I posted this question elsewhere, but decided this would also be a good
place to ask. Thanks, by the way, to the two people who responded to my
request for partitioning advice.
I am going through the long, hard, complicated process of installing
Debian Sarge on an IBM powerpc. I'm installing Sarge because that's the
only install cd I could find that would boot on my RS/6000. I've been
running a stripped down low-level linux completely in ram for the last
several days as I make baby steps towards getting a bootable linux on
one of the computer's scsi hard discs. I did manage to get a Debian
Sarge install to the hard drive after partitioning it and mounting it. I
have the swap partition working. I can even chroot into it.
The problem is, the install system uses bterm which the distro on the
hard drive does not recognize when I try to issue apt-setup. I've tried
every method I can think of or find to change the TERM, but it just
won't change. It just keeps telling me that bterm is not recognized. The
install cd isn't working like it should, so I'm having to do every step
myself from this bterm screen. I had to download and install a scsi
module. I had to download and install mke2fs. I'm stuck at this last
step before I can make this system bootable. I'm so close I can taste
it, but so far away I'm getting depressed.
I just don't know how to change the TERM or even if I need to. There
might be something else I'm missing. I think I'm past the hardware
issues at this point and it's all software. Maybe it's more important to
install a kernel and boot loader.
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