Hi I have been playing around with making a custom boot CD to help with the setup and fixing of Windows systems. Although many things are possible with my current CD, there are some (Linux) programs which Win95/DOS just doesn't have (like dd, YAST's partitioning tool, etc...), plus Win95/DOS can't access ext2 partitions. Is it possible to take a small, basic Linux install and make it bootable on CD? I'm thinking of installing Linux (SuSE 6.1) on a spare hard disk then just taking the image of it and burning it on CD with the help of 'mkisofs', 'mkbootcd' and 'cdrecord'. The big problem I can see is the mounting of file systems - not all computers have a CD drive on hdc (for example). Is there a LILO parameter I could use to get round this? I'm planning on having the whole file system under one partition, or is it better to have a /boot partition and then everything else mounted as loopback devices? Also, I presume the mount command will still work properly running off a CD so that hard disk partitions can be mounted once the CD has booted? As you can tell, my knowledge of Linux booting isn't particularly great, so please bear with me if what I say is stupid! Many Thanks for any help, Andrew