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? > > > 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.
Here are the results of the test, boot-floppies 3.0.18 dated 21.12.2001: 1. After entering the root floppy, and immediately before the first screen (the Debian 3.0 title), the following error messages occured: modprobe: modprobe: Can't open dependencies file /lib/modules/2.2.20/modules.dep (no such file or directory) I don't know if it has anything to the ``Malformed'' message, I just write *anything* I met during installation. 2. To make kernel configuration minimal I only installed the IDE/ATAPI floppy support (I might have skipped that..) and the eepro100.o network module (for my network card, which is a must). When trying to install these two, I received the following error message: /target/usr/sbin/modconf: cannot create: directory nonexistent. This was followed by a ``successful installation'' message, so I assumed these errors are not show-stoppers. 3. When I came to the base system installation, chose network, and then chose my mirror site (ftp://ftp.tau.ac.il/pub/OS/Debian, proxy: none, port: 8080; proxy & port: didn't change the defaults) came the surprise: I did NOT get the ``Malformed Release file'' message. It seemed like the installation is going fine (I didn't get to this step the previous time I tried to install). BTW, this time I was working on a brand new unused partition I have /dev/hda4. In the previous one (/dev/hda1) I already installed potato from CDs, and upgraded (network) to woody, so I don't want this erased. I reformatted my swap partition /dev/hda2, just to ensure nothing is due to the other installation. 4. Well, I thought to myself, everything is going fine. But then, another surprise: at_3.1.8-10.deb was corrupt (or so the installation system said; I guess the installation system is wrong, or else I couldn't upgrade my potato from that very same site). I tried to upgrade from the default http://http.us.debian.org/debian site (immediately after the first attempt has failed; i.e., no boot or anything in between), but then I received a message that: base-config_1.33.7_all.deb was corrupt. The same message was issued from http.uk.debian.org . Again, I can only assume these messages are wrong and not a problem in the installation system. 5. When all else fails: I executed a shell. I tried: find / -name Release . The only files I found were: /target/var/lib/apt/lists/debootstrap.invalid_dists_woody_{Release,main_binary-i386_Packages} I also tried: find / -name '*elease*' but only the above was found (and /release-notes, which has nothing to do with this). 6. I manually erased the two files I just mentioned, returned to the installation system, and tried once again the base system installation. And the 3rd surprise: ``Malformed Release file''. I never got this message in the various downloading attempts I had, but I got it only after *erased* the two files! 7. I executed a shell once again, but this time too: no Release file found. 8. Attempts to continue the installation at this stage fail and result in the ``Malformed Release file''. Good luck with the debugging, and let me know if I can be of any help in the testing! -- 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]