On 4/6/19 4:00 PM, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz wrote: > On 4/6/19 8:19 PM, Dennis Clarke wrote: >> I just did a quick test here and ran into an inability to partition the >> internal disk. >> >> You can listen to me rambling about this at : >> >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQwwexSvpY0 >> >> Just skip ahead to the 3:45 time mark and we can see partition process >> is not there. > > Your video description is not correct. d-i does not use parted > but libparted. The correct command is "partman": > ... > > These files are part of partman-base which is shipped on the ISO (I just > verified that). > > Adrian >
OKay .. I don't know what is wrong but neither expert mode or just regular "install" seems to be able to detect a disk nor run a partition tool. However the /dev/sdaX links are in place. No idea. Also, and this is more important, your work is not only exceptional but vastly appreciated. Pay no attention to my frustrated tone as that is just me *trying* to move forwards and do testing and get a machine running. You are doing very valuable work and I really understand that it may feel like a silly treadmill to run upon. Many machines. Multiple architectures. Why? Why even bother with old sparc? Well the last thing I want in this world is a place where only x86 exists. That would be criminal. I am happy to see the concept of RISC-V but we all know there is no hardware. Yet. There are emulators like qemu which seem to work fairly well for RISC-V and possibly even ppc64 for a variety of machine specs. All of this is *needed* in the computer world. I have worked on Sparc systems for at least twenty years and I am still baffled at 4AM in the morning why bother test a new Apache apr release on Solaris? Mostly because I don't want a world run by a single perspective and a single manufacturer. So people need to be there, good people, doing good work. Also I have arm boards and a collection of Apple PowerMac boxen kicking around and even an old DEC Alpha server. I happen to really like the IBM power cpu approach. It is a great system architecture and let's face it .. the most powerful machine in the world is IBM Power9 with NVidia and all running Linux. Sadly Red Hat but let's not go there. Anyways ... I am rambling again. Trying to say "thank you". Dennis