Chapter 2. Installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux

Chapter 2. Installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux

2.1. The Graphical Installation Program User Interface
2.1.1. Booting the OpenPower, p5, i5, and pSeries Installation Program
2.1.2. Booting the iSeries Installation Program
2.1.3. A Note about Virtual Consoles on OpenPower, p5, and pSeries
2.1.4. Using the iSeries Virtual Console
2.2. The Text Mode Installation Program User Interface
2.2.1. Using the Keyboard to Navigate
2.3. Installation Methods
2.3.1. Installing from CD-ROM
2.3.2. Installing from a Hard Drive or DASD
2.3.3. Performing a Network Installation
2.3.4. Installing via NFS
2.3.5. Installing via FTP
2.3.6. Installing via HTTP
2.4. Welcome to Red Hat Enterprise Linux
2.5. Language Selection
2.6. Keyboard Configuration
2.7. Disk Partitioning Setup
2.8. Partitioning Your System
2.8.1. Graphical Display of Hard Drive(s)
2.8.2. Disk Druid's Buttons
2.8.3. Partition Fields
2.8.4. Recommended Partitioning Scheme
2.8.5. Adding Partitions
2.8.6. Editing Partitions
2.8.7. Deleting a Partition
2.9. Network Configuration
2.10. Firewall Configuration
2.11. Language Support Selection
2.12. Time Zone Configuration
2.13. Set Root Password
2.14. Package Group Selection
2.15. Preparing to Install
2.16. Installing Packages
2.17. Installation Complete
2.18. Rescue Mode on POWER Systems
2.18.1. Special Considerations for Accessing the SCSI Utilities from Rescue Mode

This chapter explains how to perform a Red Hat Enterprise Linux installation from the CD-ROM, using the graphical, mouse-based installation program. The following topics are discussed:



[2] The fsck application is used to check the file system for metadata consistency and optionally repair one or more Linux file systems.

[3] A root password is the administrative password for your Red Hat Enterprise Linux system. You should only log in as root when needed for system maintenance. The root account does not operate within the restrictions placed on normal user accounts, so changes made as root can have implications for your entire system.


Note: This documentation is provided {and copyrighted} by Red Hat®, Inc. and is released via the Open Publication License. The copyright holder has added the further requirement that Distribution of substantively modified versions of this document is prohibited without the explicit permission of the copyright holder. The CentOS project redistributes these original works (in their unmodified form) as a reference for CentOS-4 because CentOS-4 is built from publicly available, open source SRPMS. The documentation is unmodified to be compliant with upstream distribution policy. Neither CentOS-4 nor the CentOS Project are in any way affiliated with or sponsored by Red Hat®, Inc.