On 8/17/2018 4:05 PM, Jude DaShiell wrote:
Yes, once language and keyboard get selected type the less than
character. That should get you a numbered menu on the screen. One of
those numbers will allow you to execute a shell. When I do a debian
install, I like to get into this menu as soon as
need to hit return to get the next
step going.
On Thu, 16 Aug 2018, Martin McCormick wrote:
> Date: Thu, 16 Aug 2018 13:14:54
> From: Martin McCormick
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Using a Debian Stretch netinstaller image as a Rescue Disk
> Resent-Date: Thu, 16 Au
On Thu, 16 Aug 2018 23:55:43 +0200
arne wrote:
> On Thu, 16 Aug 2018 21:56:47 +0200
> john doe wrote:
>
> > On 8/16/2018 9:39 PM, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > Martin McCormick wrote:
> > >> Ah, this sounds good. Thank you.
> > >
> > > I assume that the system is
On Thu, 16 Aug 2018 21:56:47 +0200
john doe wrote:
> On 8/16/2018 9:39 PM, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Martin McCormick wrote:
> >> Ah, this sounds good. Thank you.
> >
> > I assume that the system is very limited.
> >
> > If you need more, consider the Debian Live ISOs at
> >
On 8/16/2018 9:39 PM, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Hi,
Martin McCormick wrote:
Ah, this sounds good. Thank you.
I assume that the system is very limited.
If you need more, consider the Debian Live ISOs at
https://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/current-live/amd64/iso-hybrid/
Hi,
Martin McCormick wrote:
> Ah, this sounds good. Thank you.
I assume that the system is very limited.
If you need more, consider the Debian Live ISOs at
https://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/current-live/amd64/iso-hybrid/
https://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/current-live/i386/iso-hybrid/
"Thomas Schmitt" writes:
> Hi,
>
>
> Trying it with
> qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -m 512 -cdrom
> debian-9.3.0-amd64-netinst.iso
>
> I select menu item "Advanced options"
> and then menu item "Rescue mode".
> Now i get to choose by menus: Language, Country, Keymap.
> (Some internal
Hi,
Martin McCormick wrote:
> Maybe I am missing something obvious but is there a way
> to boot the CD, select language and keyboard and then skip
> directly to the rescue shell?
Trying it with
qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -m 512 -cdrom debian-9.3.0-amd64-netinst.iso
I select menu item
drive and
maybe do fsck and so forth.
Maybe I am missing something obvious but is there a way
to boot the CD, select language and keyboard and then skip
directly to the rescue shell?
I actually downloaded a dedicated rescue disk and
successfully used it for a few years
Howdy ,
I wish to create a Debian an image that can be dd'ed into a hard drive.
So for instance if i have a mulfunctioning hard drive i could put other disk
and just use dd to put it on.
I'm installing now (debian sid ) it now into a qemu image build using
qemu-img -f qcow filename size.
and
Jabka Atu wrote:
Howdy ,
I wish to create a Debian an image that can be dd'ed into a hard drive.
So for instance if i have a mulfunctioning hard drive i could put
other disk and just use dd to put it on.
I'm installing now (debian sid ) it now into a qemu image build using
qemu-img -f qcow
On Wed, Jul 16, 2008 at 4:04 PM, Jabka Atu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I did not understand what you are trying to do. Are you installing
Debian on qemu, and then intend to clone this qemu image to a real hard
disk? That might work (Debian is not Windows), but is not ideal as the
virtualized
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 2008-07-16 16:54, Jabka Atu wrote:
On Wed, Jul 16, 2008 at 4:04 PM, Jabka Atu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I did not understand what you are trying to do. Are you installing
Debian on qemu, and then intend to clone this qemu image to a real hard
and rescue disk. These options all seem to want to interact
with/write to the disk before you can log in, which is not something
that makes me feel safe (without knowing what is actually written).
Does anyone know of a Live CD that permits you to do things in a
terminal and interact with your
Alle Meije Wink wrote:
Does anyone know of a Live CD that permits you to do things in a
terminal and interact with your old linux system?
