On Wed 25 Feb 2015 at 14:00:58 +0800, Bret Busby wrote: > On 20/02/2015, Bob Proulx <b...@proulx.com> wrote: > > > > You could always download the standard debian-installer and use that > > to boot rescue mode. It is a very good option. > > In trying to use a standard Debian installer iso, and booting into > rescue mode, I got toa screen "select partition into which to install > the root system", or words to that effect.
That is a travesty of what it does say. > I have 13 partitions, and that screen does not provide any > information, such as labels or filesystem types, for the partitions, > so I have to figure out which is the appropriate partition to use as > the root system. It does not indicate anything like "A previous Debian > installation was found in partition <x>, so you might want to use this > partition." You have already been given guidance on how to find the Debian partition from the GRUB prompt. > So, I have to remove the disk with that iso image, boot with a LiveCD > disk, and, examine the partitions. No you don't. 1. Switch to a console with ALT F2. 2. On my machine I would do ls -l /dev/sd* to get the recognised partitions. 3. Then I would mount each of them in turn mount /dev/sda5 /mnt and do cat /mnt/etc/issue umount /mnt [Snip] > Why does the Debian standard installation iso image, not include an > "Abort installation" option (at each screen, although, even, a single > instantiation, on the primary menu, would help, by rebooting the > system into that menu, to do it, if that is the only way to access > that option), that would enable ejection of the removable media with > the iso image, instead of making this so difficult, to extract the > removable media with the iso image? Did you try the <Go Back> button? Or type "poweroff" or "reboot". -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/25022015102707.1408dcb5a...@desktop.copernicus.demon.co.uk