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This page describes how to prepare a bootable USB stick which loads DOS using tools available in Gentoo.
Many firmware loading programs on PCs require a DOS environment to function. Moreover, most computers no longer have floppy drives, and many do not even have CD drives, so a USB bootable DOS environment may come in useful.
It is advisable to wipe the USB stick before loading it with a new environment. If the USB stick is at /dev/sdb, this can be done with:
root #dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdb bs=1M count=<COUNT><COUNT> should be replaced with the size of the USB stick in MiB (can be found in dmesg when plugging in the stick).
The stick must now be partitioned. Most any partitioning tool can be used, such as cfdisk. In this article, it is assumed that the first partition is to be used for this application. This partition should be marked bootable and its type set to FAT16.
Using ms-sys from the package sys-block/ms-sys, prepare the boot sector on the USB stick with:
root #ms-sys -s /dev/sdbThis writes a public domain boot sector compatible with DOSEMU which is used below.
Finally, using mkfs.fat from the package sys-fs/dosfstools, format this partition as FAT16 with:
root #mkfs.fat -F16 /dev/sdb1Now, use DOSEMU to create a DOS environment in the USB stick. If DOSEMU is not already on the system, install app-emulation/dosemu.
Add the previously prepared USB partition to the list of "hdimages" in the DOSEMU configuration file ~/.dosemurc:
~/.dosemurc$_hdimage = "drives/* /tmp /dev/sdb1"
Make sure the USB stick is not already mounted, e.g. through any desktop environment file manager, as DOSEMU requires block-level access. This means that DOSEMU must be invoked as root, unless the permissions of the device file have been modified.
After starting DOSEMU, the disk should appear as F:. Start DOSEMU:
root #dosemuChange to drive Z:, as some files are being copied from there:
C:\>Z:Make the USB partition a DOS boot disk:
Z:\>sys F:This should provide a working command-line environment for running the firmware software.
To have a more user-friendly and powerful DOS environment, it is helpful to copy over tools from DOSEMU into the disk:
Z:\>xcopy /S /N Z: F:In order to prevent problems with booting and conflicts between drivers and firmware software, it is recommended editing config.sys and autoexec.bat to be minimal. For example:
F:\config.sysSWITCHES=/F DOS=UMB,HIGH dosdata=umb lastdrive=Z files=40 stacks=0 buffers=10
F:\autoexec.bat@echo off path c:\bin;c:\gnu;c:\dosemu set HELPPATH=c:\help set TEMP=c:\tmp prompt $P$G
To edit these files within DOSEMU, use the tool edit. File -> Open... and go to drive F::
Z:\>editIf editing from Linux, take care to make sure that the files retain their DOS-style CR+LF newlines.
path statement in the autoexec.bat example above assumes that the BIOS sees the USB stick as a hard disk, such that the stick will be C: under DOS. If it is seen as a floppy, it will become A:.Exit DOSEMU:
Z:\>exitemuCheck that the USB stick is bootable without actually rebooting the computer by using QEMU:
root #qemu -hda /dev/sdb1Keep in mind that this is no guarantee that the BIOS will boot the computer off the USB stick successfully, only a check that the preparations are correct.
If the kernel supports the FAT filesystem, just mount the USB stick normally, and copy over the necessary software. Otherwise, this can be done within DOSEMU, where D: is the user home directory. Place the firmware software in the home directory:
C:\>xcopy /S /N D:\FIRMWARE F:Here, FIRMWARE is the directory of the firmware software.
To have a bootable DOS partition as well as a bootable Linux partition (e.g. SystemRescueCD) on the same disk, a bootloader setup more sophisticated than mbr-sys is required. This can be done with GRUB, as described in another HOWTO (archived).