and tried to install Fedora 40 :
Normally this is no problem ,but I am not able to create the correct disk
partitioning . See following disk layout.
sda1 partition ntfs 348.71 Mb system reserved.
sda2 partition ntfs 195.35 Gb Windows 10 Professionel (C:\).
sda 3
rive .
>
> I burned a netinstall DVD Fedora 40 and tried to install Fedora 40 :
> Normally this is no problem ,but I am not able to create the correct disk
> partitioning . See following disk layout.
>
>
> sda1 partition ntfs 348.71 Mb system reserved.
>
> sd
Hi All,
I had a total crash on my PC and had to restore Windows 10 Professionel by
using Veeam Recorvery. This was succesfull , but the bootloader was gone
and Fedora 40 also .
I did install a 1 Terra SSD drive .
I burned a netinstall DVD Fedora 40 and tried to install Fedora 40 :
Normally
> Am 03.07.2024 um 18:34 schrieb François Patte
> :
>
> Bonjour,
>
> Where can I find some details on the installation of fedora 40, I would like
> to have raid1 arrays and lvm.
For Fedora server you may have a look at:
https://pboy.fedorapeople.org/InstGuideF33-Hetzner-en.pdf
Not really a
Bonjour,
Where can I find some details on the installation of fedora 40, I would
like to have raid1 arrays and lvm.
Thank you.
--
François Patte
UFR de mathématiques et informatique
Laboratoire CNRS MAP5, UMR 8145
Université Paris Descartes
45, rue des Saints Pères
F-75270 Paris Cedex 06
Tél.
On Tue, 22 Dec 2020 at 05:23, François Patte <
francois.pa...@mi.parisdescartes.fr> wrote:
> Bonjour,
>
> I am struggling with a motherboard (Asus prime B360M-A) to install
> fedora 33 (Fedora-Server-netinst-x86_64-33-1.2.iso).
>
Does the system have Windows installed? If
Le 22/12/2020 à 15:41, Jorge Fábregas a écrit :
On 12/22/20 5:23 AM, François Patte wrote:
What is the right config in the bios to perform a linux install with
these "new" motherboard.
Hi,
There's nothing special really. Either you boot in UEFI mode or Legacy
mode (appears as "CSM" in firmwar
On 12/22/20 5:23 AM, François Patte wrote:
> What is the right config in the bios to perform a linux install with
> these "new" motherboard.
Hi,
There's nothing special really. Either you boot in UEFI mode or Legacy
mode (appears as "CSM" in firmware options). If you choose UEFI, then
there's t
Bonjour,
I am struggling with a motherboard (Asus prime B360M-A) to install
fedora 33 (Fedora-Server-netinst-x86_64-33-1.2.iso).
At boot time, I can see the menu:
Install Fedora 33
Test this media...
troubleshooting
But that's all... nothing happens if I choose any of these entries.
Wh
On Mon, Nov 2, 2020 at 3:50 AM Patrick O'Callaghan
wrote:
>
> On Sun, 2020-11-01 at 19:00 -0700, Chris Murphy wrote:
> > On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 6:51 AM John Mellor wrote:
> > > On 2020-10-31 10:46 p.m., Tim via users wrote:
> > > > On Sat, 2020-10-31 at 16:11 +, lancelasset...@gmail.com wrote
On Sun, 2020-11-01 at 19:00 -0700, Chris Murphy wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 6:51 AM John Mellor wrote:
> > On 2020-10-31 10:46 p.m., Tim via users wrote:
> > > On Sat, 2020-10-31 at 16:11 +, lancelasset...@gmail.com wrote:
> > > > Will NFS tell you data has been corrupted during the transf
On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 7:00 PM Chris Murphy wrote:
> ddrescue by default reads the whole file (via the mounted file system,
> not pointing it to raw sectors), but with truncated bad 4KiB blocks.
> The bad blocks are simply missing, there is no gap filled with zeros
> or some other pattern unless
On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 6:51 AM John Mellor wrote:
>
> On 2020-10-31 10:46 p.m., Tim via users wrote:
> > On Sat, 2020-10-31 at 16:11 +, lancelasset...@gmail.com wrote:
> >> Will NFS tell you data has been corrupted during the transfer and
> >> write process?
> > Does any filing system? In gen
On 2020-10-31 10:46 p.m., Tim via users wrote:
On Sat, 2020-10-31 at 16:11 +, lancelasset...@gmail.com wrote:
Will NFS tell you data has been corrupted during the transfer and
write process?