My rescue distro of choice is LNX-BBC:
http://www.lnx-bbc.org/
--
Steve C. Lamb | But who decides what they dream?
PGP Key:
Bom dia, dups!
Ainda não consegui fazer um disco de boot. Como fazer um CD bootável (
ou mesmo um disquete ) para meu
SID? Qualquer resumo será muito bem vindo.
Obrigado.
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
Joerg Rossdeutscher wrote:
A bit late, but this has to be mentioned:
Am Sonntag, den 20.11.2005, 20:03 -0500 schrieb mikepolniak:
Now with these two CD's i have everything i need.
I use R.I.P. - Recovery is possible.
A bit late, but this has to be mentioned:
Am Sonntag, den 20.11.2005, 20:03 -0500 schrieb mikepolniak:
Now with these two CD's i have everything i need.
I use R.I.P. - Recovery is possible. This thing is great. It
contains stuff like reiser4 since a long time, comes in different
flavors
Joerg Rossdeutscher wrote:
A bit late, but this has to be mentioned:
Am Sonntag, den 20.11.2005, 20:03 -0500 schrieb mikepolniak:
Now with these two CD's i have everything i need.
I use R.I.P. - Recovery is possible.
http://www.tux.org/pub/people/kent-robotti/looplinux/rip/
This
On 19 Nov 2005, mikepolniak wrote:
I have used the Debian install cd as a rescue disk and in the past also
the 'BBC-business-card', 'System-Rescue-cd' and Knoppix.
Knoppix is OK for Debian rescue but a big d/l and the others seem a
little outdated. I need one that includes iproute, rsync
On Sat, Nov 19, 2005 at 03:21:41PM -0500, mikepolniak wrote:
I have used the Debian install cd as a rescue disk and in the past also
the 'BBC-business-card', 'System-Rescue-cd' and Knoppix.
Knoppix is OK for Debian rescue but a big d/l and the others seem a
little outdated. I need one
On 21:58 Sun 20 Nov , Joachim Fahnenmüller wrote:
On Sat, Nov 19, 2005 at 03:21:41PM -0500, mikepolniak wrote:
I have used the Debian install cd as a rescue disk and in the past also
the 'BBC-business-card', 'System-Rescue-cd' and Knoppix.
Knoppix is OK for Debian rescue but a big d
I have used the Debian install cd as a rescue disk and in the past also
the 'BBC-business-card', 'System-Rescue-cd' and Knoppix.
Knoppix is OK for Debian rescue but a big d/l and the others seem a
little outdated. I need one that includes iproute, rsync, LVM and grub.
Has anyone come across
initrd.gz and rootfs
and you'd need to make an iso of the whole thing
hacking a existing knoppix is easy but is too big
of a rescue disk
7) test and retest from different failures
8) endless list with more variances and differences of how to boot it
c ya
alvin
hi ya bruno
On Tue, 25 Oct 2005, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
On Sunday 23 October 2005 09:13, Alvin Oga wrote:
Thanks Alvin for all these details.
I decided to 'keep it simple' and will try a Knoppix.
simple is most always the best way to go
c ya
alvin
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL
On Tue, 25 Oct 2005 06:14:01 +
Bruno Costacurta [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm looking for procedure / howto about creating rescue CD disk.
SNIP
Thanks Alvin for all these details.
I decided to 'keep it simple' and will try a Knoppix.
Bye,
Bruno
If I may be so bold you may want to try a
On Sunday 23 October 2005 10:51, Roberto C. Sanchez wrote:
On Sun, Oct 23, 2005 at 10:07:31AM +, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for procedure / howto about creating rescue CD disk.
Thanks.
Bruno
Download either the full CD1 or the net install CD from the Debian
Bruno Costacurta [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I downloaded the net install CD from Debian but my feeling is that it don't
contain 'rescue' but only 'installer'. Is it possible ?
The net installer doesn't have a rescue image, but there is a way.
http://wiki.debian.org/?DebianInstallerFAQ (look
On Mon October 24 2005 03:49 pm, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
On Sunday 23 October 2005 10:51, Roberto C. Sanchez wrote:
On Sun, Oct 23, 2005 at 10:07:31AM +, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for procedure / howto about creating rescue CD disk.
Thanks.
Bruno
Download
Hello,
I'm looking for procedure / howto about creating rescue CD disk.
Thanks.
Bruno
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sun, Oct 23, 2005 at 10:07:31AM +, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for procedure / howto about creating rescue CD disk.
Thanks.
Bruno
Download either the full CD1 or the net install CD from the Debian
installer page. Alternatively, keep a Knoppix or other live CD around,
and you'd need to make an iso of the whole thing
hacking a existing knoppix is easy but is too big
of a rescue disk
7) test and retest from different failures
8) endless list with more variances and differences of how to boot it
c ya
alvin
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email
Bruno Costacurta wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for procedure / howto about creating rescue CD disk.
Thanks.
Bruno
With lilo comes mkrescue.
mkrescue --iso
puts rescue.iso in the dir.
Then you burn that with cdrecord and you boot from that.
mkrescue is a script.
I change it a little, to show
On Sun, Oct 23, 2005 at 06:51:45AM -0400, Roberto C. Sanchez wrote:
On Sun, Oct 23, 2005 at 10:07:31AM +, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for procedure / howto about creating rescue CD disk.
Thanks.
Bruno
Download either the full CD1 or the net install CD from the
Hai,
ich benutze auf einem Server einen selbst kompilierten Kernel unter
Sarge. Das System ist vollständig mit Software-Raid gespiegelt. Es gibt
keinen Mountpoint, der sich nicht auf ein /dev/mdX Device bezieht. Ich
habe vor kurzem ein wenig Probleme mit der Boot-Platte gehabt und dabei
Sebastian Laubscher schrieb:
Hai,
ich benutze auf einem Server einen selbst kompilierten Kernel unter
Sarge. Das System ist vollständig mit Software-Raid gespiegelt. Es gibt
keinen Mountpoint, der sich nicht auf ein /dev/mdX Device bezieht. Ich
habe vor kurzem ein wenig Probleme mit der
* Christian Schulte [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sebastian Laubscher schrieb:
hatte das gleiche Problem mal mit mehreren Dell-Servern.
Es gibt im Internet ein ISO von woody (irgendein Japaner hat's glaube
ich gebaut), in dem ein haufen Module fuer Raids etc. schon drin
sind.
Wenn es irgendwo
Hallo,
ich benutze auf einem Server einen selbst kompilierten Kernel unter
Sarge. Das System ist vollständig mit Software-Raid gespiegelt. Es gibt
keinen Mountpoint, der sich nicht auf ein /dev/mdX Device bezieht. Ich
habe vor kurzem ein wenig Probleme mit der Boot-Platte gehabt und dabei
Hi Kent,
The problem : the new hard disk is too big to be correctly recognized by the
BIOS, so I disabled it in the BIOS configuration. I have burned Sarge 3.1
netinst CD, and ran the install without any problem, with Grub on /dev/hda
(the new hard disk). This computer has no floppy drive : only
Hi!
I am facing a little problem with my Sarge install.
I was an happy Woody user for a long time, and I need to do a fresh install of
Sarge on a computer with BIOS problem. This computer ran Woody without any
problem, but I have received a new hard disk for this one, on which I would like
to
Sylvain Briole wrote:
Hi!
I am facing a little problem with my Sarge install.
I was an happy Woody user for a long time, and I need to do a fresh install of
Sarge on a computer with BIOS problem. This computer ran Woody without any
problem, but I have received a new hard disk for this one, on
I successfully installed Debian from a CDROM burned from the image
debian-31r0a-i386-binary-1.iso
I then tried to install a 2.6.5 kernel on that system and must
have incorrectly modified /boot/grub/menu.lst because the system
doesn't boot. I did think to make a backup of the
Martin McCormick:
I then tried to install a 2.6.5 kernel on that system and must
have incorrectly modified /boot/grub/menu.lst because the system
doesn't boot.
