Fedora 6 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux Bible

It can be a little intimidating to see a thick chapter on installation. But the truth is, if you have a little bit of experience with computers and a computer with common hardware, you can probably install Fedora or RHEL pretty easily. The procedure in this section will get you going quickly if you have:

For this quick procedure, you must either be dedicating your entire hard disk to Linux, have a preconfigured Linux partition, or have sufficient free space on your hard disk outside any existing Windows partition.

Caution 

If you are not dedicating your whole hard disk to Fedora and you don't understand partitioning, skip to the following "Detailed Installation Instructions" section in this chapter. That section describes choices for having both Linux and Windows on the same computer.

Here's how you get started:

  1. Insert the Fedora (Fedora Core 6) installation DVD or CD #1 into your computer's drive.

  2. Reboot your computer.

  3. When you see the installation screen (with a boot: prompt at the bottom), do one of the following, depending on your media:

    • For the DVD, press Enter to begin the installation.

    • For the install/live CD, type linux askmethod and press Enter. (Then refer to the "Installing from Other Media" section later in this chapter for information on completing a network install.)

During installation, you are asked questions about your computer hardware and the network connections. After you have completed each answer, click Next. The following list describes the information you will need to enter. (If you need help, all of these topics are explained later in this chapter.)

Note 

After answering the questions, the actual installation of packages takes between 20 and 60 minutes, depending on the number of packages and the speed of the computer hardware. For a network install, the time can be much longer for a slow Internet connection.

When installation is done, remove the Fedora DVD or CD and click Exit to reboot your computer. Linux should boot by default. After Linux boots for the first time, the Fedora Setup Agent runs to let you read the license agreement, set system date and time, configure your display, add a user account, configure your sound card, and install additional CDs. On subsequent reboots, you will see a login prompt. You can log in and begin using your Linux system.

If you need more information than this procedure provides, go to the detailed installation instructions just ahead.

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