Ok. I tried manually mounting the /dev/sdb1 (which is hfs), and here's what I see (# ls -al instmnt):
d... . d... .. -rwx... Desktop DB -rwx... Desktop DF -rwx... Finder -r-x... System -rwx... Where_have_all_my_files_gone? (literally) -rw-... .rootinfo dr-x... .finderinfo dr-x... .resource Drilling down into .finderinfo and .resource, I see the same directory structure, only .finderinfo and .resource are not directories. I don't see the debian directory that I created and exists in MacOS 8.1. If I can't see my debian directory, I'm not surprised dbootstrap doesn't either. Is there a trick I'm missing? At this point, I have a debian source directory on two different macos drives (sdb1 and sdc1). These are the only hard drives connected to the system other than the target (sda). Back to the docs... -----Original Message----- From: Matthew Dalton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Sunday, September 19, 1999 5:48 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org Subject: Re: "install operating system kernel and modules" problem Is /dev/sdb1 mounted? What is the output of mount (with no arguments)? You probably have to Alt-F2 to a new vt and mount /dev/sdb1 somewhere, then specify the path to the debian archive from there. This is how I installed the base system on my PC. In my case, the base_21.tgz file was on a dos partition, which I had to mount manually first. Matthew Roger Weinheimer wrote: > > This is my question and Bob Hilliard's response. Unfortunately, neither of > his suggestions worked. Is 'instmnt' a literal string or just a placeholder? > Can anyone help me with this. Many thanks. > > > Ok. Next stupid question: > > > > I'm hung up on the following step in the debian dbootsrap process. I'm > > installing from a local disk. Mac68k. > > > > Partition table: > > ... > > /dev/sda2 no driver 4.3 > > /dev/sda3 yes linux swap > > /dev/sda4 yes linux native /target > > /dev/sda5 yes linux native /target/usr > > /dev/sda6 yes linux native /target/home > > /dev/sda7 no free > > > > /dev/sdb1 no hfs (debian archive is here) > > /dev/sdb2 no partition map > > /dev/sdb3 no driver 4.3 > > /dev/sdb4 no free > > > > I get to the screen where I'm supposed to give it the path to the debian > > archive. No matter what I enter, nothing happpens. Are the following > literal > > strings? I'm not offered "choices" as the help file suggests. The screen > > pops up with '/debian' as the default path. > > > > /instmnt/debian/.finderinfo > > > > /instmnt/debian/.resource > > > > /instmnt/debian > > > > Any help with this would be greatly appreciated. Then again, maybe I'll > > answer my own question again. > > I haven't made a new installation in years (my last installation > was for bo), and don't know anything about the current boot disks, so > my guess may not be helpful. I would try `/instmnt/debian/dev/sdb1' > or `/instmnt/dev/sdb1'. If neither of those work, try the same without > the `/instmnt'. > > If these don't help, the best place to get help is the the > mailing list, [EMAIL PROTECTED]'. To subscribe to the > list, send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the > subject `subscribe'. > > Bob > -- > _ > |_) _ |_ Robert D. Hilliard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > |_) (_) |_) Palm City, FL USA PGP Key ID: A8E40EB9 > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null