On Fri, Jun 20, 2003 at 01:29:27AM -0700, kvichak wrote: > I have been using Linux (Mandrake, Redhat, Suse, etc.) for 4 or so years > and want to try Debian, but can't get it installed. I have spent many > hours on this and read the help on many sites, including debian.org. > > My system: An Asus A7V with Duron 1300 MHz and an onboard promise HD > controller. I boot off an old Western Digital 4.3 gig on the main IDE > channel #1 but have two IBM drives (a 30 and a 40 gig) on the Promise > controller's first channel. These drives are broken into about 5 to 6 > partitions each and this is where all my OSs and applications reside: > Windows on hde1, Redhat on hdf2, Mandrake on hde6, Suse on hde3, /home > on hdf3, etc. There's nothing on the main IDE channel that I boot from > (using lilo) except a blank fat partition. > > I downloaded 3 debian CDs from linuxiso.org: Binary 5, 6, and 7. > The install using binary 5 (or for that matter any of the three CDs) > goes fine until time to install the kernel. I configure the keyboard, > select and format a swap partition (hde7), select and format a partition > for debian (hdf5), tell the installer where to install from (the CDROM), > tell it where /home is (hdf3), and then tell it to install the debian > OS. It goes out looking for directories that contain the install > archive and comes back and says it can't find: > > images-1.44/bf2.4/rescue.bin > > I noticed that there is a "rescue.bin" file in the the binary 5 CDROM in > the boot directory, so I manually tell it to look there, but it comes > back and says "/instmnt/boot does not contain > images-1.44/bf2.4/rescue.bin", as if it wants this specific path (with > the "images-1.44/bf2.4" part). To try to overcome this, I tried copying > the rescue.bin file from the binary 5 CD to a hard disk partition, > imbedded in an "images-1.44/bf2.4" path that I created. The installer > still can't find it.
You were on the right path. You need one more level above that for it to find it: current bf2.4 drivers.tgz images-2.44 bf2.4 rescue.bin Also, you must make sure that rescue.bin is actually the bf2.4 version (it must have come from a bf2.4 folder). However you will need CD 1 for the base installation anyway, since you don't have a fast net connection. The first CD has all the base packages on it, they are not copied to the other CDs. The alternative boot CDs such as 5 are just bootable with different kernels so that someone that needs a particular kernel to boot can still boot from CD; other than that, they each contain different software, in decreasing order of popularity. So unfortunately, CDs 6 and 7 will probably not be useful to you at all. > Is my problem that I have to do the install from the Binary 1 CD? I > noticed the binary 5 CD README file says this CD contains the install > files, but I don't have this disk (I download these disks at the > University about 40 miles away, they have a huge bandwidth, At home, > where I'm writing you from, I have a modem that maxes out at about 22 > kb/s (I live in the boonies)). The fact that the binary 5 CD starts to > install, and has the "rescue.bin" file on it, implies to me that I > should not need the binary 1 CD and I'm just doing something wrong. > > I have tried to find on the internet the "install files" that the binary > 5 CD says are on binary 1 CD, in hopes of doenloading them, but can't > find any specific to the bf2.4 flavor. The install files are available on any debian archive such as http.us.debian.org. But I think you're much better off to burn CD #1. You can probably even boot from CD #1, just type bf24 at the prompt. If you still have to boot from #5, then just insert #1 before asking for the kernel and modules to be installed. -- Debian GNU/Linux Operating System By the People, For the People Chris Tillman (a people instance) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]