If you know the correct parameters (or know how to guess it), you can
edit the boot entries by pressing 'e' in the grub menu.
On Sat, 18 Jun 2005 14:47:51 -0500
Martin McCormick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I successfully installed Debian from a CDROM burned from the image
debian-31r0a-i386-binary-1.iso
I then tried to install a 2.6.5 kernel on that system and must
have incorrectly modified
Serveren bruger lilo og er ovenikøbet en woody. Dvs. kan jeg overhovedet
bruge en rescuedisk fra woody til sarge?
Siger du at du ikke har opgraderet kernen siden officiel Woody release?
Ok, server1 kører, server2 kører ikke :)
Måske kan en lille historik give et bedre overblik (om ikke
Tony Godshall wrote:
According to Hugo Vanwoerkom,
George Iordanou wrote:
I want to create a rescue disk. I went to debian's official webpage
and i downloaded the unstable version which consists of the following
files:
boot.img
cd-drivers.img
net-drivers.img
root.img
How can i create a bootable
George Iordanou wrote:
I want to create a rescue disk. I went to debian's official webpage
and i downloaded the unstable version which consists of the following
files:
boot.img
cd-drivers.img
net-drivers.img
root.img
How can i create a bootable rescue disk? I want to get into my system
using
Thanks a lot for your help.
if you have a bootable disk with chroot, you can run the mkrescue (or
maybe mkboot for a bootdisk). I usually use knoppix.
Unfortunately i haven't exactly understood the procedure. Do i need
knoppix? I have the installation cd of sarge.
Is a bootable rescue CD
On Tue, 2004-11-30 at 16:29, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
George Iordanou wrote:
I want to create a rescue disk. I went to debian's official webpage
and i downloaded the unstable version which consists of the following
files:
boot.img
cd-drivers.img
net-drivers.img
root.img
How
George Iordanou([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
Thanks a lot for your help.
if you have a bootable disk with chroot, you can run the mkrescue (or
maybe mkboot for a bootdisk). I usually use knoppix.
Unfortunately i haven't exactly understood the procedure. Do i need
According to Hugo Vanwoerkom,
George Iordanou wrote:
I want to create a rescue disk. I went to debian's official webpage
and i downloaded the unstable version which consists of the following
files:
boot.img
cd-drivers.img
net-drivers.img
root.img
How can i create a bootable rescue
the computer and up
comes Knoppix. Since everything is on the CD, it does not rely on
your hard drive being in working order. If something is broken on
your HD, you can use Knoppix to fix it. I.e. Knoppix is the ultimate
Linux rescue disk.
All you have to do is to burn the Knoppix distribution
I want to create a rescue disk. I went to debian's official webpage
and i downloaded the unstable version which consists of the following
files:
boot.img
cd-drivers.img
net-drivers.img
root.img
How can i create a bootable rescue disk? I want to get into my system
using the floppy's kernel
On Mon, 2004-11-29 at 20:47 +0200, George Iordanou wrote:
I want to create a rescue disk. I went to debian's official webpage
and i downloaded the unstable version which consists of the following
files:
boot.img
cd-drivers.img
net-drivers.img
root.img
How can i create a bootable rescue
On Mon, 29 Nov 2004 13:21:56 -0600, Ron Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 2004-11-29 at 20:47 +0200, George Iordanou wrote:
I want to create a rescue disk. I went to debian's official webpage
and i downloaded the unstable version which consists of the following
files:
boot.img
On Mon, Nov 29, 2004 at 08:47:41PM +0200, George Iordanou wrote:
I want to create a rescue disk. I went to debian's official webpage
and i downloaded the unstable version which consists of the following
files:
boot.img
cd-drivers.img
net-drivers.img
root.img
How can i create a bootable
Hello!
trying to get my server working again.. somehow is the MBR of the boot
disk corrupt, and i don't seem to get it repaired
(should have never thought about rebooting that damn machine... was
running fine for 3 years)
thus i want to be at least able to boot the system from a cd
beim booten der rescue disk für eine neuinstallation von debian tritt bei
mir folgender fehler auf:
boot:
Loading linux.bin ready.
Wrong loader: giving up.
da bleibt das system dann stehen.
das system:
amd k6-2
64mb ram
400mb festplatte
kein cdrom
ich habe andere disketten
ja hallo erstmal,...
Am Dienstag, 3. Februar 2004 15:01 schrieb Peter Gruber:
beim booten der rescue disk für eine neuinstallation von debian tritt bei
mir folgender fehler auf:
boot:
Loading linux.bin ready.
Wrong loader: giving up.
da bleibt das system dann stehen
I'm not sure if this is the right list, but I'm gonna try here (I'm also
subscribed to several other of the Debian lists, including debian-boot,
so if this question belongs there, please excuse my faux pas).
Currently I'm running RedHat 7.2 on my main machine. I want to install
Debian on a
with getting the rescue disk but
you need to grab root.bin and driver1-4.bin also. make sure you have
some good disks that dd cleanly, 14 in and 14 out. and some time for
the install. It really sux you don't have a cdrom to run off of but
I'm noone to talk.
I'm so lazy that after putting together my
I am trying to run a beige G3 mac (powerpc) with only linux on it (no
mac-os) which rools out bootX if I can.
I was wondering what was the best way to boot the system (hda2).
I tried to make a rescue disk, but was unsuccesful thus far as I don't
have much installed and I can't boot into the system
On Mon, Nov 25, 2002 at 12:34:46PM -0800, Micha Feigin wrote:
I am trying to run a beige G3 mac (powerpc) with only linux on it (no
mac-os) which rools out bootX if I can.
I actually don't think this is possible. The beige G3 seems to occupy
some strange space between NewWorld and OldWorld,
I'll figure it out... Eventually. Thanks for the help.
On Thu, Oct 31, 2002 at 12:19:43PM -0500, Jameson C. Burt wrote:
I spent a several days trying to do this myself.
This got me looking beyond LILO to trying GRUB,
which didn't do all I wanted either.
I never could boot the $10 (U.S.)
I have an ls120 drive. I am still pretty new, and have looked all over,
but can't find a way to make an LS-120 bootable.
I have found a way to reformat it and all the partitions on it work.
It's like having a 120mb hd. (but slower)
What I want to do is get a copy of my current kernel (or a new
I spent a several days trying to do this myself.
This got me looking beyond LILO to trying GRUB,
which didn't do all I wanted either.
I never could boot the $10 (U.S.) LS-120 diskettes,
but I could eventually boot a regular 25 cent 1.44MB diskettes
through my LS-120 drive.
[I understand the
Meu amigo:
Em Fri, 16 Aug 2002 23:26:08 -0300 o amigo
Marcelo Coimbra [EMAIL PROTECTED] enviou:
Olá pessoal da lista.
Recentemente instalei numa maquina o Windows XP, e este apagou a minha
MBR. Entao coloquei o rescue disk e passei para o prompt: rescue
root=/dev/hda4 ate ai tudo bem
Olá pessoal da lista.
Recentemente instalei numa maquina o Windows XP, e
este apagou a minha MBR.
Entao coloquei o rescue disk e passei para o
prompt: rescue root=/dev/hda4
ate ai tudo bem, porem a uma altura do boot ele
pedia para passar a opçao init= para a kernel... como eu faço isso
Heh, been there. After 2 days trying, I gave up, installed the base
system using 2.2.17-reiserfs (from
http://chao.ucsd.edu/debian/boot-floppies/), and upgraded to 2.4.x
afterwards (add deb http://people.debian.org/~bunk/debian potato main
to apt.sources, apt-get dist-upgrade).
I
On Tue, 2001-11-20 at 11:38, Daniel Serodio wrote:
Heh, been there. After 2 days trying, I gave up, installed the base
system using 2.2.17-reiserfs (from
http://chao.ucsd.edu/debian/boot-floppies/), and upgraded to 2.4.x
afterwards (add deb http://people.debian.org/~bunk/debian potato
Hi, I'm running into a problem here and wanted to see if anyone else saw
something like it before.
