[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Bug#989987: installation-report Bullseye rc2



Hallo Oliver,

And thanks for your report.

Oliver Psotta <oliver.psotta@posteo.de> (2021-06-17):
> [O] = OK, [E] = Error (please elaborate below), [ ] = didn't try it
> 
> Initial boot:           [O ]
> Detect network card:    [E ]
> Configure network:      [O ]
> Detect media:           [E ]
> Load installer modules: [E ]
> Clock/timezone setup:   [O ]
> User/password setup:    [O ]
> Detect hard drives:     [O ]
> Partition hard drives:  [O ]
> Install base system:    [O ]
> Install tasks:          [O ]
> Install boot loader:    [O ]
> Overall install:        [O ]
> 
> Comments/Problems: Graphical Install did not find ethernet, because
> laptop is not equipped with it. But it did not try to search for
> wireless. Instead I was able to choose my wireless Realtek chip in
> ethernet window.

I do have some laptops around that I'm testing firmware-related issues
with, and I think I've noticed this (to be confirmed):
 - on a laptop without wired Ethernet, I'm getting a prompt for the
   wireless card and its firmware.
 - when booting it with a USB→Ethernet adapter, I'm getting a prompt for
   the (possibly missing but actually unimportant) firmware for the
   USB→Ethernet adapter, but no mention of the wireless card or missing
   firmware.

> It could not activate the supplied driver from 2nd USB drive. Mounting
> of 2nd USB drive was unreliable. Installation worked well after using
> USB-Ethernet adapter.

OK, that part I'm not familiar with, and I cannot really comment.

You could have used one of the unofficial/non-free images that come with
all firmware packages:
  https://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage/unofficial/non-free/cd-including-firmware/

> Installation process of install via ethernet worked well. Gnome
> desktop not useable on built in screen because resolution and
> brightness not changeable, no sound, no BT.

Alright, I'm currently chasing that kind of issues. You can double check
you're using a software-based rendering by installing the mesa-utils
package, running `glxinfo | grep renderer` should give you llvmpipe.

Wild guess, you're lacking:
 - firmware-iwlwifi for bluetooth support (I do have a realtek wireless
   card here, but the kernel complains about files that are shipped in
   that package instead).
 - firmware-amd-graphics for proper display support.
 - firmware-sof-signed for sound support.

All those wouldn't have been solved by using the firmware-enabled images
because we're currently lacking some detection, but I'm working on this.

For users of official installation images (main-only), I'm wondering
whether to advertise something like this in the installation guide:

    sudo apt install isenkram-cli
    sudo isenkram-autoinstall-firmware
    sudo reboot

Please note that due to #989884, one should install isenkram-cli from
unstable to make sure the firmware file to firmware package lookup
works.

More on such issues on #989863 and follow-up bug reports when I get a
chance to sum up my findings.


Tschüss,
-- 
Cyril Brulebois (kibi@debian.org)            <https://debamax.com/>
D-I release manager -- Release team member -- Freelance Consultant

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: PGP signature


Reply to: