Bug#413931: d-i missing ide modules
On Thu, 8 Mar 2007, Frans Pop wrote: On Wednesday 07 March 2007 23:58, Lou Poppler wrote: > The text of the error screen, and the text of the Installation Guide, > seem to be saying clearly that these modules are needed to drive the > IDE hardware, and this was the last chance to automatically find them, > and it did not succeed. No, the message is just informing you that those modules those modules are associated with your hardware, but have not been loaded. To be honest, that message is there more for debugging than for signalling any real issues. Unfortunately it tends to be more confusing than helpful to users. Yes, confusing and scary. Perhaps the words "needed" and "need" are too strong in this message. I leave this bug open only to allow d-i maintainers to consider if they want to reword it. [...] It is extremely unlikely that your disk problems were in any way caused by the installer, and certainly not by the presence of this message. Note that the message would not even be shown during a regular (non-expert) installation. That would be unthinkable if it contained any real information. If you select "manual partitioning" in the first dialog of the partitioner and the next screen shows your harddisk and the existing partitions that are on it, there is nothing to worry about. [...] Given the age of your system it should be well supported by Sarge. If it were a recent system I'd advice to install Etch instead of Sarge, but for a Pentium 3 box there is no reason for that. Hope this gives you the confidence to proceed. Yes, thank you. The CD part of the install finished fine, the disks are partitioned and OK, and now it has rebooted from the hard disk and is happily downloading more packages. Thanks again. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Bug#413931: d-i missing ide modules
On Wednesday 07 March 2007 23:58, Lou Poppler wrote: > Comments/Problems: > : The unavailable modules, and the devices that need them are: agpgart > : (Intel Corporation 440BX/ZX/DX - 82443BX/ZX/DX Host bridge), ide-scsi > : (Linux IDE-SCSI emulation layer), ide-mod (Linux IDE driver), > : ide-probe-mod (Linux IDE probe driver), ide-detect (Linux IDE > : detection), ide-floppy (Linux IDE floppy) > The text of the error screen, and the text of the Installation Guide, > seem to be saying clearly that these modules are needed to drive the > IDE hardware, and this was the last chance to automatically find them, > and it did not succeed. No, the message is just informing you that those modules those modules are associated with your hardware, but have not been loaded. To be honest, that message is there more for debugging than for signalling any real issues. Unfortunately it tends to be more confusing than helpful to users. > I am _very_ reluctant to proceed to partitioning and file-system > making, for this reason: A week ago I tried installing on this > machine, using the 3.1R4 netinst CD and the original 4MB Seagate IDE > disk that came with this machine. I saw the same errors about missing > modules, but proceeded anyway. The installer pretended to partition the > disk, and pretended to install some stuff for a while, then croaked > with an error about the disk being Busy. After much investigating of > the disk with Knoppix and smartctl, it seemed that the disk was > permanently bad, giving errors on self-tests, unable to successfully > write to some parts of it, and hanging busy. I replaced it with 2 nice > new high-capacity IDE Ultra-ATA disks, and downloaded the newest > netinst 3.1R5 CD, and tried again today. It is extremely unlikely that your disk problems were in any way caused by the installer, and certainly not by the presence of this message. Note that the message would not even be shown during a regular (non-expert) installation. That would be unthinkable if it contained any real information. If you select "manual partitioning" in the first dialog of the partitioner and the next screen shows your harddisk and the existing partitions that are on it, there is nothing to worry about. > I don't want to destroy my new disks by trying to partition them when > the installer is plainly telling me it doesn't have the necessary > kernel modules to do the job. As I said, it is _not_ saying that. The harddisk problems must have been a latent hardware problem that was just exposed by the intensive writing that is done during an installation. Given the age of your system it should be well supported by Sarge. If it were a recent system I'd advice to install Etch instead of Sarge, but for a Pentium 3 box there is no reason for that. Hope this gives you the confidence to proceed. Cheers, FJP -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Bug#413931: d-i missing ide modules
Package: installation-reports Boot method: CD Image version: debian-31r5-i386-netinst.iso, from usc.edu mirror, md5sum good Date: 7 Mar 2007, 22:00 UTC Machine: Old Gateway, Tabor{2,3} motherboard Processor: P3 (Katmai) 596MHz Memory: 384 MB ECC Partitions: none Output of lspci and lspci -n: /bin/sh: lspci: not found dmesg says: : PCI: Probing PCI hardware (bus 00) : PCI: Using IRQ router PIIX/ICH [8086/7110] at :00:07.0 : PCI: Found IRQ 9 for device :00:07.0 : PCI: Sharing IRQ 9 with :00:10.0 Base System Installation Checklist: [O] = OK, [E] = Error (please elaborate below), [ ] = didn't try it Initial boot worked:[O] Configure network HW: [O] Config network: [O] Detect CD: [O] Load installer modules: [O] Detect hard drives: [O] looks correct in dmesg Partition hard drives: [ ] Create file systems:[ ] Mount partitions: [ ] Install base system:[ ] Install boot loader:[ ] Reboot: [ ] Comments/Problems: Missing modules for ide. Running as expert26 installation. The last installer screen before starting disk partitioning says this: : [.] Detect hardware : Unable to load some modules : Linux kernel modules needed to drive some of your hardware are not : available yet. Simply proceeding with the install may make these : modules available later. : : The unavailable modules, and the devices that need them are: agpgart : (Intel Corporation 440BX/ZX/DX - 82443BX/ZX/DX Host bridge), ide-scsi : (Linux IDE-SCSI emulation layer), ide-mod (Linux IDE driver), : ide-probe-mod (Linux IDE probe driver), ide-detect (Linux IDE : detection), ide-floppy (Linux IDE floppy) : : Selecting Continue brings us to the start of partitioning and making filesystems. As I searched Google's archives of various debian lists for this problem, the recurrent answer seems to be that this is an informative message only, and the modules will be loaded later. This seems to be contradicted by this section from the Installation Guide: : 6.3.2.B Partitioning and Mount Point Selection : :At this time, after hardware detection has been executed a final time, :debian-installer should be at its full strength, customized for the :user's needs and ready to do some real work. As the title of this :section indicates, the main task of the next few components lies in :partitioning your disks, creating filesystems, assigning mountpoints :and optionally configuring closely related issues like LVM or RAID :devices. The text of the error screen, and the text of the Installation Guide, seem to be saying clearly that these modules are needed to drive the IDE hardware, and this was the last chance to automatically find them, and it did not succeed. I am _very_ reluctant to proceed to partitioning and file-system making, for this reason: A week ago I tried installing on this machine, using the 3.1R4 netinst CD and the original 4MB Seagate IDE disk that came with this machine. I saw the same errors about missing modules, but proceeded anyway. The installer pretended to partition the disk, and pretended to install some stuff for a while, then croaked with an error about the disk being Busy. After much investigating of the disk with Knoppix and smartctl, it seemed that the disk was permanently bad, giving errors on self-tests, unable to successfully write to some parts of it, and hanging busy. I replaced it with 2 nice new high-capacity IDE Ultra-ATA disks, and downloaded the newest netinst 3.1R5 CD, and tried again today. I don't want to destroy my new disks by trying to partition them when the installer is plainly telling me it doesn't have the necessary kernel modules to do the job. Is there some way I can supply these missing modules to the installer ? Should I try to partition/mk*fs them from Knoppix ? Is there any other documentation I should read ? Please advise. Note: I am subscribed to the debian-bugs-dist list. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]