Boot media is removable digital data storage medium from which a computer can load and run (boot) an operating system or utility program. This article is a complete guide to bootable media.

Boot media is removable digital data storage medium from which a computer can load and run (boot) an operating system or utility program. The computer must have a built-in program which will load and execute a program from a boot disk meeting certain standards.

bootable media

While almost all modern computers can boot from a hard drive containing the operating system and other software, they would not normally be called boot disks because they are not removable media. CD-ROMs are the most common forms of media used, but other media, such as magnetic or paper tape drives, ZIP drives, and more recently USB flash drives can be used. The computer’s BIOS must support booting from the device in question.

Uses

Boot disks are usually used for:

  • Operating system installation
  • Data recovery
  • Data purging
  • BIOS flashing
  • Hardware or software troubleshooting
  • Customizing an operating environment

MiniTool Media Builder offers the best way to create a bootable media so as to help users manage hard drives better, such as to restore system to previous version, to recover hard drive without OS, etc.

Process

The term boot comes from the idea of lifting oneself by one’s own bootstraps: the computer contains a tiny program (bootstrap loader) which will load and run a program found on a boot device. This program may itself be a small program designed to load a larger and more capable program, i.e., the full operating system. To enable booting without the requirement either for a mass storage device or to write to the boot medium, it is usual for the boot program to use some system RAM as a RAM disk for temporary file storage.

As an example, any computer compatible with the IBM PC is able with built-in software to load the contents of the first 512 bytes of a floppy and to execute it if it is a viable program; boot floppies have a very simple loader program in these bytes. The process is vulnerable to abuse; data floppies could have a virus written to their first sector which silently infects the host computer if switched on with the disk in the drive.

Device Selection

A modern PC is configured to attempt to boot from various devices in a certain order. If a computer is not booting from the device desired, such as the floppy drive, the user may have to enter the BIOS setup function by pressing a special key when the computer is first turned on (such as Delete, F1, F2, F10 or F12), and then changing the boot order. More recent BIOSes permit the interruption of the final stage of the boot process by pressing a function key (usually F11). This results in a list of bootable devices being presented, from which a selection may be made.

Modern Apple computers will boot from an appropriate disk if the user presses the C key while the machine is starting.

Requirements

Different operating systems use different boot disk contents. All boot disks must be compatible with the computer they are designed for.

MS-DOS/PC DOS/DR-DOS

  • A valid boot sector in form of a volume boot record (VBR)
  • IO.SYS or IBMBIO.COM
  • MSDOS.SYS or IBMDOS.COM
  • COMMAND.COM
  • All files must be for the same version of the operating system. Complete boot disks can be prepared in one operation by an installed operating system; details vary.

FreeDOS

  • A valid boot sector on the disk
  • COMMAND.COM
  • KERNEL.SYS

Linux

  • A bootloader such as SYSLINUX or GRUB
  • Linux kernel
  • Initial ram disk (initrd)
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