Am 27.01.2015 um 13:00 schrieb Jonathan Copeland
jonathan.mcopel...@icloud.com:
Hi Debian Community
I am a student at the University of Pretoria and I need to have Debian
installed on my Mac for my degree,
The only requirements that we’ve been notified of are that we’re meant to be
Hi Debian Community
I am a student at the University of Pretoria and I need to have Debian
installed on my Mac for my degree,
The only requirements that we’ve been notified of are that we’re meant to be
able to run Debian in our Computers
and that we are to be able to submit Projects.
I’d
Gary Dale extremegroundmai...@gmail.com writes:
On 25/11/14 02:14 PM, lee wrote:
Hi,
what could be the problem with the backport kernels? They never finish
booting when the root fs is on an LVM volume.
Do I need to take special precautions with the backports kernel to get
it to boot? I
Hi,
what could be the problem with the backport kernels? They never finish
booting when the root fs is on an LVM volume.
Do I need to take special precautions with the backports kernel to get
it to boot? I have a separate /boot partition not on LVM and a biosgrub
partition with the root fs
On 25/11/14 02:14 PM, lee wrote:
Hi,
what could be the problem with the backport kernels? They never finish
booting when the root fs is on an LVM volume.
Do I need to take special precautions with the backports kernel to get
it to boot? I have a separate /boot partition not on LVM
On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 09:17:09PM -0700, john.tiger wrote:
Have followed both guided partitioning as well as trying manual partitions
with efi boot as first partition. Install works fine but after completion
does not boot (get ? folder image) - tried to boot into rescue mode but
target
Have followed both guided partitioning as well as trying manual
partitions with efi boot as first partition. Install works fine but
after completion does not boot (get ? folder image) - tried to boot
into rescue mode but target partition not found
partitions :
free space 1 gb
/efi
Dieter Deyke dieter.de...@gmail.com writes:
On 09/26/2014 06:31 PM, lee wrote:
is there an easy way to force chronyd to get into/remain in its online
mode rather than going into offline mode?
I had the same problem. My workaround was to run the following python
script from /etc/cron.hourly/
Philippe Clérié phili...@gcal.net writes:
On 09/27/2014 07:17 AM, lee wrote:
Hm, you don't use UPSs?
:-)
It's a long story. I'll make it short: I'm in Haiti. Grid power is an
iffy proposition.
:-)
So we have to have heavy backups. That means generators and large
inverters. There is
op 25-09-14 13:04, Paul van der Vlis schreef:
Hello,
I am using Wheezy, and on some machines I see messages from starting
services while booting, and on some machines I don't see them.
Can somebody explain me how this works? I have the idea that I don't see
messages on fast machines
On 09/26/2014 06:31 PM, lee wrote:
is there an easy way to force chronyd to get into/remain in its online
mode rather than going into offline mode?
I had the same problem. My workaround was to run the following python
script from /etc/cron.hourly/
#! /usr/bin/env python
import os
import time
Philippe Clérié phili...@gcal.net writes:
On 09/26/2014 06:31 PM, lee wrote:
So is there some simple way to just force chronyd to remain online? I
think when there isn't an option for this, I'll just replace it with
ntpd ...
I'd like to second that question.
I've used chronyd for a
On 09/27/2014 07:17 AM, lee wrote:
Hm, you don't use UPSs?
:-)
It's a long story. I'll make it short: I'm in Haiti. Grid power is an
iffy proposition.
:-)
So we have to have heavy backups. That means generators and large
inverters. There is always a slight delay when switching to
Philippe Clérié wrote:
On 09/27/2014 07:17 AM, lee wrote:
Hm, you don't use UPSs?
:-)
It's a long story. I'll make it short: I'm in Haiti. Grid power is an
iffy proposition.
:-)
So we have to have heavy backups. That means generators and large
inverters. There is always a slight delay
Hey Debianers,
I am trying to compose a real basic preseed file, that will answer
all the d-i questions so that the install is completely automated. This
works on a PXE boot (with dhcp) but not with a CD boot (with dhcp). I
still get asked to confirm my hostname, domain name and also if I
On Fri 26 Sep 2014 at 19:02:57 +0100, Iain M Conochie wrote:
I am trying to compose a real basic preseed file, that will answer
all the d-i questions so that the install is completely automated.
This works on a PXE boot (with dhcp) but not with a CD boot (with
dhcp). I still get asked to
Hey Brian,
On 26/09/14 19:24, Brian wrote:
On Fri 26 Sep 2014 at 19:02:57 +0100, Iain M Conochie wrote:
I am trying to compose a real basic preseed file, that will answer
all the d-i questions so that the install is completely automated.
This works on a PXE boot (with dhcp) but not with a
is the dom0 of the VM chronyd is running in, so the
server is even /granted/ to be online. When I restart chronyd manually
after booting the VM, it works fine, proving that the server is
reachable.
So is there some simple way to just force chronyd to remain online? I
think when there isn't an option
it with ntpd.
The server it uses is the dom0 of the VM chronyd is running in, so the
server is even /granted/ to be online. When I restart chronyd manually
after booting the VM, it works fine, proving that the server is
reachable.
So is there some simple way to just force chronyd to remain online
Hello,
I am using Wheezy, and on some machines I see messages from starting
services while booting, and on some machines I don't see them.
Can somebody explain me how this works? I have the idea that I don't see
messages on fast machines.
And can I control this? On some servers I like to see
On 9/25/14, Paul van der Vlis p...@vandervlis.nl wrote:
Hello,
I am using Wheezy, and on some machines I see messages from starting
services while booting, and on some machines I don't see them.
Can somebody explain me how this works? I have the idea that I don't see
messages on fast
Hello Cindy-Sue,
op 25-09-14 15:08, Cindy-Sue Causey schreef:
On 9/25/14, Paul van der Vlis p...@vandervlis.nl wrote:
Hello,
I am using Wheezy, and on some machines I see messages from starting
services while booting, and on some machines I don't see them.
Can somebody explain me how
On 2014-09-25 13:04 +0200, Paul van der Vlis wrote:
I am using Wheezy, and on some machines I see messages from starting
services while booting, and on some machines I don't see them.
Can somebody explain me how this works? I have the idea that I don't see
messages on fast machines.
Are you
On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 13:04:59 +0200
Paul van der Vlis p...@vandervlis.nl wrote:
Hello,
I am using Wheezy, and on some machines I see messages from starting
services while booting, and on some machines I don't see them.
Can somebody explain me how this works? I have the idea that I don't
op 25-09-14 17:30, Steve Litt schreef:
On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 13:04:59 +0200
Paul van der Vlis p...@vandervlis.nl wrote:
Hello,
I am using Wheezy, and on some machines I see messages from starting
services while booting, and on some machines I don't see them.
Can somebody explain me how
op 25-09-14 16:41, Sven Joachim schreef:
On 2014-09-25 13:04 +0200, Paul van der Vlis wrote:
I am using Wheezy, and on some machines I see messages from starting
services while booting, and on some machines I don't see them.
Can somebody explain me how this works? I have the idea that I
Am 25.09.2014 um 17:30 schrieb Steve Litt:
Disable lightdm and you'll start seeing the messages. The right way is
to put an exit command early in the lightdm config file. The easy way
That's actually entirely the wrong way to disable a (SysV) init script.
Please use
invoke-rc.d lightdm disable
while booting, and on some machines I don't see
them.
Can somebody explain me how this works? I have the idea that I
don't see messages on fast machines.
And can I control this? On some servers I like to see the messages
from the services when the machine boots.
Disable lightdm
see messages from
starting services while booting, and on some machines I don't see
them.
Can somebody explain me how this works? I have the idea that I
don't see messages on fast machines.
And can I control this? On some servers I like to see the messages
from the services when the machine
On Jo, 25 sep 14, 18:30:53, Michael Biebl wrote:
Am 25.09.2014 um 17:30 schrieb Steve Litt:
Disable lightdm and you'll start seeing the messages. The right way is
to put an exit command early in the lightdm config file. The easy way
That's actually entirely the wrong way to disable a
On Thu 25 Sep 2014 at 23:46:15 +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Jo, 25 sep 14, 18:30:53, Michael Biebl wrote:
Am 25.09.2014 um 17:30 schrieb Steve Litt:
Disable lightdm and you'll start seeing the messages. The right way is
to put an exit command early in the lightdm config file. The easy
Am 25.09.2014 um 22:46 schrieb Andrei POPESCU:
On Jo, 25 sep 14, 18:30:53, Michael Biebl wrote:
Am 25.09.2014 um 17:30 schrieb Steve Litt:
Disable lightdm and you'll start seeing the messages. The right way is
to put an exit command early in the lightdm config file. The easy way
That's
On Sun, 21 Sep 2014 19:02:39 +0300
Lars Noodén lars.noo...@gmail.com wrote:
On 09/21/2014 06:54 PM, Chris Bannister wrote:
On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 03:43:40PM +0300, Lars Noodén wrote:
I've installed Debian GNU/kFreeBSD 7.6 (wheezy) from a mini.iso CD image on
a MacBookPro 8.2. The
On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 07:02:39PM +0300, Lars Noodén wrote:
On 09/21/2014 06:54 PM, Chris Bannister wrote:
On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 03:43:40PM +0300, Lars Noodén wrote:
I've installed Debian GNU/kFreeBSD 7.6 (wheezy) from a mini.iso CD image on
a MacBookPro 8.2. The installation seemed to go
I've installed Debian GNU/kFreeBSD 7.6 (wheezy) from a mini.iso CD image
on a MacBookPro 8.2. The installation seemed to go smoothly, including
installing Grub, but when it is time to boot, the machine only ever
shows a blinking folder with a question mark, indicating no system. The
system
On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 03:43:40PM +0300, Lars Noodén wrote:
I've installed Debian GNU/kFreeBSD 7.6 (wheezy) from a mini.iso CD image on
a MacBookPro 8.2. The installation seemed to go smoothly, including
What was url from where you got the mini.iso CD?
--
If you're not careful, the
On 09/21/2014 06:54 PM, Chris Bannister wrote:
On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 03:43:40PM +0300, Lars Noodén wrote:
I've installed Debian GNU/kFreeBSD 7.6 (wheezy) from a mini.iso CD image on
a MacBookPro 8.2. The installation seemed to go smoothly, including
What was url from where you got the
On Sunday, September 21, 2014 05:43:40 AM Lars Noodén wrote:
I've installed Debian GNU/kFreeBSD 7.6 (wheezy) from a mini.iso CD
image
on a MacBookPro 8.2. The installation seemed to go smoothly, including
installing Grub, but when it is time to boot, the machine only ever
shows a blinking
On 09/21/2014 09:05 PM, Andrew Winnenberg wrote:
On Sunday, September 21, 2014 05:43:40 AM Lars Noodén wrote:
I've installed Debian GNU/kFreeBSD 7.6 (wheezy) from a mini.iso CD
image
on a MacBookPro 8.2. The installation seemed to go smoothly, including
installing Grub, but when it is time
is
booting fine with a 250GB drive.
BIOS can only ever boot from one device. Typically, this is defined in
the Boot Order menu, somewhere in the BIOS menu. The normal procedure
for a BIOS with several options is to try the various boot devices in
the specified order and look for a valid boot loader
it
amazingly boot. it seems like more of a BIOS issue but the same system is
booting fine with a 250GB drive.
any idea what is going on.
Thanks,
MYK
goes smoothly (so I can login in a terminal,
start x, etc.).
After many attempts, I found a solution. Add
idle=halt
to kernel booting options. I wish I had explanation for that too, but ref.
doc [1] is pretty dry.
[1] https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt
Hello Debian users,
I recently bought a gluglug X60s laptop and once received I installed
Debian on it (wheezy i386).
The installation was done using the netinstall CD; I only installed base system
plus laptop programs and apt-get install'd other stuff (xorg, alsa, etc.) later
on.
The
Dear all,
Zenbook bootable again. The fix was actually really easy:
apt-get install --reinstall grub-efi-amd64
The question remains what led to this error, but I guess I will never
find out ;)
Regards!
--
j.hofmüller
mur.sat -- a space art projecthttp://sat.mur.at/
Jogi Hofmüller, 28.01.2014:
Dear all,
Zenbook bootable again. The fix was actually really easy:
apt-get install --reinstall grub-efi-amd64
If the machine wasn't booting, how did you get to a state where you
could run that? Did you use a rescue usb/cd?
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email
On Tue, 2014-01-28 at 08:07 -0600, Selim T. Erdogan wrote:
Jogi Hofmüller, 28.01.2014:
Dear all,
Zenbook bootable again. The fix was actually really easy:
apt-get install --reinstall grub-efi-amd64
If the machine wasn't booting, how did you get to a state where you
could run
wasn't booting, how did you get to a state where you
could run that?
Oops, than a multi-boot wouldn't work :D.
Did you use a rescue usb/cd?
Seems to be the only solution. And than to chroot or systemd-nspawn.
Or the OP has got a multi-boot as I've got.
[rocketmouse@archlinux ~]$ sudo
Am 2014-01-28 15:07, schrieb Selim T. Erdogan:
apt-get install --reinstall grub-efi-amd64
If the machine wasn't booting, how did you get to a state where you
could run that? Did you use a rescue usb/cd?
Booted the machine using the rescue feature from a debian netboot on usb
stick
the
upgrade and tested suspend/resume. Still no luck on resume, machine is
frozen.
So I hit the power button. Instead of booting, the machine goes
straight into the BIOS setup utility. There, no EFI boot option is
available anymore.
What I did since then is:
* configure a boot option pointing
I have a directory /media/USB01
Nothing is mounted on this directory.
When I run the following, after booting up with systemd, the command hangs:
sudo umount /media/USB01
A Ctrl-C breaks the hang.
$ cat /etc/fstab
# /etc/fstab: static file system information.
#
# Use 'blkid' to print
On 12/15/13, Zenaan Harkness z...@freedbms.net wrote:
/etc/fstab :
/zenlocal/zen/justa /home/justa none bind
/zenlocal/zen/ /home/justa/zen none bind
Removing these solved the problem. I have unwound my two bind mount
mounts (with the sequence as above - not recursive, but the latter
bind
On 12/15/13, Zenaan Harkness z...@freedbms.net wrote:
On 12/15/13, Zenaan Harkness z...@freedbms.net wrote:
/etc/fstab :
/zenlocal/zen/justa /home/justa none bind
/zenlocal/zen/ /home/justa/zen none bind
Removing these solved the problem.
Another small issue that arose when I
After my recent sid upgrade, when I test boot with systemd, startx
ends with an error saying something (I think it is X) is lacking
permissions.
Any systemd users knowledgeable on how to user startx manually after
booting with systemd?
I tested systemd a few times after my upgrade, and have
On 12/10/13, Zenaan Harkness z...@freedbms.net wrote:
After my recent sid upgrade, when I test boot with systemd, startx
ends with an error saying something (I think it is X) is lacking
permissions.
Just rebooted (to test other changes), and my laptop is now
auto-booting with systemd (looks
other changes), and my laptop is now
auto-booting with systemd (looks like some grub customization has been
lost), but on the other hand, startx now works! Happy me :)
No idea what changed - I certainly have not modified any permissions
today... Zenaan
Had thisu problem some time ago when
- Original Message -
From: Andrei POPESCU
To:
Cc:
Sent:Tue, 26 Nov 2013 13:04:24 +0200
Subject:Re: Booting from USB stick
On Lu, 25 nov 13, 23:40:44, erosenberg@hygeiabiomedicalcom [1]
wrote:
Dear List -
There is a problem with my Lenovo 8189-58U. It will not boot
from
On Lu, 25 nov 13, 23:40:44, erosenb...@hygeiabiomedical.com wrote:
Dear List -
There is a problem with my Lenovo 8189-58U. It will not boot from
the CDROM. According to Google, it is a problem with the older BIOS.
I need to flash the BIOS, but I cannot boot from a USB stick.so...
How do I
On Mon, 25 Nov 2013, erosenb...@hygeiabiomedical.com wrote:
Dear List -
There is a problem with my Lenovo 8189-58U. It will not boot from
the CDROM. According to Google, it is a problem with the older BIOS.
I need to flash the BIOS, but I cannot boot from a USB stick.so...
How do I use
Dear List -
There is a problem with my Lenovo 8189-58U. It will not boot from
the CDROM. According to Google, it is a problem with the older BIOS.
I need to flash the BIOS, but I cannot boot from a USB stick.so...
How do I use GRUB to boot from a USB stick? Any other
suggestions?
TIA
Ethan
Hello *,
I've followed this guide [1] and now I have my PXE server up and running,
however that guide doesn't tell how to configure tftp-hpa menus for Debian, let
alone the netinst version.
This other guide [2] tell something about Lenny, but I couldn't find the
debian-installer folder in the
In data mercoledì 6 novembre 2013 16:09:42, Lucio Crusca ha scritto:
What am I doing wrong?
I still don't know what, but switching to the minimal ISO (mini.iso) instead
of the one with the debian installer bundled did the trick.
That suggests me that the same problem would show up with Ubuntu
disk client. For Fedora and
OpenSUSE it mounts the installation media that way. Instead of
booting a local cdrom it is booting a remote nfs mounted cdrom image.
And since those were netinst images the installation proceeds from
there downloading from the network. I think. I didn't actually set
or lvm). If I do a system upgrade then kernel 3.10-2-amd64 fails to boot
completely with a message that it can't find the root file system. In the
busybox shell the raid devices don't appear to be created.
If I do a dpkg-reconfigure linux-image-3.10-2-amd64 after the failure (and
booting
For the records,
On 09/13/2013 10:07 PM, e.waelde wrote:
Hello,
my main workstation runs its root-filesystem on lvm
on crypt_luks on raid1 (software raid). Everything
works flawless with kernel-image-3.2.0-4-amd64
However, all later kernels that I tried fail to boot,
e.g.
e.waelde wrote:
Hello,
my main workstation runs its root-filesystem on lvm
on crypt_luks on raid1 (software raid). Everything
works flawless with kernel-image-3.2.0-4-amd64
However, all later kernels that I tried fail to boot,
e.g. kernel-image-3.10-3-amd64
+ grub2 starts the kernel
+
Hello,
my main workstation runs its root-filesystem on lvm
on crypt_luks on raid1 (software raid). Everything
works flawless with kernel-image-3.2.0-4-amd64
However, all later kernels that I tried fail to boot,
e.g. kernel-image-3.10-3-amd64
+ grub2 starts the kernel
+ the kernel starts quering
Hi Darac,
Am 06.09.2013 um 14:45 schrieb Darac Marjal mailingl...@darac.org.uk:
If you're getting an error saying root couldn't be mounted then I'm
assuming that:
- BIOS has found GRUB
- GRUB has found the kernel
- the kernel has booted BUT
- the kernel couldn't find the rootfs, so
Hello Shane,
Am 06.09.2013 um 15:49 schrieb Shane Johnson s...@rasmussenequipment.com:
I have had problems with the initrd not having the LVM modules loaded in it.
I had to make sure LVM was installed then run:
update-initramfs -u -k all
then :
update-grub
to get it to play
Hi list,
I just purchased an HP ProLiant Micro Server G2020T. As for the hard drives, I
installed 4 3TB Western Digital HDs. So far so good, but volumes with a
capacity greater than 2TB require a GPT partition table. Unfortunately, the
server does not support UEFI, and thus can't boot from GPT
On Fri, Sep 06, 2013 at 02:29:55PM +0200, Robin Kipp wrote:
Hi list,
I just purchased an HP ProLiant Micro Server G2020T. As for the hard drives,
I installed 4 3TB Western Digital HDs. So far so good, but volumes with a
capacity greater than 2TB require a GPT partition table. Unfortunately,
On Fri, Sep 6, 2013 at 6:45 AM, Darac Marjal mailingl...@darac.org.ukwrote:
On Fri, Sep 06, 2013 at 02:29:55PM +0200, Robin Kipp wrote:
Hi list,
I just purchased an HP ProLiant Micro Server G2020T. As for the hard
drives, I installed 4 3TB Western Digital HDs. So far so good, but volumes
at install time? You said you were PXE booting
so you aren't using it for the installation image. Try installing
without it since it would just be adding noise to the problem.
For me my raided sata disks show up as sda and sdb. I think the
answer to your question lies in what is different about your
Tad Bak wrote:
I have Debian Wheezy 64bit installed on a machine with 2 SATA
drives. On the hard drives I have two software RAID1 partitions, md0
and md1. The bigger md1 uses LVM and has separate volumes for swap,
/tmp, /var, /opt, /usr, and /home. Everything was working fine,
A typical
Bob Proulx [b...@proulx.com] wrote:
I personally think it is easier to use the debian-installer in rescue
mode to recover in this situation. I have written about hte process
here often. Here is one recent posting of mine on the topic.
[...]
Thanks Bob! Yes, that looks easier. I have saved
- Original Message -
From: Tad Bak t@uws.edu.au
Background.
I have Debian Wheezy 64bit installed on a machine with 2 SATA drives.
On the hard drives I have two software RAID1 partitions, md0 and
md1. The bigger md1 uses LVM and has separate volumes for swap,
/tmp, /var, /opt,
From: Rob Owens [row...@ptd.net]
Sent: Tuesday, 6 August 2013 00:42
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Booting degraded software raid1 with failed /dev/sda
- Original Message -
From: Tad Bak t@uws.edu.au
Background.
I
Background.
I have Debian Wheezy 64bit installed on a machine with 2 SATA drives. On the
hard drives I have two software RAID1 partitions, md0 and md1. The bigger md1
uses LVM and has separate volumes for swap, /tmp, /var, /opt, /usr, and /home.
Everything was working fine, until one day the
Hi Folks,
Just did a new install of Wheezy on a server, but having problems trying
to boot.
Basic setup:
- PXEboot into installer
- a pretty standard install
- had to fiddle a little at the end to get the MBR into the right places
(RAIDed disks, USB stick mounts as /dev/sda)
- now it boots,
Miles Fidelman wrote:
Just did a new install of Wheezy on a server, but having problems
trying to boot.
Basic setup:
- PXEboot into installer
- a pretty standard install
- had to fiddle a little at the end to get the MBR into the right
places (RAIDed disks, USB stick mounts as /dev/sda)
-
Miles Fidelman wrote:
Miles Fidelman wrote:
Just did a new install of Wheezy on a server, but having problems
trying to boot.
Basic setup:
- PXEboot into installer
- a pretty standard install
- had to fiddle a little at the end to get the MBR into the right
places (RAIDed disks, USB stick
)
insmod normal
normal
up comes the boot menu, and after the timeout, everything loads just fine
Well, after booting - ran update-grub and grub-install on all drives,
and on the /dev/md0 (boot) and /dev/md2 (root) for good measure
rebooted - everything came up fine
So problem is solved but 2
Hi,
Got the problems solved. I couldn't solve the problem by using the rescue
disk, as it wouldn't let me stop the raid array.
What I did was drop into the maintenance mode:
mdadm --assemble /dev/md1 /dev/sdd1 /dev/sde1 //This should recreate the
array
mdadm --detail --scan
Hello,
I've been too nervous to reboot, so I've left it in the rescue mode at the
point where I assembled the raid arrays and went into boot at the \
partition.
Tried to run:
mdadm --stop /dev/md127
but got a mdadm: failed to stop array /dev/md127: Device or resource busy.
Perhaps a running
Thanks Bob, like I say, very much appreciated and I'll let you know how it
goes!
I'd like to hear about the optimisations, but I think I'll wait till I get
the system rebuilt!
James
On 4 July 2013 00:47, Bob Proulx b...@proulx.com wrote:
James Allsopp wrote:
Thanks Bob, really can't thank
James Allsopp wrote:
I'd like to hear about the optimisations, but I think I'll wait till I get
the system rebuilt!
Basically I had expected you to use either rescue mode of the d-i or a
livecd or other to assemble the arrays. You did. But neither array
came up completely correct. One came
point sda isn't the boot hard drive, that's the partitions
/sdb1
and sdc1, but these should be the same (I thought I'd mirrored them to be
honest).
I don't see sda anywhere. It might be a dual booting Windows disk?
Or other. But the BIOS will boot the first disk from the BIOS boot
order
James Allsopp wrote:
Thanks Bob, really can't thank you enough. Just to be clear about this, I'd
do these commands from the rescue disk after I have assembled the arrays
and gone to the bash shell?
Short answer: Yes. Go for it!
Longer answer: There are all kinds of things I want to say here.
Ok..I installed Ubuntu from Win 7 and I am using it ok...I later tried
installing Debian just to get a feel of the two Linux. Did the Grub booter
thing in both cases but could not find Debian in the list just ubuntu and Win 7
options. How do I go about fixing this i.e been able to see debian in
Thanks Bob, I'll get back to after I've followed your instructions. I think
I'm going to have to learn to type with crossed fingers!
I think I initially sorted out all my partitions manually, rather than
directly using the installer to do it automatically,
Really appreciated,
James
On 2 July
On Tue 02 Jul 2013 at 07:38:55 +0100, Lagun Adeshina wrote:
Ok..I installed Ubuntu from Win 7 and I am using it ok...I later tried
installing Debian just to get a feel of the two Linux. Did the Grub
booter thing in both cases but could not find Debian in the list just
ubuntu and Win 7
One other point sda isn't the boot hard drive, that's the partitions /sdb1
and sdc1, but these should be the same (I thought I'd mirrored them to be
honest).
I tried mdadm --detail /dev/sdd1 but it didn't work. I have these results
if they help?
/dev/md1:
Version : 1.2
Creation Time :
For ruther information:
/dev/sdb3:
Magic : a92b4efc
Version : 0.90.00
UUID : a529cd1b:c055887e:bfe78010:bc810f04
Creation Time : Fri Nov 20 09:37:34 2009
Raid Level : raid1
Used Dev Size : 972550912 (927.50 GiB 995.89 GB)
Array Size : 972550912 (927.50
Hi,
I don't have a Ubuntu at hand, so I can't tell the version of grub Ubuntu
is using. Suppose the grub-pc is used just as debian did. You can simply
do that by executing:
$ sudo update-grub2
this command will probe all installation in your machine, and generate a
new grub config file at:
James Allsopp wrote:
One other point sda isn't the boot hard drive, that's the partitions /sdb1
and sdc1, but these should be the same (I thought I'd mirrored them to be
honest).
I don't see sda anywhere. It might be a dual booting Windows disk?
Or other. But the BIOS will boot the first
am not familiar with that error. But searching the web
found several stories about it. Most concerned recent changes to the
system that prevented it from booting.
I have a debian machine which was on for a long time (~months). Just
moved house and rebooted and now it doesn't boot.
My 4
James Allsopp wrote:
Personalities : [raid0] [raid1] [raid6] [raid5] [raid4]
md126 : active raid1 sdb3[0] sdc3[1]
972550912 blocks [2/2] [UU]
So sdb3 and sdc3 are assembled into /dev/md126. That seems good. One
full array is assembled.
Is /dev/md126 your preferred name for that array?
Hi,
I have a debian machine which was on for a long time (~months). Just moved
house and rebooted and now it doesn't boot.
My 4 harddrives are organised in pairs of RAID 1 (Mirrored) with LVM
spanning them. Originally there was just one pair, but then I got two new
hard drives and added them. I
/dev/mapper/VolGroup-LogVol03:
The superblock could not be read or does not describe a correct ext2
.
Hmm... I am not familiar with that error. But searching the web
found several stories about it. Most concerned recent changes to the
system that prevented it from booting.
I have
to be on there, with every HD capable of booting the system.
Ultimately the RAID 6 array will host an LVM partition that will be used
for the whole system (unless /boot is put a separate array).
I've made several attempts with the current Wheezy (testing) installer,
but all have failed
, expanding the array). I'd like
everything to be on there, with every HD capable of booting the system.
Ultimately the RAID 6 array will host an LVM partition that will be used
for the whole system (unless /boot is put a separate array).
I've made several attempts with the current Wheezy
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