Almost certainly easier and more useful to fix 2020.10. Might not solve the AHCI+RAID issue, but at least the ISO will be able to run all the executables available in single user mode.
On Thursday, March 4, 2021, 10:12:17 AM CST, Udo Grabowski (IMK) <udo.grabow...@kit.edu> wrote: On 04.03.21 17:04, Udo Grabowski (IMK) wrote: > On 04.03.21 16:43, Reginald Beardsley via openindiana-discuss wrote: >> OK I just made several attempts: >> >> First attempt was with 2020.10 GUI install ISO. That was forced to >> maintenance mode and was unable to locate libpcidb.so.1 when I ran >> prtconf -v. >> >> Second attempt was with 2019.04 USB. That kernel panicked for >> multiuser and single user. Even with a camera ready I couldn't get the >> message. >> >> Both of those attempts had a 5 TB drive installed. I'm trying again >> with a 750 GB drive which happens to have CentOS 7 installed. That >> tries to boot, but doesn't seem to get far before it just spins. The >> GUI 2020.10 ISO behaves the same as with the 5 TB disk. >> >> It completely ignored the 2019.04 USB image even with it selected via >> F9. The 20202.10 text ISO also fails for lack of libpcidb.so.1 >> > > I can only second your opinion about the the quality of the ISOs, but > two years ago I had some luck with 2018.10, which was the first after > 151a9 that actually booted a newer system. Maybe you try that, it's > sufficient for the job (if the rpool does not have activated the most > recent feature flags...) > No, sorry, the ISO was 2018.04 (the system was then upgraded to 2018.10) _______________________________________________ openindiana-discuss mailing list openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org https://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss _______________________________________________ openindiana-discuss mailing list openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org https://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss