Dave, I don't want to bust your bubble but your reply won't and doesn't work. The same error that has plagued all others that came before you has reared it's ugly head.
By following your instructions, after booting to the cd (which will work), you get a message to 'Insert Setup Disk #1'. I have searched for a couple of years for a solution to this and can't find one. Priglashenie na vecher vstrechi vipusknikov v proze 1. Someone wrote that the setup.exe file is written to look at a floppy drive and will not install from any other drive. I am nowhere near your expertise but I know this answer won't work. I tried it myself.
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If you can figure this one out you will prove you are a genius and we will worship you as the tech god. Have a good one Dave. The setup.exe file is written to look at a floppy drive and will not install from any other drive.' Actually the setup looks for the disk ID files on each disk.
Inside that disk ID file it says something like 'DISK 1', 'DISK 2, & 'DISK 3', with the spaces between the word and numbers. This is why the files have to be kept in their respective 'installation groups'. The appropriate disk ID has to be with it's group of files. This is why you can't just dump all the 'raw' source files into one directory. The disk ID file has the same name across all three disks, and would be overwritten.
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On the first disk there's an information file which correlates the different files with those three ID's. If this was edited to look for all files in one location. Or, keep the seperate groups in different folders on the CD, and when it asks for 'DISK 2 of the set', point it/redirect it (the install) to the location where it will find that disk ID file for that group.
I appreciate your response. I do not claim to be an expert and that is why I am here in this forum.
I like to learn new things. Since posting my first post on this subject I have been lucky enough to find what I think is the install cd I have heard about but was never able to find. It came with a bootdisk image file to start the installation and all the rest of what is needed to do the install from the cd. I made the boot floppy and have now created a boot image to use on the cd.
If all goes well the cd should boot and go right into the setup program. I looked at the directories and files and noticed that all the DOS files have already been expanded so I guess that they are just copied to the DOS folder. I will be trying it shortly and will let you know if it works and how well it works. If this is the elusive cd I have been looking for for over two years I believe it will work. I will let you know. Thanks again for your response. It is always nice to learn something new from someone who explains and doesn't ridicule.
I tested the DOS 6.22 install CD and it worked perfectly. Now all that is left to do is edit the autoexec.bat and config.sys files to have the install include CD -ROM drivers and it should be as good as it gets.
When the install CD boots the computer the CD-ROM drivers are loaded to access the cd for the install but when you reboot after the install in completed there are no drivers loaded for the cd's. Minor problem.
Also the install doesn't create a partition or format. You must have an existing partition and it must be formatted before the installation will run. I will probably still work on a different installation cd that will run like the floppies do. Don't know if I can do it but I'm gonna try. Back in the DOS days I remember copying all the files from a multi-disk install program to one directory and installing from the hard drive. I also remember that each of these disks would have a label file (not the disk label but a file with the same name) that would read something like disk1 or disk2 but I can't remember if the files had an extension on them or not.
Does anybody remember what I am talking about or am I crazy? I remember that if you didn't have that disk files in the directory, setup would stop because it couldn't find the next disk in the set. Hope I haven't confused everybody. Over the last two years I have tried to make DOS 6.22 install from a hd or cd.
My attempts have not been successful. I do have a DOS 6.22 install cd but it is something someone else created.
They wrote their own install program which, in essence, does not much more than copy the already expanded DOS file to a directory called DOS. Before this install will work you must already have partitioned and formatted your hd using fdisk or some other disk tool.
In the current world of computer and operating systems, this task seems antiquated and maybe even silly. People will argue that I am wasting my time. I have invested a lot of time into my little project but I have learned a great deal by my experience and as Dan Penny says, 'It's a good day when you learn something'. I have given up more than once only to start trying again.