Thanks for the advice. I wiped the drive and successfully installed the minimal install. Since things looked good at that point, I tried to add some software packages. There I ran into trouble. Almost every package errored out. By pressing ALT-F2, I observerd the following errors:
gzip: stdin: invalid compressed data --CRC error
tar: child returned status 1
tar: error exit delayed from previous errors
pkg-add: tar extract of - failed
pkg-add: unable to extract table of contents file from "-"


Does this sound like a problem reading the CD?

Tonight I tried booting from the CD and installing XWindows. The install stopped almost immediately. Now I can't boot from the hard drive or the CD. Both ways the boot stops with the line "Mounting root from ufs:/dev/ad1s1a. Looks like I'll be wiping the drive again.

Any suggestions? Would copying the CD to another hard drive on the same machine make installing the software packages easier?

Thanks,
Mike

Lowell Gilbert wrote:

When Greg talked about bad CD-ROMs, he meant CD-ROMs, not CD-ROM
drives. It is, in fact, most likely a bad install disk. It could be
a bad drive, but that's far less likely.


Try an absolute minimum install, then go back afterards and add
additional distribution sets from sysinstall.  That will either work
or will give you more useful clues about the source of the problem.


Mike Leman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:



I am trying to install Freebsd 4.8 on a computer and having a great
deal of problems.   The first time I tried the install stopped when
the doc install was at 100% and would not go on.  I rebooted and it
would boot, but I didn't have much.  I tried booting from the CD to
finish the install, but that didn't work.  I would get a screen screen
dump that just kept scrolling. Since I'm putting this on a second hard
drive, I wiped everything off the drive and started over.  When it was
loading the BIN to first directory, I noticed I was getting a lot of
"/stand/cpio: invalid header: checksum error" messages.  Then on the
window with progress bar, I got a message  "write failure on
transfer".  I acknowledged the error and received a message asking to
try again yes/no.  After retrying and failing a number of times, I
selected no and the docs installed OK.  After this every part of the
install had the write failure until I stopped the install.   On
monitoring side, there were invalid header errors and other errors
also.

In Greg Lehey's book "The Complete FREEBSD", he notes can be problems
with ATAPI CD-ROMs. I have a Acer 36X CDROM that reports "ATAPI 36X
MAXIMUM" when the computer boots. Could there be problem with the
CDROM drive? Is there something I do for this? Or do I have a bad
install CD? I just purchased the intall CDs. Also the Hard drive in
fairly new. I bought it and installed six months ago, but have not
used till now.



When Greg talked about bad CD-ROMs, he meant CD-ROMs, not CD-ROM
drives. It is, in fact, most likely a bad install disk. It could be
a bad drive, but that's far less likely.


Try an absolute minimum install, then go back afterards and add
additional distribution sets from sysinstall.  That will either work
or will give you more useful clues about the source of the problem.






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