Since I was finally able to install Fedora 7 in VPC2007 and since this has been a topic several times but no complete solution mentioned I thought that I could post this for those of you trying to make it work. For comparison here is the details of my system: PC: DELL Dimansion 9100 with 3 Gb RAM (DualCore CPU) OS: Windows XP Pro SP2 attached to a Domain Network: I have an ADSL modem hooked to a D-Link router that supplies IP addresses via DHCP on my network. So IP is automatic. VPC version: VPC2007 This is how I did the installation: 1. Download the Fedora 7 DVD ISO file: F-7-i386-DVD.iso (From RedHat or a mirror) 2. Create a VPC2007 guest with the defaults and 512 Mb RAM Also enable undo disks, because you will benefitr from them... 3. Start guest and capture the ISO file downloaded above 4. Reset guest from Action menu 5. Wait until the Fedora start screen appears with selections 6. Press TAB to edit the parameters for the selected (top) line 7. Add this at the end: vesa i8042.nolop psmouse.proto=imps clock=pit vga=771 8. Save changes and continue by pressing ENTER 9. Now the Fedora install will start up and the screen will be OK in VPC2007. 10. Run through the installer as usual. 11. At the end when it asks to reboot, let it do so, but as soon as it is on the boot screen use the VPC Action menu and close the virtual machine. Select to commit the changes to the virtual disk. This gives you a starting point to which you can return later if you need to. I have repeated the following steps several times using the undo disk from this point on. 12. Now start the machine again. 13. When Fedora starts up to the first boot menu press any key to stop the boot and enter the boot menu. 14. Press e to edit the start parameters 15. Then select the kernel line and then press e again to edit the start parameters. 16. Add the following to the end of the parameters already present: 3 vesa i8042.nolop psmouse.proto=imps clock=pit vga=771 The important item here is the 3 at the start, which directs the boot to runlevel 3, which is non-graphical. Press ENTER to go on. 17. Now Fedora will continue the boot process, which takes a while until it reaches the "Setup Agent" on a blue character based screen. Just let it sit and it will go on or activate the Exit command. 18. Now you will reach a login prompt and here you have to log in as root to get to the # prompt. 19. Now enter the command: system-config-display 20. You will see a graphics window with the Display Settings. Use this to set the following: Hardware tab: ============= Configure Monitor type by selecting the "Generic LCD Display" Expand it and select "LCD Panel 1024x768". Settings tab: ============= Resolution = 1024x768 Color Depth = Thousands of Colors Click OK and then OK on the next confirmation window. 21. Now the screen will go black and you cannot do anything with it. No escape, so you will use the Action/Reset command to restart the virtual machine. 22. Now it will restart and get to the boot screen again. Repeat step 16, except do *not* add the 3 parameter. Now you want the normal graphics runlevel. 23. Next you will see a graphis screen with a progress bar when Fedora loads. If you want you can switch to "Show Details", which will list all commands being executed. 24. After a while the Fedora Welcome screen is shown where the rest of the install configuration is done. Use the Forward button until you reach the "Create User" screen. 25. Now add your normal user account by entering the details here. 26. Next is the sound card setup, but you can continue here because sound will not work.... Click Finish. 27. Now after some time there will be a graphics login screen shown. Enter root as user and give the root password you defined in the first install sequence. 28. Now you enter Fedora for the first time and there is one important thing still to do: Use the text editor found under Applications and open the file: /boot/grub/grub.conf for editing. 29. Edit the kernel command parameters as follows: - remove rhgb - add vesa i8042.nolop psmouse.proto=imps clock=pit vga=771 Save the file and close the editor. 30. As a first test at this point log out root and log in as the normal user and check that all is working fine. 31. Then select System/ShutDown and then use Restart to let Fedora start over. This will take some time, but you should then get to the login screen again. Log on as any of the two accounts and check that all is OK. 32. Then select System/ShutDown and this time command a real shutdown. 33. When the shutdown reaches the end you will get a dialogue from VPC2007 calling for you to select what to do with the undo disk. At this time select to commit changes to the VHD drive, because now you have a working baseline system to start from in the future. Next time you start up, log in as root and wait. If your networking is OK Fedora will now grab an IP address and will check for updates to the installer (in my case it found 178 updates), which you should let it download and install. If by any chance the reboot after the update fails you can always discard the undo disk changes and get back to the baseline you created in step 33 above. :-) Phew, this was a long and tedious process, but now it is done and also documented here for the benefit of others. My Fedora 7 now runs fine inside VPC2007. Thanks to all the people who helped me to get this going! Bo Berglund -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list