinux,
896 *especially* if you are using it for a distribution.
898 If you are reporting problems, please include all possible information
899 about your system and your BIOS; the vast majority of all problems
900 reported turn out to be BIOS or hardware bugs, and I need as much
901 information as possible in order to diagnose the problems.
903 There is a mailing list for discussion among Syslinux users and for
904 announcements of new and test versions. To join, or to browse the
907 http://www.zytor.com/mailman/listinfo/syslinux
909 Please DO NOT send HTML messages or attachments to the mailing list
910 (including multipart/alternative or similar.) All such messages will