On Mon, Jun 13, 2005 at 04:06:55PM -0300, Fernando Cacciola wrote: > Hello People, > > I had Knoppix 3.8.1 intalled on an old AMD K7 Duron 700 with 128Mb RAM, all > OnBoard except the wireless eth card. > It worked OK. > > Then I installed Sarge from scratch (keeping the Knoppix partitions but > re-installing the Sarge FS on it) using a netdist CD. > The CD part went very smoothly, but when it first booted from the HD I got: > > (1) Spurious 8529A interrupt IRQ7; and it halted. > > Using another PC I looked that up in google and saw that it was probably > related to the ACPI code on the 2.4 Kernel. > > So I tried with the 2.6 Kernel but I had 2 problems: > > (2.a) DHCP didn't work (and I tried several times) (but it did for Kernel > 2.4) > (2.b) Leaving net unconfigured, it stops at some point saying that it > couldn't locate the Kernel image for 2.6. Either it is not on the netinst CD > or it was trying to get it from the internet (and of course it failed) > > So I had to stick with the 2.4 Kernel. > > I tried adding "linux acpi=off" on the CD prompt and installing all over > again but I still had the IRQ problem. > > So I was about to install Knoppix back again when I read in its help window > to try: "knoppix acpi=off noapci pci=bios" for "broken BIOS"... I figured my > PC could have a broken BIOS so I tried those parameters with the debian > netinst CD. > It then passed the first HD boot and moved on with the installation. > Yet, after it finished downloading and configuring all the packages I got a > error saying that "Some packages couldn't be installed"... but it didn't say > which ones, so I just ignored it and finished the installation. > > When I rebooted (for the first time with the system apparently fully > installed) I got back the IRQ problem, so I just rebooted again and again > until it passed (I eventually determined that the message always apperared > but 4 out of 5 times it also halted) > Did you use "pci=bios" when you rebooted? You can put that into /etc/lilo.conf or /boot/grub/menu.lst depending which boot loader you use.
> So I typed "apt-get -f installed" and it download XFree86-common and spend > quite a lot of time updating packages. > I though it was it, but after I rebooted (about 5 times to get past the IRQ > halt); I still get the console prompt and the error that the X server is > missing. > > Effectively, xinit is trying to execute "/usr/bin/X11R6/X" but I don't have > that X on my system. > > Any clues? > apt-get install xserver-xfree86 apt-get install x-window-system -- I cannot believe that God plays dice with the cosmos. -- Albert Einstein, on the randomness of quantum mechanics -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]