Microsoft Windows XP Setup boot disks

Microsoft Windows XP Setup boot disks are available only by download from Microsoft. The Setup boot disks are available so that you can run the Setup program on computers that cannot use a bootable CD-ROM.

If your computer does support booting from a CD-ROM, or if network-based installation is available, Microsoft recommends that you use those installations methods instead.

Future products will no longer support installation by using the Setup boot disks. Installation of future Microsoft operating systems will require the ability to start from the CD-ROM drive or by using PXE boot from the network. For more information about how to use PXE boot, visit the following Microsoft Web site:
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/WindowsServ/2003/all/ads/en-us/Default.asp?url=/resources/documentation/WindowsServ/2003/all/ADS/en-us/nbs_boot_policy_overview.asp

There are six Windows XP Setup boot floppy disks. You must have the files and the drivers that these disks contain to access the CD-ROM drive and to start the Setup process.

Create the Setup disks
When you download the Setup disks, the download contains only one large program file. When you run the downloaded file, it extracts the files. You receive the following prompt:
This program creates the Setup boot disks for Microsoft Windows XP. To create these disks, you need to provide 6 blank, formatted, high-density disks.

Please specify the floppy drive to copy the images to:
Type the drive letter for the floppy disk drive (this is typically drive A). After you type the floppy disk drive letter, you receive the following prompt:
Insert one of these disks into drive drive letter:. This disk will become the Windows XP Setup Boot Disk.

Press any key when you are ready.
When you press a key, the downloaded file starts to extract and copy the files. Continue to insert the blank disks as you are prompted to do so until all six disks are created. If the process is interrupted, you must run the downloaded program file again to create all six disks.

Make sure to label each disk appropriately with the number that is specified by the program. You must use the disks in the correct order during the Setup process.

Use the Setup disks
After you create all six disks, insert the first disk in the floppy disk drive, and then restart the computer. The computer must be configured to boot from the floppy disk drive. You may have to modify the BIOS settings on your computer to do this.

The Setup process starts. Insert the other floppy disks as you are prompted to do so. You must use the Windows XP CD-ROM to finish the Setup process.

Download the Setup disk program file
Windows XP original release
For information about the Setup boot disk versions that are available for download, visit the following Microsoft Web sites:


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Internet Layer

After the transport information is added, the data packet is passed to the Internet layer of the TCP/IP protocol stack. In this layer, IP adds the following header information:

 

  • The source IP address
  • The destination IP address
  • The transport protocol
  • The checksum value
  • Time to Live (TTL) information

 

In addition to adding this information, the Internet layer is also responsible for resolving the destination IP addresses to a MAC address. The ARP performs this resolution. The MAC address is added to the packet header and the packet is handed down to the network interface layer.

Network Interface Layer

The network interface layer adds two types of information—a preamble and a cyclical redundancy check (CRC)—to the packet that it receives from IP. The preamble is a sequence of bytes that identifies the beginning of a frame. The CRC is a mathematical computation that is added to the end of the frame to

verify that the frame has not been corrupted. After the information is added to the frames at the network interface layer, they are merged onto the network. The frames are sent to all computers on the network.

 

 

Destination Computer

When the frames reach the destination computer, the network interface layer on this computer discards the preamble and recalculates the CRC. If this value  matches the value calculated before transmission, then the destination MAC address on the frame is examined. If the MAC address is a broadcast address or if the MAC address matches that of the destination computer, the frame is passed to the IP in the Internet layer above, otherwise the frame is discarded. At the IP layer, IP recalculates the checksum and compares it with the value calculated before transmission to determine if the packet arrived intact. Then IP passes the packet to the transport protocol identified in the IP header.

 

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