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Bug#276517: marked as done (Installer Problem with Sarge)



Your message dated Wed, 08 Sep 2010 03:57:43 +0000
with message-id <E1OtBn5-0004Aq-Kz@ravel.debian.org>
and subject line Closing old installation report #276517
has caused the Debian Bug report #276517,
regarding Installer Problem with Sarge
to be marked as done.

This means that you claim that the problem has been dealt with.
If this is not the case it is now your responsibility to reopen the
Bug report if necessary, and/or fix the problem forthwith.

(NB: If you are a system administrator and have no idea what this
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misconfiguration somewhere. Please contact owner@bugs.debian.org
immediately.)


-- 
276517: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=276517
Debian Bug Tracking System
Contact owner@bugs.debian.org with problems
--- Begin Message ---

Package: Installer

Version: Sarge

I tried installing Sarge over a dozen times. It automatically partitions my hard drive with the wrong geometry. The fist time, I didn't actually notice the problem. This is an older Gateway Solo 2500 laptop, P1, 233 MHz, 256 RAM, 6 GB HD, 800x600 screen. The exact size of the hard drive is just under 6.2 GB. I'm also a newbie to anything UNIX.

The first time that Installed it, Sarge seemed to install fine using the 2.4.27-speakup kernel, but I kept getting errors until I got frustrated. I finally removed it and started to put Fedora back on this laptop. I've been exploring various versions of UNIX type systems and distros. Fedora had been on before. When Fedora went to install, it reported that my hard drive was not partitioned correctly according to the information in my BIOS. I had run into a problem with this drive before with the FreeBSD partition program and solved it by using System Commander to partition it ahead of time. I tried the same thing here with Sarge. No good, for whatever reason, Sarge reported it as an error and wouldn't install. The Sarge installer says that my hard drive is actually a 6.4 GB hard drive.

I tried installing with the 2.4.27-speakup kernel, then switched to the 2.6 kernel several times. It loaded all of the modules for the 2.6 -386 kernel, yet it installed the 686 kernel every time this option was used, which resulted in a loading loop where it simply kept re-starting after Grub.

I tried every option that I could see over the course of several days before giving up. By using the default values with the 2.4.27-speakup kernel, the system will install. But afterwards, when installing the software packages, I will begin getting lots of errors about software not being installed.

I can install using the Expert mode, then choose the 2.6-386 kernel and it will install with the same problems. It does not matter which kernel that I try to install, I can't seem to get around that partition program. It appears to me that it is needed to setup the directories. But it keeps wanting to add extra space to what is actually available.


--

Lloyd Hayes

Email: lloyd545220-trucker@yahoo.com
URL: http://TalkingStaff.bravehost.com E-FAX Number: (208) 248-6590




--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
We are closing this installation report for one of the following
reasons:
- it was reported with a pre-lenny version of Debian
  Installer.
- indications in the installation report give the feeling that
  the reported problem waslying in another software, unrelated to
  D-I, which we can't easily identify.
- indications in the installation report suggest that it may have been
  fixed in a more recent version of a D-I component
- it was successful and we forgot closing it..:-)
- it has no information we consider useful


The D-I team is currently in the process of cleaning out the old spool
of installation reports that haven't bene processed yet. 

In case you think that the problem you reported has chances to be
still present, please reiterate your installation test with
a more recent image of D-I, if you're in position of doing this.

You'll find daily builds at
http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-installer. We recommend you choose
the netboot image, in the "daily builds section", then choose to
install "squeeze" when prompted.

If some problems are found, please report them with a new bug sent
against installation-reports.

Many thanks for your understanding and your help improving Debian,
past and present.



--- End Message ---

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