On Oct 5, 2:41pm, Alan Dayley wrote: > I am looking for a bootable Linux distro that I can install on a 128MB ATA > PC-card. X-server is not needed, just console and some standard admin > apps. The PC-Card will be in an IDE adapter so the system sees it as the > master IDE drive. > > Any recommendations? I wonder if you could adapt the Red Hat system administrator's survival CD for your purposes? See: ftp://ftp ftp.redhat.de/pub/rh-addons/rescue-cd You might also look at some of the packages used to create custom rescue disks. (I used one a while back, but I forgot what it was called.) I haven't tried out Slackware in a very long time, but when I used to use it, I seem to remember that you could customize the install to fit in a fairly small space. Perhaps that's still true. I think you should also be able to take pieces from an already working system and assemble these into a new root file system. That way you could use your favorite distro. (It'd be a valuable learning experience too because you'd find out about the various dependencies between the files you assemble into your new root file system.) Kevin