Have you already tried the framebuffer device with vesa?? Have you
installed everything necessary (session-manager, xfree86 or xorg etc.)?
Am Montag, den 03.10.2005, 13:05 +0100 schrieb Andrew Brown:
> Hi
> I hope somebody will help. I am trying to install debian 3.1 (x86) on an
> older machine t
I prefer httpd.conf too, but deleting the apache2.conf is no good idea.
The only good thing about the apache2.conf is, that it includes the
httpd.conf so all user defined configuration can be done in the
httpd.conf and they can be seen very easily. But that is also possible
if you include a complet
own profile in the config.layout file to
customize where config files and so on are located.
Greetings,
David Huemer
On Mon, 2005-09-19 at 08:26 +0200, Kjetil Kjernsmo wrote:
> On mandag 19 september 2005, 06:53, Steve Dondley wrote:
> > The README file that came with Debian doesn
Hi Tim,
Try placing an executable file with "alsactl restore" in /etc/rc2.d and
call the file S99alsa, or something. The important part is S99 which
means alsactl is one of the last things which will be called while
booting.
David
On Fri, 2005-08-26 at 09:54 +0200, Tim Ruehsen wrote:
> Hi,
>
I had this problem too and solved it like this:
When booting (with lilo) I appended root=/dev/sda1 (my root device under
2.4 was hda1) and checked if the kernel was able to mount the root
device. After successfully mounting the root device I booted up a Kernel
2.4 and changed the /etc/fstab from /
Under Kernel 2.4 the disks are addressed by /dev/ataraid/d0 for boot
and /dev/ataraid/d0p1 for /. When compiling a kernel 2.6 I am not able
to boot it:
Kernel panic...
Which modules do I need and are the disks still addressed
using /dev/ataraid/d0?
Thanks
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