Does any filing system? In general, writes to storage are assumed to
have worked unless something t
On Sat, 2020-10-31 at 16:11 +, lancelasset...@gmail.com wrote:
> Will NFS tell you data has been corrupted during the transfer and
> write process?
Does any filing system? In general, writes to storage are assumed to
have worked unless something throws up an error message. Your hard
drive co
On Sat, Oct 31, 2020 at 04:11:30PM -, lancelasset...@gmail.com wrote:
> If you write and ISO to a thumb drive over NFS, how are you going to
> checksum the ISO after it's transferred over the network? Will NFS tell
> you data has been corrupted during the transfer and write process? I
> thought
If you write and ISO to a thumb drive over NFS, how are you going to checksum
the ISO after it's transferred over the network? Will NFS tell you data has
been corrupted during the transfer and write process? I thought he was short
on local storage so needed to write the image from a local netw
On 10/24/20 3:12 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
On 2020-10-23 04:56, Merovingian Puccioni wrote:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Multiboot_USB_drive
And make a USB stick that can boot any one of a collection
of iso images off the USB stick. I got the last few versions
of ubuntu and fedora, memt
On 2020-10-23 04:56, Merovingian Puccioni wrote:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Multiboot_USB_drive
And make a USB stick that can boot any one of a collection
of iso images off the USB stick. I got the last few versions
of ubuntu and fedora, memtest, and systemrescue all able to
boot fr
On Fri, Oct 23, 2020, at 11:39 AM, GianPiero Puccioni wrote:
>
> Isn't MemTest86 part of the "Systemrescue CD"? At least the one I use
> from
> https://www.system-rescue.org/System-tools/ has Memtest86 (for regular)
> and
> memtester (for UEFI).
Yes, good point. And with some more research I fo
On 10/23/20 6:33 PM, Doug H. wrote:
On Fri, Oct 23, 2020, at 1:56 AM, GianPiero Puccioni wrote:
On 10/22/20 11:17 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
On this topic (probably too late to do any good), I use the technique
here:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Multiboot_USB_drive
And make a USB stick th
On Fri, Oct 23, 2020, at 1:56 AM, GianPiero Puccioni wrote:
> On 10/22/20 11:17 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> > On this topic (probably too late to do any good), I use
> > the technique here:
> >
> > https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Multiboot_USB_drive
> >
> > And make a USB stick that can boot an
On 10/22/20 11:17 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
On this topic (probably too late to do any good), I use
the technique here:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Multiboot_USB_drive
And make a USB stick that can boot any one of a collection
of iso images off the USB stick. I got the last few versions
o
On this topic (probably too late to do any good), I use
the technique here:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Multiboot_USB_drive
And make a USB stick that can boot any one of a collection
of iso images off the USB stick. I got the last few versions
of ubuntu and fedora, memtest, and systemres
On 10/22/20 8:09 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
*
I'm sorry about the missed attribute, I thought it was pretty much
implied since it was part of a thread in which several people had
contributed similar advice. Beyond that the responses begin to look
more bloggy to me, I've noticed some messages just
On 10/22/20 7:51 AM, Tim via users wrote:
I'd always understood that any drive you were dd'ing to should be
unmounted. You wouldn't want another thing to try and write to it as
well. However, has anyone else encountered this behaviour:
You plug in your spare flashdrive. You look for its devic
On 10/22/20 7:37 AM, Tim via users wrote:
Tim:
If you boot an install disc as a live OS (it running from that
install as a usable OS), it has an install to hard drive icon on the
desktop that will simply dump itself to a hard drive, with little
choice about how it's down.
Samuel Sieb:
You sti
On Wed, 2020-10-21 at 11:01 -0700, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> Why would you say something like that about NFS? NFS is a network
> filesystem that has been used since before Linux even existed. I
> can't think of any common protocol where transferring a file over the
> network could affect the integrit
On Thu, 2020-10-22 at 07:56 -0400, Jonathan Billings wrote:
> It’s not a terrible idea to use sync. You absolutely should not be
> running dd to a device that is used in a mounted file system. It
> should be unmounted first. Then there is no risk of sync corrupting
> the disk.
I'd always understo
On Thu, 2020-10-22 at 08:09 -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> sorry about the missed attribute
That doesn't matter. It's just a bit confusing when someone says
follow person X's example, when it's really person Y's, and both of
them have provided examples in a thread, if you were trying to work out
who
Tim:
>> If you boot an install disc as a live OS (it running from that
>> install as a usable OS), it has an install to hard drive icon on the
>> desktop that will simply dump itself to a hard drive, with little
>> choice about how it's down.
