Dear Mr.Kent West, >ts wrote: > >>> Kent West wrote: >>> >>>>>ts wrote: >>>>> >>>>>>At first I ventured into debian installation ( via networking)again, >>>>>>the embeded LAN chips(RTL8201BL , RTL8101L) of current EPOX-8RDA3G >>>>>>motherboard (nforce2 Ultra 400 +MCP chipsets) can't be detected whatever >>>>>>kernel driver modules I set on. >>>>>> >>>>>>later on I nearly fulfilled debian's installation from hard disk by >>>>>>downloading >>>>>>"rescue.bin"&"root.bin"(from >>>>>>http://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/...ges-1.44/bf2.4/ ) >>>>>>"drivers.tgz"( from http://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/.../current/bf2.4/) >>>>>>"basedebs.tar"-27M >>>>>>(from http://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/....23-2002-07-18/) >>>>>>and following up the prompts. >>>>>>. >>>>>>Now it's only a base system, I can login under console.... >>>>>>no x windows yet , what left packages should I download & install under >>>>>>console ?is it possible to make networking chips work and make rest of >>>>>>installation via network and upgrade kernel to latest 2.6.3? and how to do it >>>>>>under console with commands? >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>I'm not sure what modules you'll need for your LAN, but a quick google >>>>indicates it might be the "8139too". Try "modprobe 8139too". >>>> >>>>You can also try "lspci"; if it reports "unknown device", you'll >>>>probably need to upgrade your kernel (which you're wanting to do anyway). >>>> >>>>You can also look to see what modules are available under >>>>/lib/modules/[kernel version]/kernel. >>>> >>>>You can also try booting off a Knoppix CD to see what modules it uses >>>>(assuming it works on the network). If it works on the network, you can >>>>download and manually install any packages for upgrading your kernel >>>>(and it's painful, but do-able). >>>> >>>>Once you have networking, and have configured your /etc/apt/sources.list >>>>file to pull from the network, you can "apt-get update" followed by >>>>"apt-get install x-window-system" to start making progress on getting X >>>>up and running. >> >>westkDear Mr. Kent West, >> >> >>Thanks for your reply! >> >> >A couple of suggestions: >* Keep posts on the lists rather than switching to private mail (unless >the posts drift off-topic). This allows other people who may know the >answer to contribute; it also allows other people looking for the same >answers to see them or find them in the archives. >* Don't top-post. Reply in conversational style, so that anyone coming >into the thread in the middle can read from top to bottom in the order >in which posts were made. >
I'll obey and follow it. >>Your adivices 're realy helpful, by typing " lspci" system indicated the NIC is >>8139too, at "eth0"... >>it's available under /lib/modules/kernel 2.4.18/kernel. >> >> >> >So "modprobe 8139too" should load the module, and "lsmod" should show >the module as listed. Now you'll need to restart networking (or reboot) >with "/etc/init.d/networking restart". This assumes you have your >network defined properly in /etc/network/interfaces. > it prompted error messages following "modprobe 8139too". "modprobe RTL-8139". "can't locate module 8139too." "can't locate module RTL-8139." >>But when I tried to ping my local ISP, ended up with no reply, within Lan "ping >>192.168.1.2" it did respond. >> >> >I'm assuming 192.168.1.2 is a different machine on your LAN, and not the >machine you're having issues with? Were you pinging your local ISP by >name or by number? If by name, I suspect that /etc/resolv.conf does not >have proper DNS entries. If by number, we'll need to know more about how >your LAN is setup (straight to modem? going through a router? are you >getting dhcp addresses or using static? etc), and this is where keeping >your posts on the list will help, as I'm no networking guru. > there're two NIC networking cards embeded with EPOX-8RDA3G MB.in fact , "ping 192.168.1.0" it responds as well. I ping local ISP by IP number, the Lan was set up via ADSL modem working under router mood( being set as gateway:192.168.1.1), surely it's set into static( under mandrake9.1 i set the same configuration, it works well). > >* Different topics should probably go into different email threads. > >>Do you think I should download the tar file (NVIDIA_nforce-1.0-0261.tar.gz ) >>From(http://download.nvidia.com/XFree86/nforce/1.0-0261/NVIDIA_nforce-1.0-0261.tar.gz) >> or >>Source RPM file (NVIDIA_nforce-1.0-0261.src.rpm) from >>(http://download.nvidia.com/XFree86/nforce/1.0-0261/NVIDIA_nforce-1.0-0261.src.rpm) >>and install it and thus set proper configuration of EPOX-8RDA3G MB& its NIC lan? >> >> >If the 8139too module installed properly without errors, I suspect >that's all you'll need; you just need to finish getting the rest of the >network configured properly. Of course, I could be wrong, and the >8139too module may be failing silently, in which case you might need to >resort to the nforce drivers. I just don't know. (Another reason for >keeping your posts on the list, for others more experienced with nforce >boards might have some input.) > >>BY the way how should I configure /etc/apt/sources.list ? is edit it under "VI" >>enough to handle the task? >> >> >> >Any text editor, including "vi", will work fine. I personally prefer >"nano", but that's just personal preference. > >Mine looks like so (but notice that I'm running unstable): > >> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/home/westk> cat /etc/apt/sources.list >> >> deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ stable main non-free contrib >> deb http://non-us.debian.org/debian-non-US stable/non-US main contrib >> non-free >> >> deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ unstable main non-free contrib >> deb http://non-us.debian.org/debian-non-US unstable/non-US main >> contrib non-free >> >> >> #deb-src http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ stable main non-free contrib >> #deb-src http://non-us.debian.org/debian-non-US stable/non-US main >> contrib non-free >> >> >> deb http://security.debian.org stable/updates main contrib non-free > > >-- >Kent > >. Tom 6/3/2004..... ?RP?€Dzf??y??????-弊?╄? "??皋r??.n?????????f?赍?lu驸jz+