From 3fb2664bc199e158f10586ee9fa2def20f3ca27a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Simon Quigley Date: Sun, 25 Sep 2016 15:29:15 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Finish Chapter 1.1 --- PROGRESS.md | 4 +- source/1/1.1/retrieving_the_image.rst | 73 +++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 2 files changed, 70 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/PROGRESS.md b/PROGRESS.md index c2172bd9..cb8c3397 100644 --- a/PROGRESS.md +++ b/PROGRESS.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ | State | Chapter | | --------------------- | ----------- | -| :construction_worker: | 1.1 | -| :red_circle: | 1.2 | +| :white_check_mark: | 1.1 | +| :construction_worker: | 1.2 | | :red_circle: | 1.3 | | :red_circle: | 2.1 | | :red_circle: | 2.2 | diff --git a/source/1/1.1/retrieving_the_image.rst b/source/1/1.1/retrieving_the_image.rst index 50874508..db11ba95 100644 --- a/source/1/1.1/retrieving_the_image.rst +++ b/source/1/1.1/retrieving_the_image.rst @@ -21,8 +21,11 @@ Lubuntu offers images for three different architectures: - i386 (commonly referred to as 32-bit) - PowerPC +Architectures +------------- + amd64 ------- +~~~~~ The amd64 image will work with most modern processors. The best way to determine if your computer has an amd64 or i386 processor is to boot the image. It's the only way that you will be able to know for sure what architecture your computer is. amd64 computers are backwards compatible with i386 images. You may want to use an i386 image instead if @@ -30,12 +33,12 @@ you have an amd64 processor with very low amounts of RAM. i386 ----- +~~~~ This is the original 32-bit architecture that will work best on computers with very low amounts of RAM. PowerPC -------- +~~~~~~~ PowerPC is for older Macintosh hardware from before 2006 and IBM OpenPower systems. While we don't release PowerPC for non-LTS releases (like 16.10), you can download a 16.04 image if you wish and upgrade it. @@ -46,7 +49,67 @@ Now that the decision of which image type and architecture is done, you will nee There are several ways to download the Lubuntu image: - HTTP download (from your web browser or terminal) - - BitTorrent (from a BitTorrent client such as Transmission) - - zsync (from the terminal, recommended) + - BitTorrent (from a BitTorrent client such as Transmission, recommended for Windows and Mac OS X users) + - zsync (from the terminal, recommended for Linux users) You can also download the image via Jigdo but we will not cover that in this manual. + + +Downloading the image via HTTP +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +*We don't recommend using this method as it's often slower and less efficient than the other methods.* + +To download the image via HTTP, you can either navigate to the `Ubuntu cdimage server `_ and select the ISO file you would +like to download, or use the direct links below. + +Direct links: + - amd64 (`desktop `_, `alternate `_) + - i386 (`desktop `_, `alternate `_) + +After you download the image, you **must** verify it. There is `a helpful page on the Ubuntu Community Help wiki `_ that +can guide you in the right direction. + + +Downloading the image via BitTorrent +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Instead of downloading the image from one server, you can "torrent" the image, or download it from multiple sources +instead of just one. This is often faster and saves the bandwidth of the Ubuntu cdimage servers. If you would like to +learn more about BitTorrent, read `the Wikipedia page on the subject `_. + +In order to torrent the file, you need a BitTorrent client. We recommend `Transmission `_, an Open Source BitTorrent +client. Since Transmission only provides clients for Linux and Mac OS X, we recommend `uTorrent `_ for Windows users. + +You first need to download the seed files. They are available on the `Ubuntu cdimage server `_, or you can use the direct +links provided below. + +Direct links: + - amd64 (`desktop `_, `alternate `_) + - i386 (`desktop `_, `alternate `_) + +After you have downloaded the link you need, open it in your BitTorrent client. This will download the image. After +this is done, we recommend that you leave your BitTorrent client open so you can seed this image for other people. + + +Downloading the image via zsync +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +zsync is a convenient application that will automatically verify the checksum of the image once downloaded. The +Lubuntu team uses this to download daily images as it will download the changes since the last image was released. + +In order to use zsync, you need to install it. Since this is a Linux-only client, you can get it from your +distribution's package repository. + +If you are running Debian or Ubuntu (or a distribution based off of either), run the following command in a terminal: + + sudo apt install zsync + +If you are running Fedora (or a distribution based off of it), run the following command in a terminal: + + sudo dnf install zsync + +If you are running Arch (or a distribution based off of it), run the following command in a terminal: + + sudo pacman -S zsync + +If you are running another distribution, you can find the source code `here `_. + +**You have now downloaded the image successfully. Please continue to Chapter 1.2.**