On Sun, 7 Sep 2003, Jan-Benedict Glaw wrote: > On Sun, 2003-09-07 13:14:53 -0400, Christian T. Steigies <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Geert volunteered to build me a kernel and I'll have a try with that. > Unfortunately, I've not yet a m68k-linux cross-toolchain, so I can't do > it myself right now.
apt-get source toolchain-source and friends :-) Although I'm still using a good lod .95.2 for kernels. > > > Well, then I started to play around: > > > > > > - Woody's root.bin with kernel-image-2.4.20-amiga kernel: > > > - Doesn't work at all, because amiboot-5.6 cannot boot that > > > kernel. It's too large. I wonder if *anybody* has ever booted > > > this image... > > > > I am using it, Amiga2000, 128MB RAM. Unless you happened to get the one > > Wow, loads of RAM:) I think my box has got 12+2, so most probably > amiboot doesn't have any problem finding enough RAM to place kernel > and/or initrd. My A4000/40 also has 12+2. It works (slowly), but you do need swap ;-) > Well, where can I get more RAM? Ebay? I'll have a look (I know that > Linux with a lot of swapping isn't much fun, though...). You need ZIPs for A3000. And the motherboard is still limited to 16 MB. > > which I built for all subarches (amiga, atari, mac, *vme), that one does not > > boot for me either, but that one never made it into the archive. You are > > sure you unpacked the kernel-image package? But then I never tried to > > install with that kernel. > > Yes, I am. But I do have a lot less RAM compared to you, so it might > simply be some too-less-RAM problem. I'll sport for some more RAM. You can also try putting the ramdisk image on a spare partition using rawwrite under AmigaOS. > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~>uname -a > > Linux aahz 2.4.20 #2 Sat Jun 21 16:37:51 EDT 2003 m68k unknown > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~>uptime > > 13:13:43 up 53 days, 13:14, 1 user, load average: 1.00, 1.01, 1.17 > > Nice:) What CPU is this? 030? IIRC he has an '060 board, which can accomodate the additional RAM. > > > - Potato install kernel + Woody root.bin > > > - Oopses some time after I've started to install the base > > > system while accessing 0x00000023 (-> seems to reference some > > > struct element...) > > > > Shouldn't happen, the woody kernel works fine for me. > > 8^D Maybe there's some bug in the swapping code. I had something like > that on MIPSel, too. Some shift value wasn't correct, but I fear I'm not > yet deep enough into m68k/linux to investigate this... Mine does survive apt-get update and upgrade, although I did remove everything from testing and unstable from sources.list. > > > 12+2, but not sure:) > > > > 12 Chip sounds a little much, 12 Fast sounds a little little, do you have a > > swap partition? > > Of course:) Would you offer to do a test for me? I don't want to ruin > your uptime, but if you're booting your box the next time, could you > please add 'mem=9M' (or rip it off if m68k doesn't handle this) to see > if the box is stable while going deeply into swap (start a gcc-3.3 or an > apt-get update). 9MB should be what's remaining after initrd got > decompressed. I'm really interested in the result here... You can do this with Amiboot. Many years ago (2.0.x-era?) I limited Fast RAM to 2 MB for a `quick' test, and was able to boot, launch X, twm, and xterm ;-) Debian installers are a different beast... I installed mine many years ago and used Debian upgrade features to keep it current. Gr{oetje,eeting}s, Geert -- Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that. -- Linus Torvalds