On Mon, Oct 06, 2003 at 01:22:44AM +0200, Wolfgang Pfeiffer wrote: > This is what I have: > cpu : 7455, altivec supported > clock : 667MHz > revision : 3.2 (pvr 8001 0302) > bogomips : 665.19 > machine : PowerBook3,5 > motherboard : PowerBook3,5 MacRISC2 MacRISC Power Macintosh > board revision : 00000000 > detected as : 80 (PowerBook Titanium IV) > pmac flags : 0000000b > L2 cache : 256K unified > memory : 768MB > pmac-generation : NewWorld
same machine here, with 512MB ram and revision '3.3' > I'm running Debian 3.0.r.1 (testing/unstable) on the same hard disk > where OS X has its own partition(s) same here. > Yesterday I installed the Mac OS X 10.2.8 upgrade to the machine > above: After this, I couldn't boot again to my default kernel which at > this time was 2.4.21-ben2 (I had compiled this kernel on the machine > above). I installed the _first_ 10.2.8 update (the one which was removed shortly after being released) and immediately was unable to boot most of my kernels. Not a single 2.6.0-text(1,4,5) kernel would boot anymore (that is what I usually ran). The last message printed during startup is "Thermal assist unit not available" after that, the machine switches power off. Also, the hardware clock is reset to 1904. > What saved me in the end, probably, was the fact I had a second, older > fallback Kernel (kernel-image-2.4.20-powerpc) in /boot, *and* indexed > in yaboot.conf :), which still booted after the OS X upgrade (better: > It booted without problems after having stopped cupsys from starting > at boot time). 2.4.23-pre5-ben0 worked on my machine, too. Now I have installed the '1.2.8old -> 1.2.8new' update from apple.com, however still no change. Not a single of my old 2.6 images (that have been running for a month or so) would boot anymore. I suspect that apple somehow did a hidden openfirmare upgrade in that MacOS upgrade. > Wolfgang -- - Harald Welte <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.gnumonks.org/ ============================================================================ Programming is like sex: One mistake and you have to support it your lifetime
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