I am using the Serial console method of installing Woody on a new, or at least, new to me, Dell system.
For those who haven't done this, you just insert the Debian boot CD and boot the system but type the following where most people just hit Enter: linux console=ttyS0,9600n8 and the Com1 port begins to send and receive all of the installation messages. This works for me until I get to the end of the first part of the configuration sequence at the point where you have to configure the Base system. At that point, you have to reboot the system and that's where things go wrong. Interestingly enough, if you build a system like that, the inittab file gets modified to make ttyS0 or which ever port you used, in to a tty login port which is very neat. Now for the bad news! What I immediately get is the remainder of the configuration sequence where one sets the time zone, host name, network acquisition method such as dhcp or ppp, etc. The problem is that now, the system seems to have forgotten that I am using a VT100. I get a very bad screen full of escape sequences and garbage like one gets when looking at a vt100 session with the wrong terminal type. When I get to the screen to set the root password, I am in an endless loop in which the system tells me that I entered an empty password which is bogus. It then proceeds to be stuck in that mode forever until I die and stop trying to enter a password.:-( GRRR! I don't fully understand what is wrong since I use Kermit's vt100 emulation on the P.C. which serves as the terminal, but I am awash in 8-bit characters and their ill effects on Kermit's operation. I can actually continue to muddle through the mess to set the time zone and system name, but that password screen is as good as a lockup since you can't get past it. I have installed earlier versions of Linux on other systems and run in to some of the same problems, but never this bad. Any ideas as to how to make the base configuration send proper vt100 codes and let me finish this installation? For computer users who happen to be blind, this is one of the best methods for installation since everything you need is on the CD, but I am stuck. The last thing that got successfully set was the time zone and I was able to bring up the network card, but all that gets lost each time I have to bring it down since it is dhcp and there isn't enough of a system up yet to safely put it on the network anyway. I did make a boot floppy when given the opportunity and it works perfectly and puts me right back at the start of the remainder of the configuration. That is fine if I can ever get proper communication with it and complete it. Any ideas please? Martin McCormick WB5AGZ Stillwater, OK OSU Center for Computing and Information Services Network Operations Group -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]