On Fri, 2003-03-28 at 12:52, Geert Stappers wrote: > > > > Similarly a possible terminfo-udeb, for remote installs; we currently > > build a subset (ansi,vt100, ..) of terminfo data on the rootskel; > > suboptimal if you are remote-installing on a different terminal. Imagine > > a terminfo-udeb; if [something] spots TERM that is not supported, it > > should request a terminfo-udeb, and automatically fix it. > > > > Supporting other "terminals" then ansi and vt100 can indeed be done in d-i. > However IMHO it doesn't make sense. > Most terminalprogramms can easy be configured to emulate an other terminal. > Or when not, then take another terminal programm at the non d-i side. >
Yes, it can, but I gave it as an example; its cosmetic. (A better example of a real use was given, pulling in the right console fonts). If someone is installing debian remotely from an eg DECterm, they shouldnt have to change TERM=vt100, or whatever. For the most part, how it would work, would be eg in the S390 case (*) (see other thread; on S390 there is no local console; you boot and then login via telnet). The user logs in via telnet, which passes the TERM value. if the TERM!={ansi,vt100,linux}, then terminfo-udeb is loaded, and the terminfo data installed, and installation continues more beautifully. > Formatting screen output with terminfo data > is an other kind of problem then a floppy disk image that has to provide > an driver for the next driver such as harddisk driver or NIC driver. > I can't parse this; do you mean its different than the driver loading problems; if so, yes, I agree; they are critical, this is cosmetic. > So take a different approach to handle it. > > (*) Actually, it may be useful in other cases too. See the netconsole project, that aims to provide an ethernet console (simple TCP/IP stack & telnet login) or, I believe the Axis Communications Linux SoCs, which provide an ethernet (telnet) login. In these cases, the telnet protocol would be used for remote installation, rather than a serial console; and so telnetd would be useful, and the terminfo issue would occur. > Geert Stappers -- Alastair McKinstry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> GPG Key fingerprint = 9E64 E714 8E08 81F9 F3DC 1020 FA8E 3790 9051 38F4 He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself. - --Thomas Paine
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