I was following the instructions in Technical information on the Boot
Floppies to replace the Rescue Floppy Kernel, as I have a machine with a
promise raid controller I want to use for the root. I
I'm trying to restore to a new hard drive, because my root disk is dying.
I have a good backup on tape, and it looks like the rescue disk ssupports
the SCSI card I have, and recognizes the tape drive. However I can't find
/dev/st0.
How can I create this?
Probably with /dev/MAKEDEV
on Sat, Oct 20, 2001 at 05:32:01PM -0400, Stan Brown ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
I'm trying to restore to a new hard drive, because my root disk is dying.
I have a good backup on tape, and it looks like the rescue disk ssupports
the SCSI card I have, and recognizes the tape drive. However I
I'm trying to restore to a new hard drive, because my root disk is dying.
I have a good backup on tape, and it looks like the rescue disk ssupports
the SCSI card I have, and recognizes the tape drive. However I can't find
/dev/st0.
How can I create this?
--
Stan Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED
derived from idepci, the reiser floppies wont boot. Cos the ide flavour
does not support reiserfs, can anyone give me advice how to create a
debian rescue disk for woody???
Of course I am not afraid of compiling my own kernel, but I dunno how to
bind it with the bootstrap menu things.
Any
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Hash: SHA1
I just got a sony PCG-C1VP, and I need a rescue disk that has USB
support so I can install linux. I tried the loadlin route in dos but
apparently once the Crusoe processor has morphed, or maybe setup the
memory allocation, it causes the linux kernel
keyboard driver.
btw - this is my first install.
Thanks
Jeff
-Original Message-
From: Brian Nelson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 04, 2001 9:56 AM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: rescue disk install
On Wed, Jul 04, 2001 at 01:20:13AM -0600
Hi,
On Tue, Jul 03, 2001 at 09:17:40PM -0600, Jeff Conder wrote:
Hi - I have not been able to get past the rescue disk install.
Which version potato/woody stable/testing? I assume potato ;-)
I've read and searched through the documents and haven't
found anything that relates to what I
Has anyone installed potato on a system with a USB keyboard?
I have a rescue and root disk, but when I'm asked to insert
the root disk and press return, nothing happens. I put the
root disk in but can't get the install to continue. It doesn't
seem to recognize my keboard.
Thanks - Jeff
On Wed, Jul 04, 2001 at 01:20:13AM -0600, Jeff Conder wrote:
Has anyone installed potato on a system with a USB keyboard?
I have a rescue and root disk, but when I'm asked to insert
the root disk and press return, nothing happens. I put the
root disk in but can't get the install to continue.
-Original Message-
From: Brian Nelson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 04, 2001 9:56 AM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: rescue disk install
On Wed, Jul 04, 2001 at 01:20:13AM -0600, Jeff Conder wrote:
Has anyone installed potato on a system with a USB keyboard?
I have
-Original Message-
From: Brian Nelson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 04, 2001 9:56 AM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: rescue disk install
On Wed, Jul 04, 2001 at 01:20:13AM -0600, Jeff Conder wrote:
Has anyone installed potato on a system with a USB keyboard?
I have
Hi - I have not been able to get past the rescue disk install.
I've read and searched through the documents and haven't
found anything that relates to what I perceive is the problem.
Any help on this would be appreciated:
My system is - 900MHz Athelon, 128M RAM, 60G IDE Hard
drive, Adaptec SCSI
patch) and replaced the
original 'LINUX' on the rescue disk, run rdev and started installing.
Now the thing is, for some reason the root gets mounted read only while
using my new kernel (the first step when you set keyboard fails). If I
remount the root read write, I can install as normal
Hello,
I've been looking for a 2.4.2 kernel rescue disk and haven't found any
ready-made one yet.
What I really need is kernel 2.4.x and mkreiserfs version 3.6.x (which
supports files larger than 4GB) on a floppy. Then I would install Debian
Potato, and finally dist-upgrade to unstable.
