On Jun 18, 2006, at 12:22 AM, TuskenTower wrote: > [...] > After looking at the candidates on the > PPC+oldworld list I chose Debian PPC.
Good choice. I have tried several other Linux Distributions that claim to work with my OldWorld PowerMac 9500 but Debian has proved to be the best. > 1. I removed all non-stock equipment, Sonnet Tempo ATA 100 PCI (with > disks) and Yamaha CD Burner I have an Acard 6280 which is very similar to your Sonnet and I also have a Yamaha CD Burner. Debian had no problem with them :-) > 4. BootX options. The BootX is a bit tricky with 2.6 Kernels. You have to use the Kernel and a corresponding Ramdisk. As Argument give init=/dev/ram0 NO 2.6 Kernel WITHOUT initrd > the installer forced me > to use EXT2 as my root filesystem (I forgot why). You can change that by manually editing the partition table. Simply select the partition you want to set with the up- and down-keys and press Return. > I tried using the 'option' key - F2 > ('alt' on a winDOwS keyboard) to switch to another virtual terminal > like some other install guides mentioned, but that didn't work. It's ctrl-option-F2 > > I needed to open the terminal shell to copy the newly install kernel > > and initrd onto the MacOS9 disk's "Linux Kernels" folder try the following: # chroot /target # modprobe hfs # mount -t hfs /dev/sdaX /mnt # cp /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.XYZ /mnt/... # cp /boot/inired-2.6.XYZ /mnt/... > My reality was that /dev/ did NOT contain the necessary devices files No, it didn't. You were in the root of the Ramdisk. You need to chroot to the root of your newly installed system: chroot /target > tried booting with BootX without the > initrd using "root=/dev/sda8" as a boot option, but that didn't work. For Debian you can leave it to root=/dev/ram0. Debian will get it right ;-) Another problem you might stumble into are the sometimes very slow Debian mirrors. A solution might be to get the Debian-DVD-iso, mount it (mount -o loop /your/path/debian-31r2-powerpc-binary-1.iso /srv/ftp/) and use ftp or nfs on another computer. (I used pure-ftp: /usr/local/sbin/pure-ftpd) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]