Samuel Sieb:
> You still have all the same partitioning
drive
where you can choose to partition your disk and install Fedora.
I've seen several posts trying to explain that Media Writer doesn't
affect your partitioning, but you continue to attribute partitioning
to Media Writer, so I hope this explains things better.
--
Jonathan Billings
On 2020-10-21 22:21, Tim via users wrote:
I wouldn't do it (writing an iso over the network from NFS storage,
due to the network possibly messing up the integrity of the iso
image) but you should still be able to with the "dd" command. Issue
a "mount" command and you should see the mount path
On Oct 22, 2020, at 02:47, J.Witvliet--- via users
wrote:
>
>
> After doing the “dd” to the raw device, do not do a “sync”, as this is for
> synchronizing filesystems. Just remove the device.
> In case something tried to mount the content of the device (before it was
> wiped by dd) it might t
0 at 20:02:28
To: "users@lists.fedoraproject.org"
mailto:users@lists.fedoraproject.org>>
Subject: Re: Install Fedora -
On 10/21/20 7:34 AM, Lance Lassetter wrote:
> I wouldn't do it (writing an iso over the network from NFS storage, due
> to the network possibly messing u
freshly written image.
From: "Bob Goodwin" mailto:bobgood...@fastmail.us>>
Date: Wednesday, 21 October 2020 at 21:36:01
To: "users@lists.fedoraproject.org"
mailto:users@lists.fedoraproject.org>>
Subject: Re: Install Fedora -
On 2020-10-21 10:34, Lance Lasse
Sorry, Tim. My bad. I got the names mixed up.
On Wed, Oct 21, 2020 at 9:21 PM Tim via users
wrote:
> On Wed, 2020-10-21 at 09:34 -0500, Lance Lassetter wrote:
> > I wouldn't do it (writing an iso over the network from NFS storage,
> > due to the network possibly messing up the integrity of the
On 10/21/20 7:34 PM, Tim via users wrote:
If you boot an install disc as a live OS (it running from that install
as a usable OS), it has an install to hard drive icon on the desktop
that will simply dump itself to a hard drive, with little choice about
how it's down.
You still have all the same
On Wed, 2020-10-21 at 15:35 -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> Well 'dd' worked without a problem to clear the PNY 64GB drive I
> that was at hand and I put Fedora 33 beta on it:
It usually does. There are some odd cases where it won't, but I'd only
bother with going into that if you're trying to work
On Wed, 2020-10-21 at 10:04 -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> Upon completing it's work media writer presents a block that says
> "Install." I do not know what happens after I click on that except
> that it does what is needed to finish the job. Quite possibly it is
> using "dd" as you describe.
It ins
On Wed, 2020-10-21 at 09:34 -0500, Lance Lassetter wrote:
> I wouldn't do it (writing an iso over the network from NFS storage,
> due to the network possibly messing up the integrity of the iso
> image) but you should still be able to with the "dd" command. Issue
> a "mount" command and you should
On 2020-10-21 15:49, Jonathan Billings wrote:
I'm not sure what you mean by 'getting the standard partition
scheme'. Are you talking about the install from the newly-written
Fedora disk? Or the actual layout of partitions on the USB storage
you just wrote?
Fedora Media Writer doesn't do anyt
On Wed, Oct 21, 2020 at 03:35:25PM -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> Well 'dd' worked without a problem to clear the PNY 64GB drive I that was at
> hand and I put Fedora 33 beta on it:
>
> [root@WS-1 /]# dd
> if=/home/bobg/Downloads/Fedora-Workstation-Live-x86_64-33_Beta-1.3.iso
> of=/dev/sdc bs=8M sta
On Wed, Oct 21, 2020, 2:35 PM Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
>
> On 2020-10-21 10:34, Lance Lassetter wrote:
> >
> > I wouldn't do it (writing an iso over the network from NFS storage,
> > due to the network possibly messing up the integrity of the iso image)
> > but you should still be able to with the "d
On 2020-10-21 10:34, Lance Lassetter wrote:
I wouldn't do it (writing an iso over the network from NFS storage,
due to the network possibly messing up the integrity of the iso image)
but you should still be able to with the "dd" command. Issue a
"mount" command and you should see the mount
On Wed, 21 Oct 2020 11:01:56 -0700
Samuel Sieb wrote:
> Why would you say something like that about NFS? NFS is a network
> filesystem that has been used since before Linux even existed. I can't
> think of any common protocol where transferring a file over the network
> could affect the integ
On 10/21/20 7:34 AM, Lance Lassetter wrote:
I wouldn't do it (writing an iso over the network from NFS storage, due
to the network possibly messing up the integrity of the iso image) but
you should still be able to with the "dd" command. Issue a "mount"
command and you should see the mount pat
On 2020-10-21 10:34, Lance Lassetter wrote:
I wouldn't do it (writing an iso over the network from NFS storage,
due to the network possibly messing up the integrity of the iso image)
but you should still be able to with the "dd" command. Issue a
"mount" command and you should see the mount p
On Wed, Oct 21, 2020 at 9:04 AM Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
>
> On 2020-10-21 09:34, Tim via users wrote:
> > "dd" on the command line is one alternative. But I suspect your
> > problem is expecting Media Writer to do something that it doesn't do,
> > and you forgot how you actually did it last time.
