On Wed, Jan 09, 2002 at 05:50:49PM +0000, Philip Blundell wrote: > > I then tried a brand new installation, including formatting the partition. > >In this case, the whole installation, until the base system installation, went > >smooth. Not a single error and no hack needed. At the base system > >installation, the error message occured once again. > > Okay. First, can you just confirm which version of boot-floppies you were > using?
3.0.18 from 2001-12-21. > > > I'd be glad to do testing, but as for debugging I can't promise anything. > >What do you mean by debugging (I never tested boot floppies of a machine > >nor am I familiar with the code; Can I run it with a debugger? What is > >the testing methodology?) > > I meant "debugging" in a fairly generic sense, as in figuring out what's wrong. > A good place to start would be to run the install up to the point where the > error occurs, then go to a shell prompt and inspect the Release file that > debootstrap claims is malformed, to see whether it was successfully downloaded > and contains a valid Components line. > > p. I'll try and do it tomorrow morning (local time). Is there anything special to check at the Components line, to see if it's valid? (Can you send me the exact line I should have there, just in case it downloads anything?) I think it does not really download anything when the problem occurs, as the error message appears instantly after I press ``Enter''. The network connection should take a little bit more, I think. I tried to find such a Release file by ``find / -name Release'', but it didn't find it. Anyway, where should I find the downloaded Release file (which dir)? -- Ariel. --- Ariel Tankus School of Computer Science Tel-Aviv University [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]