On 09/18/2018 07:58 PM, Frank Scheiner wrote:
Hi all,
On 08/17/2018 10:00 PM, Frank Scheiner wrote:
On 08/17/2018 09:35 PM, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz wrote:
On 08/17/2018 09:23 PM, Frank Scheiner wrote:
My question now is, to which `linux-image[...]` package version
should I actually file the
Hi all,
On 08/17/2018 10:00 PM, Frank Scheiner wrote:
On 08/17/2018 09:35 PM, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz wrote:
On 08/17/2018 09:23 PM, Frank Scheiner wrote:
My question now is, to which `linux-image[...]` package version
should I actually file the bug report?
You should rather test an upstre
On 08/17/2018 09:35 PM, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz wrote:
On 08/17/2018 09:23 PM, Frank Scheiner wrote:
My question now is, to which `linux-image[...]` package version should I
actually file the bug report?
You should rather test an upstream kernel and report the bug
to bugzilla.kernel.org.
On 08/17/2018 09:23 PM, Frank Scheiner wrote:
> My question now is, to which `linux-image[...]` package version should I
> actually file the bug report?
You should rather test an upstream kernel and report the bug
to bugzilla.kernel.org.
Adrian
--
.''`. John Paul Adrian Glaubitz
: :' : Debi
Hi,
during testing an on-disk installation of Sid on my p5 520Q I noticed a
problem that prevents the installed OS from finishing booting. I suspect
the `ipr` module (which handles the built-in IBM SCSI (RAID) controller,
the internal disks are attached to) or at least that it is part of this
Hi, there
When booting, it always hangs here,
-8<-
Invalid card number
Usage: amixer command
Available options:
-h,--help this help
-c,--card N select the card
-D,--device N select the device, default 'defaul
On Sat, 10 Sep 2005 the mental interface of
Elimar Riesebieter told:
> On Fri, 09 Sep 2005 the mental interface of
> Matteo Bigoi - Bigo! told:
>
> [...]
> > What can I do?
>
> Checkout 2.6.13:
No, checkout 2.6.13.1!
Elimar
--
Never make anything simple and efficient when a way
can be f
On Fri, 09 Sep 2005 the mental interface of
Matteo Bigoi - Bigo! told:
[...]
> What can I do?
Checkout 2.6.13:
...
Author: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sun Sep 4 08:28:05 2005 +1000
[PATCH] Fix PCI ROM mapping
This fixes a problem with pci_map_rom() which doesn't properly
On 9/9/05, Andrea Lusuardi - UoVoBW <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, 9 Sep 2005 11:53:33 +0200
> Matteo Bigoi - Bigo! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> > I' ve compiled a 2.6.13 kernel without any patch ad when I boot it,
> > the open firmware print some information ad the kernel don't bo
On Fri, 9 Sep 2005 11:53:33 +0200
Matteo Bigoi - Bigo! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> I' ve compiled a 2.6.13 kernel without any patch ad when I boot it,
> the open firmware print some information ad the kernel don't boot.
>
> This is my openfirmware "log":
>
> pmac_init(): exit
> id mac():
Hi,
I' ve compiled a 2.6.13 kernel without any patch ad when I boot it, the
open firmware print some information ad the kernel don't boot.
This is my openfirmware "log":
pmac_init(): exit
id mac(): done
MMU: enter
MMU: hw init
hash: enter
hash: find piece
hash: patch
hash: done
MMU: mapin
MMU: se
This mail was in my mail queue due to my "wise" ISP.
Apparently I also have my IP (dorm wide) listed in rsbl... and is only
them (and is the lame ftp-url relaying scheme which does not apply).
Freaking rsbl!
Eddy Petrisor wrote:
Mauro wrote:
On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 21:49 +0300, Eddy Petrisor wrote:
On (21/04/05 01:36), Eddy Petrisor wrote:
> Mauro wrote:
> >On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 21:49 +0300, Eddy Petrisor wrote:
> >
> >>I have encountered the clock problem when using the ubuntu kernel
> >>2.6.10. After most of the sleeps the laptop could not recover and I
> >>was
> >>forced to reset. Invari
Mauro wrote:
On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 21:49 +0300, Eddy Petrisor wrote:
I have encountered the clock problem when using the ubuntu kernel
2.6.10. After most of the sleeps the laptop could not recover and I
was
forced to reset. Invariably the clock was set to 1-jan-1904 and I had
problems with vario
On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 21:49 +0300, Eddy Petrisor wrote:
>
> I have encountered the clock problem when using the ubuntu kernel
> 2.6.10. After most of the sleeps the laptop could not recover and I
> was
> forced to reset. Invariably the clock was set to 1-jan-1904 and I had
> problems with vario
James Tappin wrote:
It looks as if the upgrade managed to trash the hardware clock setting,
and in addition when I booted to Linux, the wireless base station was
weak so that the network was effectively down when ntpdate tried to run
-- as a result on Linux I was getting a date of 1-Jan-1904. After
On (18/04/05 17:42), James Tappin wrote:
> On Mon, 18 Apr 2005 14:28:17 +0100
> James Tappin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> JT> I have a G3 iBook that is supposed to dual-boot Debian/Sarge and
> JT> MacOS X.
