avenue Posted August 16, 2008 Share Posted August 16, 2008 (edited) Hello,somebody know how... a single Windows98 full unnatendet bootcd without any submissionsin the autoexec.bat i put this ...but there is an error:first i have to find a tool, which make this partition automaticly in "FAT32"which can i use?@ECHO OFFset EXPAND=YESSET DIRCMD=/O:Nset LglDrv=27 * 26 Z 25 Y 24 X 23 W 22 V 21 U 20 T 19 S 18 R 17 Q 16 P 15set LglDrv=%LglDrv% O 14 N 13 M 12 L 11 K 10 J 9 I 8 H 7 G 6 F 5 E 4 D 3 Cclscall setramd.bat %LglDrv%set temp=c:\set tmp=c:\path=%RAMD%:\;a:\;%CDROM%:\format c: /q /u /autotestcopy command.com %RAMD%:\ > NULset comspec=%RAMD%:\command.comcopy extract.exe %RAMD%:\ > NULcopy readme.txt %RAMD%:\ > NULto start the format c:..full unnatendetbut what do i have to do, to start after thatimmediately...Where do i put it?setup.exe -s msbatch.inf /IS /IQ /IV /IWI don't know exactly, if this is right.. Edited August 16, 2008 by avenue Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Galileo Figaro Posted August 16, 2008 Share Posted August 16, 2008 ... a single Windows98 full unnatendet bootcd without any submissionsIs that really a good idea?If you happen to forget the CD in the CDROM drive and then reboot,your rabbit is cooked. I wouldn't make it an automated process from CD.The whole idea about unattended install is that it can install the system withoutyou sitting there at the table in front of it. But it surely isn't about one size fits all.Even if you'd be using this only privately, you'd want to change things from timeto time and from machine to machine.There are unattended fdisk parameters, which you probably are aware of?These should take care of the FAT32 part.That plus the ordinary msbatch.inf should suffice to make a completelyunattended install.Would you care to explain the parameters in that autoexec.bat of yours? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
avenue Posted August 16, 2008 Author Share Posted August 16, 2008 ... a single Windows98 full unnatendet bootcd without any submissionsIs that really a good idea?If you happen to forget the CD in the CDROM drive and then reboot,your rabbit is cooked. I wouldn't make it an automated process from CD. Yes it is..I'm only using win98 as an .iso file...and only on VMware. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
submix8c Posted August 16, 2008 Share Posted August 16, 2008 (edited) There is/was a way, but I'm not authorized to reveal it. It was originally a thread by member soporific called Unattended Boot CD for Windows 98SE, but some of the contents were deemed warez.Perhaps if you ask kindly, provided the moderators are in agreement, the non-warez portion and tips may be allowed. This, to my knowledge, would involve building the CD on your own utilizing software you either already have or that you may need you obtain elsewere. Again, the reason it was considered warez was AFAIK due to the fact that some contents were MS proprietary albeit either on the CD you own or available at the MS FTP site.Not sure if it can be resurrected in an acceptable fashion, under a new and acceptable topic, or not. I personally will not undertake to usurp soporific's grand idea and code (DOS BATCH files) nor will I provide any lest I or soporific be inadvertantly banned.Bear in mind, it isn't as simple as you may think it is but not necessarily that complex.There is a repository for all of it, but I will not under any circumstances reveal that either for the same reasons as above.I'm sure that somewhere along the line, perhaps others may be able to shed some light on the ins-and-outs. It is possible...Peace, and Welcome to MSFN!edit - Going back, I find some of the utilities contained therein were also non-MS, one of which specifically was the "unnamed" partitioning tool. Perhaps an alternative utility could be found. FDISK really stunk for unattended. Curiosity - Is the disk you have OEM?edit2 - Look into FreeDOS; I think it may have a compatible set of partioning tools, including an alternative FDISK that may/may not do what you need. Edited August 16, 2008 by submix8c Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
avenue Posted August 17, 2008 Author Share Posted August 17, 2008 Where can i find the SYSTEM.INI on OEM CD ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RetroOS Posted August 18, 2008 Share Posted August 18, 2008 Where can i find the SYSTEM.INI on OEM CD ?You won't find SYSTEM.INI on the CD...It is dynamically generated during setup. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ShadeTreeLee Posted August 20, 2008 Share Posted August 20, 2008 Aefdisk will both partition and format a hard drive in the blink of an eye more or less. And of course you get your choice of FAT types on those partitons.But you will still need to reboot in order for DOS to load the new partition/format info to then be able to make use of it for the Windows installation...As RetroOS said, System.ini is generated during setup from inf files such as shell.inf and many others. Why ask this?It sounds like you are leaping right along since you don't seem to post 2 questions about any one item. That's good? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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