Am 30.05.2016 um 12:50 schrieb John Paul Adrian Glaubitz: > On 05/30/2016 12:36 PM, Stefan Niestegge wrote: >> No, i wasn't. Thats beyond my abilities. I just wanted to install Debian >> to my friend's old Mac. > > Well, you are installing on 20+-year-old hardware. I don't think it's fair > to assume that everything works out-of-the-box and is straight-forward > to set up. We are all know this port needs work.
Yes, you are right. > >> But how much sense makes a system that you can only use remotely? >> I guess for you people that run buildds it has all you need. I'd prefer >> a system i can use locally, on its own. > > Well, yes, ADB support is currently broken as you have heard. So, either > you look into fixing it yourself or you install a much older version > of Debian. I don't think you can anyone else to jump in right now and > fix the driver for you. > I can't fix such stuff myself, nor do i expect that someone interrupts his work to fix the ADB now. >> Perhaps there is an older kernel that can use your chroot, but still has >> (unstable?) ADB keyboard support? > > I don't know when ADB support broke. I have an m68k Mac myself, but I > normally run Linux on Amigas or virtual Ataris. On my Centris 650, ADB > support is working fine with the 3.16 stock kernel in any case. > Now this is probably the thing to try out. Do you boot it with Penguin, too? What is your kernel commandline? I tried the generic m68k kernel from your debian space but it didn't boot, it hangs after un-gzipping but before screen turns black. System 7 Desktop freezes.

