User`s guide

69 Copyright © Acronis, Inc., 2000-2010
system will be used. For bare metal, or if no Windows operating system is found, the disk layout
will be used according to the bootable media environment (Linux-based or Windows PE).
3. The Linux-based bootable media shows local disks and volumes as unmounted (sda1, sda2...).
4. The log lifetime is limited to the current session. You can save the entire log or the filtered log
entries to a file.
8.1.2.1 Setting up a display mode
For a machine booted from media, a display video mode is detected automatically based on the
hardware configuration (monitor and graphics card specifications). If, for some reason, the video
mode is detected incorrectly, do the following:
1. In the boot menu, press F11.
2. Add the following command to the command prompt: vga=ask, and then proceed with booting.
3. From the list of supported video modes, choose the appropriate one by typing its number (for
example, 318), and then press ENTER.
If you do not wish to follow this procedure every time you boot from media on a given hardware
configuration, re-create the bootable media with the appropriate mode number (in our example,
vga=0x318) typed in the Kernel parameters window—see Linux-based bootable media (p. 65) for
details.
8.1.2.2 List of commands and utilities available in Linux-based bootable
media
Linux-based bootable media contains the following commands and command line utilities, which you
can use when running a command shell. To start the command shell, press CTRL+ALT+F2 while in the
bootable media's management console.
Linux commands and utilities
busybox
fxload
ls
pktsetup
strace
cat
gawk
lspci
poweroff
swapoff
cdrecord
gpm
lvm
ps
swapon
chmod
grep
mc
raidautorun
sysinfo
chown
growisofs
mdadm
readcd
tar
chroot
grub
mkdir
reboot
tune2fs
cp
gunzip
mke2fs
rm
udev
dd halt mknod rmmod udevinfo
df
hexdump
mkswap
route
udevstart
dmesg
hotplug
more
scp
umount
dmraid
ifconfig
mount
scsi_id
uuidgen
e2fsck
init
mtx
sed
vconfig
e2label
insmod
mv
sg_map26
vi