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new-os: add DragonOS as a supported distro #1344

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swlistener2020 opened this issue Jun 30, 2024 · 2 comments
Open
1 task done

new-os: add DragonOS as a supported distro #1344

swlistener2020 opened this issue Jun 30, 2024 · 2 comments
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new-os Request to add a new OS to quicket

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@swlistener2020
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swlistener2020 commented Jun 30, 2024

I confirm this feature has not been previously requested

  • I have searched the issues and this feature has not previously been requested

DragonOS is a Lubuntu-based distro for Software Defined Radio and also Ham Radio activities

https://sourceforge.net/projects/dragonos-focal/

@flexiondotorg flexiondotorg changed the title add DragonOS as a supported distro newos: add DragonOS as a supported distro Jun 30, 2024
@flexiondotorg flexiondotorg added the new-os Request to add a new OS to quicket label Jun 30, 2024
@flexiondotorg flexiondotorg changed the title newos: add DragonOS as a supported distro new-os: add DragonOS as a supported distro Jun 30, 2024
@matteolinux
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Basically you can install any iso you want, even if not supported. That's what I've done.
Let's say you want to install a distro called myos.iso which is not officially supported. Ok, go to the folder of another distro you have successfully installed with quickemu. You will find in there few files and the qcow2 disk. Create a folder for the iso you want to install. Copy all the file of the already existing vm and change their name ,keeping the extension, with myos (the name of the iso we want to install). Create a new qcow2 file (you can find how on google) and put all this files inside the folder you created callled myos. Cd into that folder and launch quickemu via terminal as usual.

@lj3954
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lj3954 commented Jul 22, 2024

Basically you can install any iso you want, even if not supported. That's what I've done. Let's say you want to install a distro called myos.iso which is not officially supported. Ok, go to the folder of another distro you have successfully installed with quickemu. You will find in there few files and the qcow2 disk. Create a folder for the iso you want to install. Copy all the file of the already existing vm and change their name ,keeping the extension, with myos (the name of the iso we want to install). Create a new qcow2 file (you can find how on google) and put all this files inside the folder you created callled myos. Cd into that folder and launch quickemu via terminal as usual.

Quickget supports this OOTB with the --create-config option. Regardless, it doesn't remove the need to add more operating systems to quickget, as long as they meet certain requirements of course.

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new-os Request to add a new OS to quicket
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