On Saturday 21 June 2008 10:50, Praseen Preman wrote: > Hi guys, > I am an ardent fan of Debian after I saw it running on one > of my friends machines. I have been trying to install it for a few > months but without success . I am a newbie as far as Debian is > concerned. I have worked on Fedora Linux but it seems Debian is harder > to tame hence all the more fun. Here are the tech details. > > My Machine configuration is given below > > Intel Pentium Dual Core CPU 2.80 GHz > 256 MB RAM > Seagate 40GB hard disk > Intel original Chipset motherboard > NVIDIA GeForce 6200 TurboCache(TM) > ST380211AS SATA hard disk (seagate) > SAMSUNG 52X CD RW+DVD drive > > I wrote 3 CD iso images of the Debian 4.0r3 into 3 CDs and tried to > install on my system, > the following are the system logs. > > ata1: SATA link up 1.5Gbps (Status 113 Scontrol) > ata1.00:qc timeout (cmd 0xef) > ata1.00:failed to set xfermode (err_mask=0x4) > hdb:SAMSUNG CDRW/DVD SM-352F,ATAPI CD/DVD-ROM DRIVE > ide0 at 0x1f0-0x1f7,0x3f6 on irq14 > hdb:lost interrupt > hdb:ATAPI 52 X DVD-ROM........
Looks like the kernel can't see the hard drives. I had a similar issue with a DG33BU motherboard, the G33 chipset apparently has some new bells and whistles. My workaround was to go into the BIOS and set the hard-drive access mode to "ide" (might be called "legacy"), and then boot with the "pci=nommconf" kernel option. This isn't really a Debian-specific problem, it's due to the devices being newer than the kernel support. -- A. -- Andrew Reid / [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]