OK, after hearing lots of hype about how Linux is the best thing since sliced bread, I'm putting the claims to the test and trying to install Debian on a new Intel box. I'm an old VAX/VMS system manager and have been playing with computers in various forms for 20 years. If Linux is so easy to install, I should be able to do it with a minimum of bother, right? NOT! So, this mailing list request is a test of Linux support. I'm assuming this is where you go when stuck.
I'm trying to install the potato release of Debian. I purchased CD's: three regular binary CD's and a non-US CD. I booted from the CD and began the installation. I didn't install the network card, because I didn't see it listed and will have to mess with that later (a question for another time). Things went more or less OK until I got to the APT configuration part. I fed it all 4 CD's to scan, which it did, and then used the Simple Package Selection- Task Installer to select several package combinations. It asked for the first binary CD, which I inserted, and it came back with errors on SSH and LIBSSH installation. It said I could try it again. It never asked for another CD, but I remembered something about SSH being on the non-US CD, so I stuck that in and tried again. This time, it didn't initially give me an error but asked for Lynx configuration and ssh configuration info, then proceeded with the install. After a line about purging TEX files, it began to give me error messages for the next hour and a half. hdc:cdrom_decode_status: status = 0X51 {DriveReady Seek Complete Error} hdc:cdrom_decode_status: error = 0X34 hdc: ATAPI reset complete hdc: irq timeout: status = 0Xd0 {Busy} end_request: I/O error, dev 16:00 (hdc), sector 863016 It stepped through a bunch of sectors before finishing, then gave me the configuration error screen again. I tried the binary 1 CD again, but the same ssh errors. I elected not to try to reinstall, and it then finished the configuration without ever asking me for the 2nd and 3rd binary CD's. Can anyone tell me what happened here and what (if anything) I should do about it? I can find no reference to this in the Debian install document. Thanks, -- Kevin Carnes Associate Research Professor James R. Macdonald Lab Kansas State University [EMAIL PROTECTED]