> JT>
> JT> I use the yaboot boot loader, but since the latest OSX release
> JT> (10.3.9)
On Mon, 18 Apr 2005 14:28:17 +0100
James Tappin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
JT> I have a G3 iBook that is supposed to dual-boot Debian/Sarge and
JT> MacOS X.
JT>
JT> I use the yaboot boot loader, but since the latest OSX release
JT> (10.3.9) I can only boot Linux. Whenever I try to boot OSX it com
I have a G3 iBook that is supposed to dual-boot Debian/Sarge and MacOS
X.
I use the yaboot boot loader, but since the latest OSX release (10.3.9)
I can only boot Linux. Whenever I try to boot OSX it comes up with the
Apple logo then powers itself down again. I've tried rerunning ybin with
no joy.
On Mon, 2004-10-25 at 10:17, Sven Luther wrote:
> > I'm not sure what the problem with quik is, actually. I've avoided
> > using it because it requires messing with Open Firmware. The
> > to me, it just doesn't seem worth while spending the time on it
> > given that BootX works so well for me.
On Tue, Sep 28, 2004 at 12:30:26AM -0400, Rick Thomas wrote:
>
> On Monday, September 27, 2004, at 03:13 PM, Sebastiaan Molenaar wrote:
>
> >On Mon, 2004-09-27 at 05:42, Rick Thomas wrote:
> >>Actually, miboot is a fully-fledged bootloader. The only thing it
> >>needs is a very small HFS partiti
There is a project to produce a free (as in "no IP encumbrances")
version of miboot in a clean-room environment.
Contact Sven Luther <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> if you want to help!
Rick
On Tuesday, September 28, 2004, at 03:43 AM, Sebastiaan Molenaar wrote:
Hmm, so technically I'm supposed to pay Apple for the use of BootX /
miboot ?
But in practice, nobody does pay, and Apple doesn't ask. It's
easier for all concerned -- especially Apple -- to just ignore the
issue and
On Tue, 2004-09-28 at 05:30, Rick Thomas wrote:
> The Debian developers use quik (and avoid miboot and BootX) for
> reasons of political correctness. BootX and miboot use some binary
> code that is lifted verbatim from Apple's boot disks. They are
> therefor "not free" of Apple's intellectual p
On Monday, September 27, 2004, at 03:13 PM, Sebastiaan Molenaar wrote:
On Mon, 2004-09-27 at 05:42, Rick Thomas wrote:
Actually, miboot is a fully-fledged bootloader. The only thing it
needs is a very small HFS partition to run out of (just big enough
for the initrd image and the compressed k
On Mon, 2004-09-27 at 05:42, Rick Thomas wrote:
> Actually, miboot is a fully-fledged bootloader. The only thing it
> needs is a very small HFS partition to run out of (just big enough
> for the initrd image and the compressed kernel -- plus the miboot
> program itself, of course!). It masquer
On Sun, 2004-09-26 at 01:08, Rick Thomas wrote:
> >>> For the moment I've got it working with bootX but I would really
> >>> like to
> >>> get it working with quik.
> >>>
> >>
> >> Unfortunately, that part has never worked for me, either.
> Wow, you're doing much better than I am. On the other han
On Saturday, September 25, 2004, at 07:47 PM, Sebastiaan Molenaar wrote:
On Sat, 2004-09-25 at 20:08, Rick Thomas wrote:
For the moment I've got it working with bootX but I would really
like to
get it working with quik.
Unfortunately, that part has never worked for me, either.
For what it'
On Sat, 2004-09-25 at 20:08, Rick Thomas wrote:
> > For the moment I've got it working with bootX but I would really
> > like to
> > get it working with quik.
> >
>
> Unfortunately, that part has never worked for me, either.
>
> For what it's worth, using BootX isn't so bad. You can fairly
> e
On Saturday, September 25, 2004, at 04:47 AM, Sebastiaan Molenaar wrote:
For the moment I've got it working with bootX but I would really
like to
get it working with quik.
