Package: debian-installer Version: bookworm Severity: important Tags: d-i X-Debbugs-Cc: budheal...@gmail.com
Dear Maintainer, * What led up to the situation? Normal installation, full DVD set, USB (external) burner/reader I selected Graphical mode but mostly used the keyboard * What exactly did you do (or not do) that was effective (or ineffective)? Prior to this installation I was jumping the gun and pressing Continue as soon as the new disk was inserted. This got into a situation where I could not recover. There was no Back button and manually removing the disk and ineffective. This is emblematic of debian-installer's problem. I tried to submit this bug as grave but got no email response and cannot find the report. This time I waited for each inserted disk to settle, as one would wait for apt; before the system does not show the new volume has mounted, apt is likely to spit out another request for a media change. If immediately pressing Enter after closing the disk's door, d-i usually worked but, for instance, the previous attempt d-i stalled on disk 3, where Back and Continue buttons did nothing and waiting or manually ejection did nothing. Power down is the only option. This, again, is something d-i should handle. This bug is about a failure to recognize a media change at the end of installing the userland. Perhaps, fixing this will let the above bugs at least limp over the line. d-i asked to use "the drive '/media/cdrom'" and not cdrom0. I checked every available option and selected LXDM; I tried SDDM earlier with similar results. That is, d-i asked for a media swap when done with disk 1. Just before the GRUB step, d-i asks for a swap back to disk 1 but d-i will not recognize the burner's eject button has been pressed. There is a "Go Back" button and I had to clicked there twice before the main menu appeared and d-i finally recognized the reinserted disk. For good measure, I went back to the software installation step, which did nothing except exit normally, at which point GRUB did its things without further ado. d-i will eject the external disk when asking the user to reboot into the new system, but everywhere else, misses the target. Maybe a fix here can propagate and fix all the problems listed above, some of which have been happening for many releases. * What was the outcome of this action? I was able to install bookworm but only in an unexpected fashion. * What outcome did you expect instead? d-i should allow the user to remove the external media practically at will. When the eject button is pressed, d-i should recognize that and unmount and eject the disk as soon as possible. If a disk is inserted, d-i should recognize the new disk as soon as the system mounts it. -- System Information: Debian Release: 12.0 Architecture: amd64 (x86_64) Kernel: Linux 6.1.0-7-amd64 (SMP w/20 CPU threads; PREEMPT) Locale: LANG=en_US.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8), LANGUAGE not set Shell: /bin/sh linked to /usr/bin/dash Init: systemd (via /run/systemd/system) LSM: AppArmor: enabled