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Bug#84830: Me too, and more info



I have tried to install Debian on my Power Computing PowerBase 180 (PCI 
expansion boards / MacAlly ethernet card). The Open Firmware version is 
2.0.

The floppy image from the 2.2.18 stable potato release behaves as 
described. The machine becomes unresponsive after the request for a root 
disk.

I obtained the previous version (2.2.17) boot floppy from a link on the 
debian-powerpc mailing list. This floppy does boot and continues to 
accept the 2.2.18 root.bin floppy image.

However, I ran into more problems trying to use the old version's boot 
floppy to install the current release. In particular, after attempting to 
install the drivers.tgz file, depmod reported that the modules.dep file 
could not be created in /lib/modules/2.2.17. (Because the directory there 
was named 2.2.18pre21 instead). I did get the installer to run without 
errors, by creating a lib/modules/2.2.17 directory on the partition prior 
to installing the kernel.

Note: the messages seen by choosing Command-F3 are confusing in this 
situation. A messaeg appears stating "kernel and modules install 
successful" even though the final message is "Can't open 
/lib/modules/2.2.17/modules.dep for writing". Since the modules can't be 
located unless the modules.dep is successfully written, I suggest holding 
off on the success message until that file has been created.

After completing the base install and configuration, I attempted to make 
my hard disk bootable. I have an external SCSI disk attached to my system 
(sdb) which was partitioned and formatted completely within Linux. This 
operation also failed, saying the Debian/PowerPC system cannot make the 
hard disk bootable yet. The partitions were: Apple_Bootstrap 10M type 
A/UX, root 64M type A/UX, swap 64M type A/UX, user 1.9G type A/UX.

I attempted to use quik from a shell to manually install the boot blocks, 
and it gave an error also, saying it could not write the partition. I 
also tried to use dd as mentioned in the quik.spec source, that also 
failed. I also tried Quik for the Mac V1.3.0, and it returns read error 
-7918 reading blks 1..1 .

I also tried booting via BootX, it froze every time I tried to launch 
Linux.

ybin and yaboot refuse to even consider my Mac.

I also tried System Disk 2.6.2 and an older version, and both said they 
would be ineffective on my Mac, and just beeped when I tried to Save.

The NetBSD documentation on OF states that OF 2.0.X will not boot from 
any old partition on a hard disk, that it must be partition 0 (the 
beginning of the disk where the partition map normally resides). NetBSD 
has a bootxx first-stage and ofwboot.xcf second-stage bootloader which 
resides there, but requires a load-base 600000 setting within Open 
Firmware, Boot Variables, or nvsetenv to accommodate the loader. Is it 
possible that quik or yaboot could accommodate the OF 1.05/2.0 macs using 
a similar approach?





    Chinook Software
    US Distributors of SpEd, *the* Stored Procedure Editor
    Chris Tillman, mailto:tillman@azstarnet.com
    http://www.speditor.com/default.asp?sig
    5150 E. Riverhouse Road,  Suite E
    Tucson, AZ  85718





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