From Fedora Project Wiki
mNo edit summary
Line 32: Line 32:


[[Media:installux-syslinux-prop1-interrupt.svg | Download SVG source]]
[[Media:installux-syslinux-prop1-interrupt.svg | Download SVG source]]
You hit F2, you exit. You hit F1, you see this screen:
[[Image:installux-syslinux-prop1-interrupt2.png]]
[[Media:installux-syslinux-prop1-interrupt2.svg | Download SVG source]]

Revision as of 23:40, 15 November 2010

Syslinux Proposal #1: Syslinux opt-in

Syslinux serves one main purpose during the Fedora install process: give users the opportunity to change some options in the case of a problematic install. E.g., install didn't succeed, try again with basic video mode, or do a memory test to make sure it's not your hardware, or pass some additional commands/arguments into the process to try to work around bugs/issues.

Ideally, we'd want all installations to just work, not requiring any hacks or workarounds - in that perfect world we wouldn't really have a need for syslinux during the install process. So we'd like to not need it. Let's be optimistic and say 90% of installs are successful without workarounds. That means that to 90% of users, the additional options & controls that syslinux provides are not needed.

In this proposal, then, we assume ~90% of users have no need for the syslinux controls and simply treat syslinux as if it was another BIOS screen.

Mockups for this proposal

Plain

A BIOS-like screen.

Installux-syslinux-prop1-plain.png

Download SVG source

Gradient Stripes

It's a BIOS-like screen, but prettier.

Installux-syslinux-prop1-gradstripes.png

Download SVG source

Interrupt

Includes a countdown timer (if the time runs out, install proceeds.)

Installux-syslinux-prop1-interrupt.png

Download SVG source

You hit F2, you exit. You hit F1, you see this screen:


Installux-syslinux-prop1-interrupt2.png

Download SVG source