All versions of Clonezilla live support machine with legacy BIOS.As the Ubuntu Server image now uses subiquity, the build process that built mini.iso is no longer used, thus why this installation media is now old.Checksums, checksums gpg, changelog, known issue, release noteĬhecksums, checksums gpg changelog, known issue, release noteĬhecksums, checksums gpg, changelog, known issue It helps you to find and download fully functional official Ubuntu mini.iso filesĬanonical and the Ubuntu project never officially supported the mini.iso it was produced as a by-product of building the debian-installer. This general link has worked for some years, and seems to be kept up to date. See this link: Installation/UEFI-and-BIOS/stable-alternative.
There is a compressed image file dd_text_16. of such an installed system, that can be used as a start of a custom installation. You can use an Ubuntu Server amd64 iso file (64-bit) for 'mini installations' in UEFI mode. Thus, the computer will boot in BIOS compatibility mode, and the installation will be in BIOS mode. The mini iso lacks the proper files for booting the computer in UEFI mode. While the minimal iso image is handy, it isn't useful for installing on UEFI-based systems that you want to run in UEFI mode.
If you selected nothing, upon reboot you will arrive at a cli prompt from here you can fully customize your new system. You may also select nothing and just continue to finish the installation. You can also select "Manual package selection" which will take you to aptitude. I personally booted Ubuntu, Xubuntu, Lubuntu from live USB (and in older years, CD) to get a graphical desktop and run some tools, even sometimes on machine without storage.
On the software selection screen, you can select from a number of collections of software such as different desktop environments (kde, xfce, etc), a multitude of different servers, multimedia creation tools, media center (mythbuntu), etc. The regular (not the alternate or server) ISOs of major flavors of Ubuntu, whether 32-bit or 64-bit, can all boot live on a machine to test drive without installing. You can then follow the instructions from the text-based installer. To install, boot your computer from the the mini iso and select "Install" at the prompt. To use the mini iso image download mini.iso from one of the following links and burn it to a CD or USB drive.įor help with CD burning, see BurningIsoHowtoįor help with USB drive burning, see Installation/FromUSBStickįor differences between Ubuntu release versions, please see Releases. The mini iso uses a text-based installer, making the image as compact as possible.
The download time savings achieved by using a mini iso can be significant, as only current packages are downloaded, so there is no need to upgrade packages immediately after installation.
Downloading packages at install time reduces the size of the iso image to approximately ~40MB depending on architecture (see below), as well as providing only the packages needed for installation. The minimal iso image will download packages from online archives at installation time instead of providing them on the install media itself.