On Mon, 11 Jul 2016 18:39:51 -0400 Allan Jude <allanjude_at_freebsd.org> wrote > On 2016-07-11 18:33, Chris H wrote: > > On Tue, 12 Jul 2016 00:46:04 +0300 Slawa Olhovchenkov <slw_at_zxy.spb.ru> > > wrote > > >> On Mon, Jul 11, 2016 at 09:41:44PM +0000, Glen Barber wrote: > >> > >>> On Mon, Jul 11, 2016 at 03:32:34PM -0600, Alan Somers wrote: > >>>>> On Mon, Jul 11, 2016 at 2:01 PM, Ronald Klop <ronald-lists_at_klop.ws> > >>>> wrote: >> Hi, > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Just downloaded the amd64 BETA1 ISO (873MB) and tried to burn a CD on > >>>>>> Windows 10. It complained that the ISO is too big for my 700 MB CD-r. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> The bootonly iso (281MB) burns and runs ok. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Regards, > >>>>>> Ronald. > >>>> > >>>> Please open a PR. Those images should be able to fit on a CD. > >>> > >>> This was actually a known "going to be problem" thing for 11.0. I'm > >>> looking into how to fix this for 11.0-RELEASE, but right now, there is > >>> not much more we can exclude from it. :( > > Can't it use the compressed iso format, or is it already using that > > format. Sorry haven't checked. > >> > >> Reduce GENERIC to MINIMAL? > > > > --Chris > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > freebsd-current_at_freebsd.org mailing list > > https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-current > > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-current-unsubscribe_at_freebsd.org" > > > > 380MB of the data on disc1 is the distsets, which are already .txz (max > compression). That doesn't leave much room for the live OS on the disk. I'm not sure I was clear enough when I responded. So, just for the record; I meant the ISO data itself, not the image per se; that is, not disc-1.iso.txz. But rather mounting a compressed file system. Be it bz2, or xz(1). I seem to remember tar(1) providing examples about creating/mounting compressed archives as iso images, and then writing them as an iso image, that can be later burned to CD/DVD. Another option that I employ, when creating CD/DVD images, is to take a dump(8) of the data I intend to create the image of. This method removes the "slack" from the data/files/dirs, before writing the image -- all the nodes are contiguous, end-for-end. So there is no wasted space. > > -- > Allan Jude --ChrisReceived on Mon Jul 11 2016 - 21:28:54 UTC
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