On 3/3/21 7:22 AM, Richard Owlett wrote:
I've one fine machine running i386 flavor of Debian 9.13 .
I've wish to install 64 bit flavor on a second machine.
debian-10.8.0-amd64-netinst.iso was successfully downloaded & saved.
It was copied to a USB flash drive and installation attempted.
Only did minimal install as I could not connect to internet.
To eliminate possibility that second was itself defective I attempted a
multi-boot install to the first machine [Dell Latitude E6410].
Essentially same result :{
Connection to internet is via a T-Mobile Alcatel Linkzone Hotspot.
The WiFi connectivity programmatically disabled (i.e. it is effectively
just a modem).
It is detected by lsusb as:
Bus 002 Device 008: ID 1bbb:0195 T & A Mobile Phones
No non-free driver is needed as none are on the working system.
I attempted to configure the ethernet device with the numeric URL the
working machine uses when configuring it. The installer was happy until
it tried to connect to a chosen mirror. I tried 3 in the United States
and 1 in Canada. None worked.
As I can boot a working Debian on that machine, all installer logs for
the failed install are conveniently available.
Also I didn't find anything in
https://www.debian.org/releases/stable/amd64/ telling details of how to
set up a "ethernet" device.
What do I do now?
If you have a Windows PC with an Ethernet port, insert the USB modem
into the Windows PC, connect to the Internet, share the Internet
connection to the Ethernet port, and connect the Ethernet port of the
Windows computer to the Ethernet port of the Linux computer.
Or, use the Debian i386 machine instead of a Windows PC.
Or, get Internet service that includes a modem/ gateway with an Ethernet
port. This is probably the best answer in the long run.
David