On Sat, May 01, 2004 at 12:13:15AM +0100, Jonathan McDowell wrote: > However there was nothing viewable on tty 3 or 4 (where I'd expect the > logs to be based on i386 + m68k installs). I was able to view these by > cat /dev/vcc/{3,4} on tty 2; I assume it was some issue in setting up the > framebuffer? tty 2 had dark blue writing rather than the white I'd > expect.
All strange, and nothing I recognize ... > Gets 70% through installing the base system and hits a problem. Looking > at tty 3 it's an issue with installing the kernel to the HD. > > "You are attempting to install an initrd kernel image (version > 2.4.25-powerpc-small) > This will not working unless you have configured your boot loader to use > initrd. (An initrd image is a kernel image that expects to use an > INITial Ram Disk to mount a minimal root file system into RAM and use > that for booting). > > > I repeat, You need to configure your boot loader -- please read your > bootloader documentation for details on how to add initrd images. > > If you have already done so, and you wish to get rid of this message, > please put > `do_initrd = Yes' > in /etc/kernel-img.conf. Not this is optional, but if you do not, > you'll continue to see this message whenever you install a kernel > image image using initrd. > Do you want to stop not? [Y/n]Ok, Aborting. > dpkg: error processing > /cdrom/pool/main/k/kernel-patch-2.4.25-powerpc/kernel-image-2.4.25-powerpc-small-pmac_2.4.25-4_powerpc.deb > (--unpack) > > " Ugh. Hello, screaming nightmare. It's unduly painful to have initrd kernels for some subarchitectures but not others, because you only get to specify a default at build-time in rootskel, i.e. one choice per architecture. Sven, how about initrd support in all powerpc 2.4 kernels? :-) It seems to work fairly happily for 2.6 now, with trunk of everything relevant in d-i ... > Running base-config it assumed my keyboard was USB; it's not, it's ADB. > I wasn't asked about this and it meant I had to change from alt to > option for switching VTs (at the very least; I haven't noticed any other > broken keys yet). I think that's just conflation of hardware and keymap. You do *not* want an ADB keymap, trust me ... (http://www.debian.org/ports/powerpc/keycodes) Cheers, -- Colin Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]