Re: Toshiba Satellite T1910CS notebook - preferred version?

2000-07-12 Thread Debian User


On Sun, 9 Jul 2000, Tony Laszlo wrote:

 
 I am trying to install Debian on a Toshiba 
 Satellite T1910CS, 486, 110M HD, 8MB ram . 
 I won't be running X and will just need to 
 use: vim, pine (+fetchmail/sendmail), 
 lynx, ftp, telnet and pcmcia and parallel 
 port modules. 
 
 Have gone through the installation steps from 
 floppy to the point where the system boots 
 from the hard disk. Next, I need to get an 
 Corega EtherII PCC-T ethernet card working 

I've heard that pcmcia stuff is hard to get going under these
laptops...*shrugg*


Joe



 in order to point dselect to the Packages.gz 
 on the debian ftp or www site. 
 
 My questions: 
 
 * In accordance with advice from someone who 
 had installed Linux on one of these beasts, 
 I chose Debian 2.0 distribution (/dists/Debian-2.0/). 
 Is this the preferred version for this machine and 
 these needs? 
 
 * while uname -a shows that the kernel running 
 is 2.0.36, somehow modules are 2.0.34 . I tried 
 to insmod pcmcia.o , etc. and got an error message 
 that the modules don't machine the kernel. 
 How could this happen and what's the best way to 
 reinstall so it doesn't happen or fix the problem 
 without reinstalling? 
 
 * To see what would happen, I downloaded the 
 pcmcia-modules deb file (2.0.36) from the Debian-2.0 
 site (copying it over to the Toshiba via floppies). 
 This I was able to install with dpkg -i ; so, while 
 the modules are 2.0.34, there are two sets of pcmcia 
 modules, 2.0.34 and 2.0.36 . 
 The Ethernet card requires pcnet_cs.0 so I entered 
 the necessary lines in /etc/pcmcia/config and started 
 pcmcia with /etc/init.d/pcmcia start (I have this 
 card working on a Linux box that runs with Turbolinux 
 [quite similar to Redhat]). On the Toshiba w/ Debian 
 it's not perfect yet, but the card is being recognized, 
 at least partially. 
 Anything else I need to do? Does the network need to 
 be configured before the card will be recognized 
 properly? 
 
 * Finally, I downloaded the kernel source from 
 /Debian-2.0/ and tried dpkg -i. It seems that I 
 need to install binutils first, or at the same time. 
 Anything else needed before I can recompile the 
 kernel? bin86, maybe? kernel headers of some kind? 
 
 Thanks!  
 
 Tony Laszlo
 Jiyugaoka, Tokyo
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Toshiba Satellite T1910CS notebook - preferred version?

2000-07-09 Thread Tony Laszlo

I am trying to install Debian on a Toshiba 
Satellite T1910CS, 486, 110M HD, 8MB ram . 
I won't be running X and will just need to 
use: vim, pine (+fetchmail/sendmail), 
lynx, ftp, telnet and pcmcia and parallel 
port modules. 

Have gone through the installation steps from 
floppy to the point where the system boots 
from the hard disk. Next, I need to get an 
Corega EtherII PCC-T ethernet card working 
in order to point dselect to the Packages.gz 
on the debian ftp or www site. 

My questions: 

* In accordance with advice from someone who 
had installed Linux on one of these beasts, 
I chose Debian 2.0 distribution (/dists/Debian-2.0/). 
Is this the preferred version for this machine and 
these needs? 

* while uname -a shows that the kernel running 
is 2.0.36, somehow modules are 2.0.34 . I tried 
to insmod pcmcia.o , etc. and got an error message 
that the modules don't machine the kernel. 
How could this happen and what's the best way to 
reinstall so it doesn't happen or fix the problem 
without reinstalling? 

* To see what would happen, I downloaded the 
pcmcia-modules deb file (2.0.36) from the Debian-2.0 
site (copying it over to the Toshiba via floppies). 
This I was able to install with dpkg -i ; so, while 
the modules are 2.0.34, there are two sets of pcmcia 
modules, 2.0.34 and 2.0.36 . 
The Ethernet card requires pcnet_cs.0 so I entered 
the necessary lines in /etc/pcmcia/config and started 
pcmcia with /etc/init.d/pcmcia start (I have this 
card working on a Linux box that runs with Turbolinux 
[quite similar to Redhat]). On the Toshiba w/ Debian 
it's not perfect yet, but the card is being recognized, 
at least partially. 
Anything else I need to do? Does the network need to 
be configured before the card will be recognized 
properly? 

* Finally, I downloaded the kernel source from 
/Debian-2.0/ and tried dpkg -i. It seems that I 
need to install binutils first, or at the same time. 
Anything else needed before I can recompile the 
kernel? bin86, maybe? kernel headers of some kind? 

Thanks!  

Tony Laszlo
Jiyugaoka, Tokyo