Unfortunately, that part has never worked for me, either.
For what it's worth, using BootX isn't so bad. You can fa
On Sat, 2004-09-25 at 06:50, Rick Thomas wrote:
> I put this aside when I first received it to answer later, then got
> busy and forgot to answer! I apologize!
>
> Did you figure out how to solve your problem? If not, please reply
> and I'll try to help.
> > For the moment I have macos instal
Sebastian,
I put this aside when I first received it to answer later, then got
busy and forgot to answer! I apologize!
Did you figure out how to solve your problem? If not, please reply
and I'll try to help.
Enjoy!
Rick
On Saturday, September 18, 2004, at 11:21 AM, Sebastiaan Molenaar
On Sun, 2004-09-19 at 11:36, Jens Schmalzing wrote:
> > Tnks, then I get the error:
> > mount: /dev/hd8 has wrong device number or fs type hfs not supported
>
> Load the hfsplus module before attempting to mount the partition.
Thnks, got it working now.
Now the next step, is there any way to get
Hi,
Sebastiaan Molenaar writes:
> Tnks, then I get the error:
> mount: /dev/hd8 has wrong device number or fs type hfs not supported
Load the hfsplus module before attempting to mount the partition.
Regards, Jens.
--
J'qbpbe, le m'en fquz pe j'qbpbe!
Le veux aimeb et mqubib panz je pézqbpbe j
On Sat, 2004-09-18 at 16:49, Jens Schmalzing wrote:
> > That is just the problem, how do I copy the initrd to the macos folder?
>
> "Execute a shell" from the main installer menu, chroot into your newly
> installed system, mount your Mac OS partition, copy the kernel and
> initrd over.
Tnks, then
Hi,
Sebastiaan Molenaar writes:
> That is just the problem, how do I copy the initrd to the macos folder?
"Execute a shell" from the main installer menu, chroot into your newly
installed system, mount your Mac OS partition, copy the kernel and
initrd over.
Regards, Jens.
--
J'qbpbe, le m'en f
On Mon, 2004-09-13 at 21:29, Christian Leimer wrote:
> I dont use BootX. But make sure you have copied the initrd and the
vmlinux
> to the macos folders and slected the initrd as ramdisk?
That is just the problem, how do I copy the initrd to the macos folder?
>From macos I can't get to the ext2 pa
dylan wrote:
> on 04.9.11 10:17 AM, Sebastiaan Molenaar at [EMAIL PROTECTED] was
> reported to have writen:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> This is starting to drive me crazy by now so I hope someone has got an
>> answer.
>> I'm trying to install Debian on my Powerbook G3 (wallstreet)
>> Base install seems t
on 04.9.11 10:17 AM, Sebastiaan Molenaar at [EMAIL PROTECTED] was
reported to have writen:
> Hi all,
>
> This is starting to drive me crazy by now so I hope someone has got an
> answer.
> I'm trying to install Debian on my Powerbook G3 (wallstreet)
> Base install seems to work allright, but I can
Hi all,
This is starting to drive me crazy by now so I hope someone has got an
answer.
I'm trying to install Debian on my Powerbook G3 (wallstreet)
Base install seems to work allright, but I can't get the system booted.
quik doesn't seem to work, and when I try bootx I get the following
message:
On 28 Sep, this message from MaX echoed through cyberspace:
> On Fri, 27 Sep 2002 18:10:14 +0200 (CEST)
> Michel Lanners <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Please tell your mail client to do linebreaks at something sane like
>> 72 characters... Thx.
>
> yes sorry
No problem :-)
>> OK, second bus.
On Fri, 27 Sep 2002 18:10:14 +0200 (CEST)
Michel Lanners <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Please tell your mail client to do linebreaks at something sane like
> 72 characters... Thx.
yes sorry
> OK, second bus
> > 512MB swap
> > 5GB root linux (/dev/hda12)
no!! this is a mystake!
i want t
Please tell your mail client to do linebreaks at something sane like 72
characters... Thx.
On 27 Sep, this message from MaX echoed through cyberspace:
> The disk is connected on second ide channel Ata66 because in the first is
> ATA100, and the installationd cd cannot see it.
OK, second bus
On Fri, Sep 27, 2002 at 12:44:41PM +0200, MaX wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> i have a "new" dual 887 mhz G4, and i want to install woody on it.
>
> the problem is that pressing ALT key at the boot, and selecting the
> penguin-icon, the system freeze.
If you wait around 3 or 4 minutes, it may go on. When
Hi all,
i have a "new" dual 887 mhz G4, and i want to install woody on it.
the problem is that pressing ALT key at the boot, and selecting the
penguin-icon, the system freeze.
