on Wed, Oct 29, 2003 at 12:14:22PM -0500, e-bone ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > I'm trying to install debian from a KNOPPIX cd, > using debootstrap and chroot. > > I'm just curious. If debootstrap goes south for whatever reason ... > (when trying to install sarge it couldn't find one of the files e.g.) > > (another time I ran out of memory (with no swap mounted) and it crapped > out) ...
Add swap first ;-) > is there anyway to restart this bugger where you left off ? While I haven't tried breaking installs partway through: - Debian package management is idempotent, by policy. That is: if you need to interrupt and restart package installation, you're not going to break anything. If you do break anything, it's a bug. File a bug report. - Most of the installation process is basic setup anyway: language, keyboard, parititioning, modules. After that, you're at package selection. See above. > What if everything is downloaded and some stuff is configured and other > stuff is not ... See above. More significantly: when downloading packages, apt will pick up a download where it left off if interrupted. Once you've got your system(s) up and running, apt-proxy is a great way to manage upgrades for multiple systems at a site. > Can you basically just run dpkg to root out and configure stuff that > needs configuring ? If you need to install packages manually, I'd recommend aptitude in either full-screen or command-line modes. You generally *don't* use dpkg directly for package installation and removal. Though 'dpkg --configure --pending' can be useful when you've borked something. Otherwise, I generally just use dpkg for querying package state and files ('dpkg -l <package list>', 'dpkg -L <package>', or 'dpkg --get-selections', etc.). > Then just edit your fstab, install lilo, and that's it ? Pretty much. For more info, see the 'chroot install' instructions in the standard Debian installation manual, or at: http://twiki.iwethey.org/Main/DebianChrootInstall Note that the Installation Manual instructions are for dbootstrap, while the TWikIWeThey ones are for a base tarball from Potato. Otherwise, pretty similar. > An unrelated quetion: > when using apt-cache show or aptitude is there a way to figure out > which release (woody, sarge, etc) a version is associated with ? Yes. But I forget how ;-) Peace. -- Karsten M. Self <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://kmself.home.netcom.com/ What Part of "Gestalt" don't you understand? Verio webhosting? Guaranteed downtime: http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,57011,00.html http://www.dowethics.com/r/environment/freedom.html
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