On Mon, 12 Aug 1996 12:48:47 +, Karsten Mueller wrote:
>I tried to install Debian 1.1 on a 4GB Partition using the kernel 2.07
There was some kind of a bug in 2.0.7, so 2.0.8 was released; similarly
for 2.0.8->2.0.9 and 2.0.9->2.0.10. 2.0.8 is however, stable. This is
the kernel
which the c
> There was some kind of a bug in 2.0.7, so 2.0.8 was released; similarly
> for 2.0.8->2.0.9 and 2.0.9->2.0.10. 2.0.8 is however, stable. This is
> the kernel
> which the current Debian installation uses.
>
> >the message "Can't resolve symbol llseek".
>
> This sounds like a programming error.
This problem only exists on the boot floppies. That means if you can
install on any small partition (where anything under 1024MB is "small")
you can then make the filesystem correctly once the system has been
installed on your hard disk.
I will try to get a new boot floppy set uploaded in the next
:
: Hello,
:
: I tried to install Debian 1.1 on a 4GB Partition using the kernel 2.07
: with NCR8010 Support. The disk is a Quantum Atlas.
: After writing 255 inodes on disk the formatting stopped with
: the message "Can't resolve symbol llseek".
:
: Does anybody know if the formatting should wo
> On Mon, 12 Aug 1996 12:48:47 +, Karsten Mueller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> said:
> I tried to install Debian 1.1 on a 4GB Partition using the kernel 2.07
> with NCR8010 Support. The disk is a Quantum Atlas.
> After writing 255 inodes on disk the formatting stopped with
> the message "Can'
Hello,
I tried to install Debian 1.1 on a 4GB Partition using the kernel 2.07
with NCR8010 Support. The disk is a Quantum Atlas.
After writing 255 inodes on disk the formatting stopped with
the message "Can't resolve symbol llseek".
Does anybody know if the formatting should work in general
and w
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