Installing the Bootable CD (Super CD Only)

While Bootable CD is extremely handy without any need to ever install it, sometimes, some people want their systems to run off of our operating environment from their hard disks. This would mean that you would, after installation, remove the CD from the drive and be able to use it for other purposes while still running our operating environment and without needing the CD to reboot.

As a point of reference, a typical install time is under 2 minutes. A slow install takes 5 minutes, and a fast install takes under 1 minute.

What Happens on an Install

(1) Installing the Bootable CD checks to see if anything else is installed. If so, it stops there. This takes about a second. (2) If no other installation is present, it partitions and formats the hard drive for use. This takes about 5-10 seconds. The partitioning includes a 350 Meg root partition, a 32Meg swap space, and the rest of the disk which if formatted for user files. (3) Next it copies the contents of the CD onto the hard drive and decompresses a few of the files. This takes most of the time - from 30 seconds on a fast system to 3 minutes or so over a USB port. (4) It then rigs the hard drive to be bootable and exits the program.

What Happens on an Outstall

The file system containing the Bootable CD distribution is overwritten using diskwipe. The rest of the system is left as it was. This typically means that you can do install, outstall, install, outstall, CD bootup, install, etc. and the data will always be available.

What Happens on an Upgrade

An upgrade is identical to an install except that the user file system is not altered and the current CD is used for the contents. This means that you can not only move to newer versions, but also to older versions if you like.