On Mon, Jan 16, 2006 at 10:36:03PM -0500, Peter Krummrich wrote: > Hi Stephen,
Howdy! > On 16.01.2006, you wrote: > > On Sun, Jan 15, 2006 at 12:32:55PM -0500, Peter Krummrich wrote: > > What install method did you use? Which initrd? What command line? > > > > Where did you get d-i from? > > > > I installed from the CD set (13 CDs labeled Debian 3.1 r1 m68k bin) > using the StartInstall_clgen icon in the amiga directory. Okay, installation from cd doesn't configure the network. > >> Some information about my set-up: Amiga 2000, Blizzard 2060 with 64 MByte > >> RAM and SCSI, Oktagon 2008 SCSI, X-Surf Ethernet, Picasso II graphics > >> adapter. > >> > >> The first observation was that the installer was not able to detect my > >> Ethernet adapter (X-Surf). In my Woody installation, the card works with > >> Kernel 2.4.27 with the zorro8390 module. Is there a way to repeat the > >> network configuration after the base installation has finished? > > > > Do you mean after you rebooted into the new system? > > > > Yes. Is there some special Debian configuration program or should I use > a generic one like linuxconf? You could. I haven't messed with linuxconf in years. First I would modprobe zorro8390. If that works, add it to /etc/modules. The debian way for networks is man 5 interfaces. /etc/network/interfaces auto eth0 iface eth0 inet dhcp or iface eth0 inet static address 192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 or some such. Then .... $ ifup eth0 > > It would be interesting to know whether modprobe zorro8390 from vt2 of > > the installation would've gotten you a working network. > > > > I repeated the first part of the install process to check. I discovered that > the zorro8390 module is actually included in the list of modules offered > for manual selection (I did not try this one during the actual installation > because I was looking for the ariadne2 module, which used to be the > appropriate one some time ago; the fact that the name had changed to > zorro8390 had escaped me at this time... sorry for this one). Manual > selection of the zorro8390 in the list worked. The installer continued with > configuring the network for DHCP (which would not have been my preferred > choice - I was rather looking for a way to configure a static IP address). Seems like if dhcp fails it lets you configure statically. > Maybe you can add examples for adapter names in the list? Some other people > may have similar problems to make a connection between the zorro8390 module > and ariadne2 or X-Surf adapters. I'll need one of you amiga folks to give me your thoughts on this. > >> The partitioning program had problems with one of my SCSI drives. Two of > >> them are connected to the Blizzard 2060 SCSI adapter (a 2 GByte IBM drive > >> and a 4 GByte IBM drive). The one I had problems with is a 9 GByte > >> Fujitsu drive connected to the Oktagon 2008 SCSI adapter. The installer > >> was able to detect the drive and displayed size and drive type correctly. > >> However, it did neither display partitions already present on the drive > >> nor let me add new partitions. > >> > >> The "partition a hard drive" menu item of the installer did not work > >> either. It displayed a list of all three hard drives. When selecting a > >> drive from the list, it jumped back to the list after a few seconds. > >> > >> Initially, I wanted to install Sarge on the third drive (9 GByte Fujitsu; > >> one > >> partition is already in use, so I could not erase the drive/partition > >> table completely). The problems with the installer forced me to install > >> on one of the IBM drives. > > > > Interesting. I'd sure like to see the installation log files. Probably > > in /var/log/installer of the new system. > > I will send you the files in a separate message. Some of the are quite big > and probably not interesting for all folks reading this list. That's fine. > >> When installing packages, the install process displayed an error message. > >> It could not find the package "read-edid" > > > > That shouldn't happen: network or cd? > > > > CD set I'll have to investigate. It's probably hardcoded and doesn't really apply to us anyway. It didn't actually cause a failure did it? (I mean where the installer stops and complains?) Thanks, Stephen -- Stephen R. Marenka If life's not fun, you're not doing it right! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature