3.33. Installation Complete
Congratulations! Your Red Hat Linux 9 installation is now complete!
The installation program will prompt you to prepare your system for
reboot. Remember to remove any installation media (diskette in the
diskette drive or CD in the CD-ROM drive) if they are not ejected
automatically upon reboot.
If you do not have a boot loader installed and configured, you will
need to use the boot diskette you created during the installation now.
After your computer's normal power-up sequence has completed,
you should see the graphical boot loader prompt, at which you can do any of
the following things:
Press [Enter] — causes the default boot entry
to be booted.
Select a boot label, followed by [Enter] —
causes the boot loader to boot the operating system corresponding to the
boot label. (Press [?] or [Tab] at LILO's
text mode boot loader prompt for a list of valid boot labels.)
Do nothing — after the boot loader's timeout period, (by
default, five seconds) the boot loader will automatically boot the
default boot entry.
Do whatever is appropriate to boot Red Hat Linux. You
should see one or more screens of messages scroll by. Eventually, you
should see a login: prompt or a GUI login screen (if you
installed the X Window System and chose to start X automatically).
 | Tip |
|---|
| | If you are not sure what to do next, we suggest you
begin with the Red Hat Linux Getting Started Guide (available online at http://www.redhat.com/docs/
if not included as part of your boxed set), which covers topics relating to
the basics of your system and is an introduction to using Red Hat Linux.
If you are a more experienced user looking for information on
administration topics, you may find the Red Hat Linux Reference Guide to
be more helpful.
If you are looking for information on system configuration, you may
find the Red Hat Linux Customization Guide to be helpful.
|
The first time you start your Red Hat Linux machine, you will be presented with
the Setup Agent, which guides you through the
Red Hat Linux configuration. Using this tool, you can set your system time and date,
install software, register your machine with Red Hat Network, and more. The
Setup Agent lets you configure your environment
at the beginning, so that you can get started using your Red Hat Linux system
quickly. For more information on using the
Setup Agent, refer to the chapter titled
Getting Started in the
Red Hat Linux Getting Started Guide.