Thanks a lot to James Wilkinson and Karsten Wade for your suggestions.
Well, I have a lot of problems trying to install Fedora in that old PC100 (PCChips) XCell mobo with Sis chipset but at least the Fedora 10 installation DVD now does recognize the harddrive. I'll try this media, if not success, I'll try the netinst cd version of Fedora 10 instead. Later I'll tell you how is going the thing. C'ya!
"Shalom" Erick Martinez Estudiante de piano y composición.
--- On Mon, 3/16/09, James Wilkinson <fedora@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
From: James Wilkinson <fedora@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: Problem with Anaconda (Fedora) and Xcell 2000 mobo To: fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx Date: Monday, March 16, 2009, 4:24
PM
Erick Martínez wrote: > Hello. I've problems trying to install Fedora (7,8,9, and maybe > realese 10, cause I almost finish the downloading) in an old cpu Intel > Celeron Coppermine-128 600 Mhz with 396 MB RAM on a PCChips M748LMRT > "XCell 200" MOBO.
Ouch! The memory will be a bit limited, and the processor a bit slow, but that looks like it’s a SiS chipset on a PCChips motherboard. I had a lot of problems with those.
> The problem in fact is, that Anacando doesn't > recognize any hard drive. I found a post but can't open it > (http://www.planetalinux.com.ar/forum/viewforum.php?f=26&st=0&sk=t&sd=d&start=400, > http://www.planetalinux.com.ar/forum/viewtopic.php?f=26&t=2118). Any > suggestions?
You may find http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9157 a more useful link. Fedora (from 7 onwards, I believe) uses the new libata
set of drivers exclusively. https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/KernelCommonProblems may also be worth reviewing for its treatment of kernel and module parameters.
I believe Fedora 10 has a lot of ATA drivers built-in, but it doesn’t look like ata_generic is. It looks like on Fedora 10, you can append ata_generic.all_generic_ide=1 to the kernel boot line, and you’ll be more likely to detect the disk.
Do you need a more detailed walkthrough of where to set those parameters? You’ll need to do it when booting the install media, and then make sure grub picks it up – you might find it easier, to begin with, simply to edit the grub command line each time you boot.
Hope this helps,
James.
-- E-mail: james@ | The winds, however, get very lazy that time of year; they aprilcottage.co.uk | don't bother going around you, they just go right on | through.
| -- Joe Zeff
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