Package: installation-reports Boot method: <How did you boot the installer? = network via USB Image version: <Full URL to image you downloaded is best> http://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage/daily-builds/daily/arch-latest/i386/iso-cd/debian-testing-i386-netinst.iso Date: 5-23-2012 3pm
Machine: DT Research WebDT366 "AMD Geode SOC" Processor: Geode LX800 Memory: 512MB RAM Partitions: one root partition on a 4gb ide dom Output of lspci -knn (or lspci -nn): Base System Installation Checklist: installer would not install base system Initial boot: [x ] Detect network card: [x ] Configure network: [x ] Detect CD: [ ] no cd drive Load installer modules: [x ] Detect hard drives: [x ] Partition hard drives: [x ] Install base system: [o ] Clock/timezone setup: [x ] User/password setup: [x ] Install tasks: [o ] Install boot loader: [o ] Overall install: [o ] Comments/Problems: Looking at tty4 I see that the key pulled did not match signature. Errors are every ten lines or so indicating libgcc1 was not found and it was needed to check the public key. debbootstrap failed on generic description and the rest should be pretty easy as we cant pass go until the public key resolved. Also see mentions that apt-setup-udeb failed. When downloading installer components I elected every single one. Not sure if that is bad practice or not. <Description of the install, in prose, and any thoughts, comments and ideas you had during the initial install.> If libgcc1 and apt-setup-udeb were accessible during the installer routines I feel that this may have gone smoother.