On Wed, 2010-10-20 at 14:25 +0200, Samuel Thibault wrote: > Hello, > > There were some reports that the d-i image on > http://jk.fr.eu.org/debian/hurd-installer/ > was hanging/erroring during grub configuration. This is now solved: the > problem was simply newer grub/parted packages on the official debian > mirrors, which were overriding the patched version of Jeremie. I have > uploaded to debian-ports newer patched versions, so it's back working > again, and I've disabled autobuild of grub and parted to make sure it > doesn't break again unexpectedly :)
I have a few questions about the Debian GNU/Hurd Installer: - Is it still maintained, latest development was made by Jeremie Koenig, in august 2010, right. He is no longer active as a developer? - Looks like Samuel made the installer work again with patched grub/parted, as well as committed the Debian Installer (D-I) patches by Jeremie? - The installer, contained in mini.iso has not been updated since August 17. Are there any plans to make the Debian GNU/Hurd installer up to date with the Debian GNU/Linux Installer, now at beta1, probably not? What about the installer status for other OSes, like *BSD? - The other files at the web address above, seems to be part of the contents of mini,iso: boot/initrd.gz, boot/kernel/{ext2fs.static, gnumach.gz, ld.so.1}? - I have some comment on the installer defaults, like for a 4.3 GB qemu file, 4 GB goes into the / partition and only 224 Meg into the swap area, even with a memory parameter of 1G passed to qemu. I tried to change the defaults but had problems to create a first partition of 3.5 GB at / and a logical 0.7G partition for swap. Also toggling the boot parameter did not work. Do somebody care about comments? - Looks like the mirror files at .../hurd-installer/mirror are still updated. From where are they mirrored? BTW: I'll write up a short story how to install GNU/Hurd starting from the D-I image mini.iso up to a running X (in addition to Jeremies README.txt) with qemu and qemu-kvm if somebody is interested. Please let me know. In my opinion kemu-kvm is very usable on computers with hardware virtualization support, VT-X and AMD-V. Otherwise, maybe Xen or Virtualbox are better alternatives (will try Xen next). Thanks, Svante