But I
for helping ;o)
Marius
-Original Message-
From: Ray Percival [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2001 4:34 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'; Marius Moisescu
Cc: 'debian-user@lists.debian.org'
Subject: Re: Linux 2.4.2 rescue disk
Take a look at debianplanet.org they have a article
boot disk
and that works, but it doesn't seem to like the bootloader on the rescue disk.
Any ideas?
Mike
Hi all..
I know this has come up before, but I'm really
confused.
I have a soundblaster 16 CD ROM, but the rescue
disk doesn't support this. I have read all the
documentation that came with the debian distro
2.2r2 as well as the documentation on the
debian.org web site, and the CD ROM HOWTO
Now that kernel 2.4 is officially released, is there going to be a
kernel 2.4 based rescue disk produced?
I really need one with the ReiserFS support compiled in (ReiserFS
requires a patch). My reason is that I am using LVM and ReiserFS ---
which means that if anything ever goes wrong, I won't
Mark Phillips wrote:
Is there any way I can create my own custom rescue disk? Is there a
package for doing this? Is there a HOWTO?
I'm pretty new to this list, but this has come up a lot. Have a look
at:
# man make-kpkg
# man mkboot
--
-=|JP|=-Why, oh, why didn't I
-
From: Jon Pennington [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Mark Phillips [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Sent: Friday, January 05, 2001 5:43 PM
Subject: Re: 2.4 kernel rescue disk?
Mark Phillips wrote:
Is there any way I can create my own custom rescue disk? Is there a
package
Is there a rescue disk for kernel 2.4.0 yet? If not, is it possible to
roll your own? How hard is it?
Thanks,
Mark.
_/___/~~
/~~_/~~__/~~__Mark_Phillips
/~~_/[EMAIL PROTECTED
Hello
Last week my system was absolutely unusuable due to some foolish lilo
experiments and I had trouble getting it working right again as I use
reiserfs which is sadly not supported by any rescue disc or installation
CD I have floating around here. The only collegue whom I gave reiserfs,
too
1) the Linuxcare Bootable Biz card CD will do some of this
(http://www.linuxcare.com/bootable_cd
it will install a Slink+1/2, among other things.
2) Lubbock, my own project spunoff from the Linuxcare one, and a major
goal of Lubbock is to become much more Debian-ish, and can always use more
Quoting Ed Burton ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
I tried to partition with the Rescue disk, then
lost my Win32 MBR. I am using EZ_Bios (installed from
floppy) from Western Digital (I have a new 10.2g WD
drive), so luckily I was able to restore the MBR. My
Award BIOS cannot read above 2gb I wanted
([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
I tried to partition with the Rescue disk, then
lost my Win32 MBR. I am using EZ_Bios (installed from
floppy) from Western Digital (I have a new 10.2g WD
drive), so luckily I was able to restore the MBR. My
Award BIOS cannot read above 2gb I wanted a 2gig
I tried to partition with the Rescue disk, then
lost my Win32 MBR. I am using EZ_Bios (installed from
floppy) from Western Digital (I have a new 10.2g WD
drive), so luckily I was able to restore the MBR. My
Award BIOS cannot read above 2gb I wanted a 2gig
partition for Debian (Potato, frozen
= Original Message From [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Ignasi Modolell) =
Hue-Bond [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
la memoria, pero no tengo ni idea de cómo confirmarlo, no dispongo de
HB memtest86, que es un programita que se instala en un diskette,
HB lo metes y él solito hace el
Hue-Bond [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
la memoria, pero no tengo ni idea de cómo confirmarlo, no dispongo de
HB memtest86, que es un programita que se instala en un diskette,
HB lo metes y él solito hace el trabajo, sin necesidad de tener
HB un
Probado, el memtest no llega a
resc1440.bin, el tecra, el safe, el tecra-save y el lowmem, y ninguno llegó
a arrancar, o bien da error de crc al descomprimir, o bien empieza el
arranque y rebota al llegar al ramdisk (más o menos, que los mensajes van
muy rápidos y podría ser un poco antes o un poco después); he probado
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