I have downloaded the mini iso from here:
http://www.phy.olemiss.edu/debian-cd/
the installation work fine as usual,
Hay,
i have changed the boot logo (little tux) in the 2.4.19-pre10-ben0
kernel (on my 500Mhz iBook2 with 128MB Ram).
The logo is created by the fblogo program from the Debian GNU/Linux
packagage fblogo. And the Image size is 1024x768 with 223 colors.
The instructions on the fblogo man-page says t
On Tue, 28 May 2002, Chris Tillman wrote:
> >From AppleSpec, it looks like the difference between the two machines
> is that the 150 is a 604 while the 180 is a 604e. I don't think this
> should make a difference to Linux, but I just thought I'd mention it.
Well, it might make a difference. The n
On Wed, 29 May 2002, Rogério Brito wrote:
> Well, I'd think that only the floppies being good may not be
> sufficient. They'd have to be readable by your 8500/150's
> drive, whose heads may not be aligned in the same way of your
> 8500/180.
Well, I don't think this would b
On May 28 2002, Brian Kim wrote:
> I've tried asking on #debian (openprojects.net) with no replies and
> I'm sure my floppies are good (ran cmp after dd and the md5sum on
> the disk image is good).
Well, I'd think that only the floppies being good may not be
sufficient. They'd have
On Tue, May 28, 2002 at 03:32:17PM -0400, Brian Kim wrote:
> Ok, I've got what may be an obscure problem. I am installing Debian on our
> file server here (PMac 8500/150) and used a PMac 8500/180 as a test bed
> before trying to perform the install. The 180 successfully booted and
> installed witho
On Tue, 28 May 2002, Brian Kim wrote:
> If it's of any use, my floppies seemed to have gotten
> written at some point during boot -- using them without write protection
> results in floppies that are ejected automatically on boot. Running cmp on
> the modified floppy results in the second byte sho
Ok, I've got what may be an obscure problem. I am installing Debian on our
file server here (PMac 8500/150) and used a PMac 8500/180 as a test bed
before trying to perform the install. The 180 successfully booted and
installed without a hitch (save the poor firmware instructions in the
install guid
Here's a little more OF black magic from NetBSD. They say to determine if a
device may be bootable, at the OF prompt type
O > dev /path/to/device
O > words
If one of the words in the resulting list is 'open', it might be bootable.
So see what it says for the path you tried, and maybe for some of
into linux no problems (knock on wood).
Chris and Ethan thanks for your support in my attempts to get the system
going.
sincerely
sridhar kodela
From: "Sridhar Kodela" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], debian-powerpc@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Help:-- Beige G3 b
From: "Chris Tillman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Sridhar Kodela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
debian-powerpc@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Help:-- Beige G3 boot problem
Date: Mon, 01 Oct 2001 20:43:08 -0700
> the output of ofpath for /dev/hda6 is
> /pci/mac
> the output of ofpath for /dev/hda6 is
> /pci/mac-io/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/[EMAIL PROTECTED]:6
>
> now what do i need to give the arguments for the nvsetenv command?
>
Try
nvsetenv /pci/mac-io/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/[EMAIL PROTECTED]:0
If you get a boot: prompt, try typing Linux in response.
*---
From: Ethan Benson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: PowerPC
Subject: Re: Help:-- Beige G3 boot problem
Date: Sun, 30 Sep 2001 22:21:34 -0800
On Sun, Sep 30, 2001 at 08:02:52PM -0700, Chris Tillman wrote:
>
> and nvsetenv (without arguments). Also, you might try booting into Open
> Fir
On Sun, Sep 30, 2001 at 08:02:52PM -0700, Chris Tillman wrote:
>
> and nvsetenv (without arguments). Also, you might try booting into Open
> Firmware using the cmd-opt-o-f combination at boot. If you get an OF prompt,
> you can then check the list of devices OF recognizes using
>
> dev / ls
>
>
> hi all,
> I am trying to install Debian PPC distribution on a Beige G3 (oldworld
> mac) with 256MB RAM, 6GB IDE disk. I use the boot and root disks, finish
> the install by selecting "Boot from hard disk" the script says install
> Quik, then I execute the shell and issue the command
> nvset
hi all,
I am trying to install Debian PPC distribution on a Beige G3 (oldworld
mac) with 256MB RAM, 6GB IDE disk. I use the boot and root disks, finish
the install by selecting "Boot from hard disk" the script says install
Quik, then I execute the shell and issue the command
nvsetenv boot-
> Config Error: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/XF86Config:217
> protocol "USB"
> Mouse type not supported by this OS
>
> I don't believe this message, because of course the keyboard is USB and it
You better believe it. Protocol "IMPS/2" or "PS/2" or "BusMouse" are legal
values. USB is not. Dea
Eric Youngson wrote:
> Config Error: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/XF86Config:217
> protocol "USB"
> Mouse type not supported by this OS
Try "ImPS/2".
