On Mon, 18 Sep 2006, David Burgess wrote:
Thanks Alan
I'll try and try that if I ever get that far, however I'm having even more
problems than that.
During the install just after it announces it's searching for previous Fedora
installations X hangs forever at that point.
Have previous installs worked on this machine? I have not seen that. I
am using a AMD64 3700+ with 1 gig of ram and a nvidia 440go graphics card
and nforce3 sata chipset.
I've tried to start in "text" mode and it crashes completely leaving a lot of
"giberish" (nice technical term) characters and informs me I need to reboot
my computer.
I get the X crash after I have fixed everything andf have gone through the
"first boot" screen.
If I wiggle the mouse, it then tells me that the x server has died and
leads me through the steps to rebuild the X config. That seems to fix the
rest of the issues.
Linus refered to this sort of problem as a "paper bag bug". That is a bug
so bad that when released makes the developer want to wear a paper bag
over their head so they will not be recognised.
I haven't had this much trouble since Redhat 5. This seems more like a test
1 than what is supposed to be in fact a release candidate.
I have not seen one this obnoxious since Slackware 3.0.
I'm running a
ASUS A8N-E
2G of RAM
Athlon 64 3400
Dual WD Raptor SATA I drives
NVidia GeForce 6600 GT video card
Installation media is fine and I've tried two different ones (DVD's that is).
From: alan <alan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Reply-To: For testers of Fedora Core development releases
<fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: For testers of Fedora Core development releases
<fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: FC/6 Test 3 64bit Trouble
Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 14:08:37 -0700 (PDT)
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006, David Burgess wrote:
Has anyone gotten the x86_64 Test 3 to install from the DVD on a box with
SATA drives?
Yes.
Here is the trick to get it to work.
Install as normal. (If you already have an install you can skip this step.
]:> )
Boot off the same disc in "rescue mode". ("linux rescue")
At the prompt:
chroot /mnt/sysimage
cd /boot
mkinitrd -v --image-version --nocompress initrd 2.6.17-1.2630.fc6
Edit /etc/grub.conf and add the following line:
initrd /initrd-2.6.17-1.2630.fc6
Save, sync the drive and reboot. With luck (and if you did it right), it
should work.
I had a problem with X as well, but reconfiguring the x server fixed it.
(Just follow the bouncing prompts.)
Hope that helps.
--
"Oh, Joel Miller, you've just found the marble in the oatmeal. You're a
lucky, lucky, lucky little boy. 'Cause you know why? You get to drink
from... the FIRE HOOOOOSE!"
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"Oh, Joel Miller, you've just found the marble in the oatmeal. You're a
lucky, lucky, lucky little boy. 'Cause you know why? You get to drink
from... the FIRE HOOOOOSE!"
- The Stanley Spudoski guide to mailing list administration
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