On Thu, Jul 11, 2002 at 12:09:26PM -0500, Kent West wrote: > Kent West wrote:
> >The cp was successful, but the "ybin -v" produced the same errors. It shouldn't have complained about the lack of a proc filesystem in the normal installer environment. > > So I started the installation over, and this time, during partitioning, > wiped the Apple Partition which gave me an empty drive, then created a > bootstrap partition (with the "b" command), created a 256MB swap > partition, and used the rest of the drive for a single / partition. > > When I got to the step to "Make System Bootable", I had the same > failures: yabootconfig failed. When I tried to run "yabootconfig" > manually on the second vt, it complained that it couldn't determine the > root partition. > > I'm really thinking there's something screwy about this particular G3's > hardware setup. I opened the case and took a look (didn't change > anything). The Maxtor hard drive is the only device plugged into the IDE > port on the mobo, and it's set to Master. The CDROM and zip drives are > plugged into the Ultra ATA port on the mobo. > > I've been trying to figure out how the aliases work, and it's not making > sense to me. > > According to "printenv", the "bootdevice" is set to "hd:,//:txbi", and > according to "devalias", "hd" and "ultra0" both are set to > "/pci/@d/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/[EMAIL PROTECTED]". BIG > ASSUMPTION: I assumed that the > command "mac-boot" is equivalent to "boot hd:,//:txbi", so I ran that > command, and got the (by now, familiar) error "can't OPEN: hd:,//:txbi". > I tried it also with "ultra0" instead of "hd", and with the long name > (appropriately adapted). > > And since I've been able to boot the installation by referring to "ide0" > instead of "hd", it seems to me that "hd" doesn't refer to the hard disk Right. I think you just need to s/hd/ide0/ in all the documentation. > at all. "devalias" refers to "cd" and "zip" and "ide0" as being on the > same controller ("mac-io/[EMAIL PROTECTED]", with the cd adding "[EMAIL > PROTECTED]" and > the zip adding "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"). So "cd" is essentially the same as > "ide0/[EMAIL PROTECTED]", but that can't be because when I boot the Debian > installation using a reference to "ide0", the installation starts from > the hard disk instead of the CDROM. > > So it seems to me that the aliases in OpenFirmware are messed up. I > tried a "set-defaults" command (or something similar; I found it on the > web yesterday but don't remember the exact command name), followed by a > "reset-all", which rebooted the Mac, but nothing changed. I believe your hardware is set up on a different scheme than normal, re: ide master/slave/primary/secondary. > Related, sort of: Does setting the "Startup Disk" in MacOS simply change > the "boot-device" setting in OpenFirmware? In other words, could I > simulate changing the Startup Disk in MacOS with a command similar to > "setenv boot-device=[whatever makes CDROM vs Hard Drive, etc)? I don't know, but I don't think so. It changes files on the hard drive that the MacOS ROM reads at boot, I think. -- *------v--------- Installing Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 --------v------* | <http://www.debian.org/releases/woody/installmanual> | | debian-imac (potato): <http://debian-imac.sourceforge.net> | | Chris Tillman [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | May the Source be with you | *----------------------------------------------------------------* -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]