--
Earthling Michel Dänzer (MrCooper)\ Debian GNU/Linux (powerpc) developer
CS student, Free Software enthusiast \XFree86
I have a G4 400MHZ, AGP 2x with an ATI Rage 128 Pro. I recently
installed Debian 2.2 Potato. My default Xserver is FBDev. When I
originally entered the command: startx, I got an error about the xserver not
being able to load the mouse. I edited the file:
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/XF86Config.
Under
On Wed, Dec 06, 2000 at 03:45:31AM +0100, Mark Lamers wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've just installed a debian prep version on my Bull Estrella 300 with
> Powerstack II Utah. According to the install text , there should be a
> prep (type 41)
> boot directory (first partition, first drive). Now I have a ke
Hello,
I've just installed a debian prep version on my Bull Estrella 300 with
Powerstack II Utah. According to the install text , there should be a
prep (type 41)
boot directory (first partition, first drive). Now I have a kernel panic
because the kernel could'nt load thet "/" partition.
Any sugge
On Wed, Nov 01, 2000 at 10:17:32AM -0500, Matt Grant wrote:
> I made the two boot disks ,booted up, and partitioned my Hard disks
> /dev/sda1 partition map
> /dev/sda2 /
> /dev/sdb1 partion map
> /dev/sdb2 swap
> /dev/sdb3 /usr
> I get through the install and when I reboot I get a Mac Disk flashi
I made the two boot disks ,booted up, and partitioned my Hard disks
/dev/sda1 partition map
/dev/sda2 /
/dev/sdb1 partion map
/dev/sdb2 swap
/dev/sdb3 /usr
I get through the install and when I reboot I get a Mac Disk flashing with
an X in the middle(I think this means The Mac HardWare can't find
on 8/6/00 12:58 pm, Daniel Jacobowitz at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Sun, May 14, 2000 at 08:42:01PM -0500, Josh wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I have installed Debian on my G3 Powerbook's 4 gig expansion bay hard
>> drive. (I have some experience with Debian, I successfully installed
>> the m68k port
On Sun, May 14, 2000 at 08:42:01PM -0500, Josh wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have installed Debian on my G3 Powerbook's 4 gig expansion bay hard
> drive. (I have some experience with Debian, I successfully installed
> the m68k port on my Mac IIci)
> I installed Debian over the net, and everything seemed
Actually, I found this little tidbit on some FAQ or HOWTO or Install doc
somwhere:
remount root filesystem read/write
mknod /dev/hdc6 b 22 6 #for my root partition
mknod /dev/hdc8 b 22 8 #for my usr partition
that worked.
thanks for your help
Josh.
>
> ---
Josh wrote:
> swap, and usr). I configured the time stuff and then rebooted. I
> unchecked the Ramdisk option and set the root as hdc6. Linux started to
> boot and then this message:
>
> No such file or directory while trying to open /dev/hdc6. (null)
> Superblock could not be read or doesn'
Hello,
I have installed Debian on my G3 Powerbook's 4 gig expansion bay hard
drive. (I have some experience with Debian, I successfully installed
the m68k port on my Mac IIci)
I installed Debian over the net, and everything seemed to go find. The
installer identified my partitions as /dev/hdc6,
On Tue, 21 Sep 1999, Alberto Varesio wrote:
>
> Hallo,
> problem #1
>
> I'm trying to install Linux on a 43P 100.
> At the moment it is running LinuxPPC R4 with kernel 2.1.125 .
>
> Now I'm trying to install something newer, I looked at LinuxPPC R5/1999, YDL
> CS1.1 and Debian, but I can't ge
Hallo,
problem #2
I'm trying to install Linux on a 43P 100.
At the moment it is running LinuxPPC R4 with kernel 2.1.125 .
Now I'm trying to install something newer, I looked at LinuxPPC R5/1999, YDL
CS1.1 and Debian, but I can't get a working kernel. All 2.2.x I have found do
not handle SCSI adap
Hallo,
problem #1
I'm trying to install Linux on a 43P 100.
At the moment it is running LinuxPPC R4 with kernel 2.1.125 .
Now I'm trying to install something newer, I looked at LinuxPPC R5/1999, YDL
CS1.1 and Debian, but I can't get a working kernel. All 2.2.x I have found do
not handle SCSI adap
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