There's a utility called 'Boot CD' which offers just that. You can get it from http://www.charlessoft.com/ - it's free.
The application, once started, asks for the name of the CD, size of the CD-R you're going to write on and the RAM-Disk the booting OS should create.
Then you can add some (not too many) utilities. I usually add Apple's own harddisk utilities, the Terminal application and any harddrive utilities I've bought, such as DiskWarrior, Norton etc.
BootCD then creates a disk image that you can burn either in Toast, DiskCopy (Jaguar) or DiskUtility (Panther).
ATTENTION: BootCD 0.5.4 is not yet Panther compatible.
You can then boot from this new CD and use the disk utilities to perform tests & reparation on your harddrive.
The application, once started, asks for the name of the CD, size of the CD-R you're going to write on and the RAM-Disk the booting OS should create.
Then you can add some (not too many) utilities. I usually add Apple's own harddisk utilities, the Terminal application and any harddrive utilities I've bought, such as DiskWarrior, Norton etc.
BootCD then creates a disk image that you can burn either in Toast, DiskCopy (Jaguar) or DiskUtility (Panther).
ATTENTION: BootCD 0.5.4 is not yet Panther compatible.
You can then boot from this new CD and use the disk utilities to perform tests & reparation on your harddrive.