* Masatran, R. Deepak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 2007-07-23 > I just installed Debian 4.0, on an AMD64 computer that has a SATA hard > drive, from the multi-architecture DVD. I used "expert" at the first prompt, > since "amd64-expert" was giving errors. I chose the 2.6-amd64 kernel during > installation. > > Installation completed successfully, but when it is booted, the console > locks up, the kernel panics, and it stops responding. I tried some fiddling > with the parameters in the "kernel" line in GRUB, but it did not help. > Kindly suggest a solution.
I reinstalled Debian using "amd64-expertgui" at the first prompt, using the same DVD. The reinstall completed successfully, but it is unable to boot. When I add to the "kernel" line in GRUB, I get: ADDITION: RESULT 1. nothing: Kernel panic 2. noapic nolapic: Kernel panic 3. acpi=off: SATA internal errors 4. acpi=off noapic nolapic: SATA internal errors "Kernel panic" looks like this: Code: <pairs of hexadecimal digits> Console shuts up ... <0>Kernel panic - not syncing: Aiee, killing interrupt handler I could not find any hardware problem. The hard drive is a Seagate 7200.10 300 giga-byte SATA. The whole computer is new. Searching the web showed that similar problems were tackled by adding/removing kernel modules. Can this be solved by adding/removing kernel modules? ALSO: I want to try the 486 linux-image, but dpkg refuses to install it, saying that that package is only for I386. How can I install the 486 linux-image on my AMD64 computer? -- Masatran, R. Deepak <http://research.iiit.ac.in/~masatran/>
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