![]() ![]() "/ventoy/script/windows_unattended4.xml", "/ventoy/script/windows_unattended3.xml", "/ventoy/script/windows_unattended2.xml", "/ventoy/script/windows_unattended1.xml", "template": "/ventoy/script/centos_kickstart.cfg" Refer VentoyPlugsonĪ auto_install array is defined to describe the auto installation configuration in /ventoy/ventoy.json. Recommend to use VentoyPlugson, a GUI ventoy.json configurator. You need to modify it for your hardware enviroment, especially the configuration for disk partition. In theory, as long as the distribution supports automatic installation through script or template, Ventoy can support it,ĭistros based on them are also supported.Īttention! The sample script here is just for reference. You can also update these scripts whenever you want. You can specify more than one scripts for an iso file at a time, ventoy will provide a menu to choose before boot. ![]() The USB drive and tell ventoy, that's all. You just need to put a script or template in You don't need to recreate a new iso file, just use the original one. ![]() Script or template into the new iso file. In normal case, if you want to make an unattended deployment, you need to recreate a new iso file based on the original iso file, and add the You just need to give a script or template for the installation.įor example, unattend xml for Windows, kickstart script for Redhat/CentOS, autoYast xml for SUSE, preseed script for Debian and so on. I might take a shotĪt translating some bits (not that I speak any Chinese, but Google Translate does).Many distros provide unattended deployment solution. Some of the error messages ventoy provides you with are in Chinese. The best way to do that would be: the delivery as a tarball containing all required This tool is actually so useful, I might actually package it, but I’m not 100% sure what Note you have to specify a theme in ventoy.json in order to make the icons work. In order to not have to pick an ISO filename but a human-friendlyĭescription, you can drop a tiny ventoy.json file like below into a directory called The ISOs and boot from it to install your machine:Īs you can see, I have mine set up with Fedora, CentOS Stream 8, RHEL8 and even good old You should see a grub-like menu that allows you to pick one of Select your USB drive (which you have inserted into the machine), and Next, you fire up the machine you need to install, and hit F12 or whatever to make theīoot menu pop up. You need to do is drop ISO files onto your USB disk. Which partitions it and installs a bootloader, and after that, litteraly the only thing ![]() You run a script to prepare your USB device, Worked with Linux and other *nix like operating systems (no Windows), but I could be Slap some fairly fragile syslinux magic in front of it. In ye olde days, the way I remember multiboot DVDĬreators worked, was to extract the contents of installer DVDs onto a USB drive, and Something called “ ventoy”, which is being actively maintainedĪnd would make both obsolete. Then, on some forum about multiboot DVDs, I read that their demise might have to do with I’m not even going to bother linking to them :/ There used to be a tool called Yumi to do this with, but their site is dead, and so is (which currently runs CentOS 8, and is in need of actual RHEL). To btrfs), and a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.3 DVD to reinstall my dad’s workstation Mainly, I needed a Fedora installer DVD (for my laptop, to make the switch The other day, I was looking for a tool to create a USB drive with multiple installer ![]()
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