Unofficial Download Mirrors In addition locations listed above and Oracle Software Delivery Cloud, Oracle Linux ISOs can be download from several mirror sites. Note that these site are not endorsed by Oracle, but that you can verify the downloaded files using the procedure outlined above.
Rhel 7.6 Download
Install RHEL 6.6 or 7.1 OS Manually Using Local or Remote Media
This procedure describes how to boot the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 6.6 or 7.1 operating system installation from local or remote media. The procedure assumes that you are booting the RHEL installation media from one of the following sources:
RHEL 6.6 or 7.1 DVD set (external DVD)
RHEL 6.6 or 7.1 ISO DVD image
If you are booting the installation media from a PXE environment, refer to Install RHEL 6.6 or 7.1 Using PXE Network Boot for instructions.
For further details about installing a RHEL OS, see the RHEL documentation collection at https://access.redhat.com/site/documentation/en-US.
Download Rhel 6.6 Iso Image Viewer
- Ensure that the install media is available to boot.
For an ISO image on a DVD, insert the DVD into the local or remote DVD-ROM drive.
For an ISO image on the network, ensure that the ISO image is available and that the Oracle ILOM Remote System Console Plus application has mounted the ISO image.
For additional information about how to set up the installation media, see Local or Remote Installation Options.
For additional information about how to set up the installation media, see Local or Remote Installation Options.
- Reset or power on the server.
For example, do one of the following:
From the local server, press the Power button (approximately 1 second) on the front panel of the server to turn the server off, and then press the Power button again to power on the server.
From the Oracle ILOM web interface, click Host Management > Power Control, select Reset from the Select Action list box, and then click Save.
From the Oracle ILOM CLI, type: reset /System
The server begins the boot process and the BIOS screen appears.
Note - The next event occurs very quickly; therefore, attention is needed for the following steps. You might want to enlarge the size of your screen to eliminate scroll bars. - In the BIOS screen, press the F8 key to specify a temporary boot device for the RHEL installation.
[Boot Pop Up Menu Selected] appears at the bottom of the BIOS screen, and then the Please Select Boot Device menu appears. The screen that appears might differ depending on whether you have the UEFI/BIOS Boot Mode configured for Legacy BIOS or UEFI.
For Legacy BIOS Boot Mode, a screen similar to the following appears:
For UEFI Boot Mode, a screen similar to the following appears:
Note - The Please Select Boot Device menu that appears in your installation might differ depending on the type of disk controller and other hardware, such as PCIe network cards, installed in your server. - In the Please Select Boot Device menu, select either the external, or virtual DVD device as the first boot device, and then press Enter.
After a few seconds, the splash screen for the RHEL installation appears. The bottom half of the splash screen lists instructions, function keys, and the boot prompt.
- In the Red Hat Enterprise Linux splash screen, click Next to continue the normal user interactive installation.
Alternately, for text mode, enter the following command:
- Continue the basic Red Hat installation setup by following the on-screen instructions and the Red Hat documentation.
For detailed installation instructions, see the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Installation Guides at:
Note - If the Oracle Linux 6.6 or 7.1 OS or Oracle VM 3.3 software is preinstalled on the disk, you can choose to partition the disk to remove the preinstalled OS; or, you can choose to keep the preinstalled OS and partition the disk to support dual-boot operating systems. - After completing the basic Red Hat installation setup, perform the post installation tasks listed inPost Installation Tasks for RHEL 6.6 or 7.1 OS.
Rhel 6 Download
Image files, unlike normal files, are usually not opened; rather, they are mounted. An ISO image (.iso) is simply a CD-ROM image saved in ISO-9660 format. ISO images are mainly used as source files from which to create CDs. As an example, most distributions of Linux release ISO images of the installation CDs. You can download the images here. Notes: Installed from CentOS-6.6-x8664-minimal.iso; Guest Additions NOT installed, fix eth0 up at boot, US keyboard. Download CentOS 6.4 x8664 and x86 ISO. CentOS 6.4 has been released 9th March 2013. As we know, CentOS is an Enterprise-class. The Red Hat Customer Portal delivers the knowledge, expertise, and guidance available through your Red Hat subscription.