Op di 04-02-2003, om 18:58 schreef Carr, Chris: > Hello Pete, > > I spent three hours last night trying to help my dad install Debian. Unless > I'm more stupid than I realise, there is a major flaw in the Debian > installation heuristic, so I'm copying this to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > in case it counts as a bug. If not, perhaps you can defend it for me! > > The situation: we have a reasonably modern PC with Windoze occupying 16Gb of > a 20Gb disk, called the CWC. There is a much older PC functioning as a > "router" - this one happily runs Slackware and shares the cablemodem > connection using NAT. (It also acts as a print server.) There is a 3rd > Windoze-only PC on the network, called the CFC, but it doesn't feature in > this little story. > > So, we decide to install Debian on the CWC. We decide to do a net (HTTP) > install, since the cablemodem is blindingly fast and we've never done one > before. We boot into Windoze, fire up CuteFTP and download the following: > > ..../current/install.bat > ..../current/linux.bin (kernel image) > ..../current/dosutils/loadlin.exe > ..../current/images-1.44/root.bin (initial ramdisk image) > > Off we go. Kernel boots fine, loads the initrd fine. We step through the > install, sorting out swap space (hda5) and creating and mounting a root > partition (hda6). We get to "Install Kernel and Driver Modules" and find no > net option - we try "Configure the Network" but this Debian kernel hasn't > detected the network card (a D-Link DFE-530TX). > > So we go back to "Configure Device Driver Modules" thinking, no problem, > we'll pop in the module and be off. The modules are of course not there > because we didn't download them, so we go back into Windoze and fetch > > ..../current/drivers.tgz > > Then we start over (from install.bat) and step through again to the same > place. We use "Mount a Previously Initialized Partition" to mount hda1 on > /target/mnt/hda1, in order to gain access to the modules.
That was your error. The 'mount a previously initialized partition' step refers to mounting a linux-formatted partition as your root ('/') partition (or, once your root partition is mounted, on any other mount point, of course). You don't want to install Linux on your Windows-partition, you want to install linux on /dev/hda6. Thus, you should indeed choose 'mount a previously initialized partition', but mount /dev/hda6 instead of /dev/hda1. When you get to the step of installing the kernel and modules, there should be an option of installing from hard disk... This is not really a bug in the install system, it's merely a misunderstanding at your side... -- wouter at grep dot be "An expert can usually spot the difference between a fake charge and a full one, but there are plenty of dead experts." -- National Geographic Channel, in a documentary about large African beasts. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]