>
On 2020-10-21 09:34, Tim via users wrote:
"dd" on the command line is one alternative. But I suspect your
problem is expecting Media Writer to do something that it doesn't do,
and you forgot how you actually did it last time.
.
Upon completing it's work media writer presents a block that s
On Wed, 2020-10-21 at 07:28 -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> this all good information but I have never used media writer to
> create the fedora.iso installation media.
Other way around. You give Media Writer your downloaded ISO file, and
it creates a bootable disk (optical disk or flashdrive) from th
On Wed, Oct 21, 2020 at 6:29 AM Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
>
> On 2020-10-20 22:09, Tim via users wrote:
> > MediaWriter is used to create your installation media from the ISO file
> > that you've downloaded.
> >
> > In a lot of cases, you can use the "dd" tool in the command line to
> > datadump the I
On 2020-10-20 22:09, Tim via users wrote:
MediaWriter is used to create your installation media from the ISO file
that you've downloaded.
In a lot of cases, you can use the "dd" tool in the command line to
datadump the ISO file onto a USB flashdrive, and boot up the installer
from that flash d
On Tue, 2020-10-20 at 14:57 -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> I simply want to install Fedora 33 beta on an existing drive in this
> computer. I have always started the installation process with Media
> Writer. Presently it has a new undesirable quirk and insists on
> installing to a W
On 2020-10-20 15:38, George N. White III wrote:
Mediawriter is just used to create bootable installation media,
normally a
"live" USB key that boots to a GUI. The alternative is to create a
kickstart
file that specifies a text mode install, but "The text user interface
is limited,
for e
On Tue, 20 Oct 2020 at 13:12, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> There must be some other way to install fedora than using "mediawriter?"
>
Mediawriter is just used to create bootable installation media, normally a
"live" USB key that boots to a GUI. The alternative is to cr
On 2020-10-20 13:21, Samuel Sieb wrote:
Your question is very unclear. Are you looking for a different way to
install that's not a boot disk or are you looking for a different way
to create the boot disk?
.
I simply want to install Fedora 33 beta on an existing drive in this
comput
On 10/20/20 9:12 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
There must be some other way to install fedora than using "mediawriter?"
mediawriter is not an installer, it's for setting up the boot media.
There are other methods of doing that. Is that what you want?
I want to install a copy
On 2020-10-20 12:56, Lance Lassetter wrote:
Just make sure you get the bootloader straight if you're dual booting
with Windows.
.
Perhaps that would be better but I don't have Windows.
I would prefer installing from a terminal, a command line is usually
better for me. I have a copy of Fedora
Just make sure you get the bootloader straight if you're dual booting with
Windows.
On Tue, Oct 20, 2020, 11:12 AM Bob Goodwin wrote:
> There must be some other way to install fedora than using "mediawriter?"
>
> I want to install a copy of fedora-33 on another drive and
I used rufus in Windows.
On Tue, Oct 20, 2020, 11:12 AM Bob Goodwin wrote:
> There must be some other way to install fedora than using "mediawriter?"
>
> I want to install a copy of fedora-33 on another drive and I would like
> to try a different method if someone can s
There must be some other way to install fedora than using "mediawriter?"
I want to install a copy of fedora-33 on another drive and I would like
to try a different method if someone can suggest one. Google has not
helped ...
--
Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia, USA
FEDORA-32/64bit
Solution can be found here:
https://ask.fedoraproject.org/t/ananconda-cant-handle-lvm-on-luks-setup/6112/5?u=sreyan32
On Sat, Apr 4, 2020 at 11:49 PM Sreyan Chakravarty
wrote:
> Is there any way to use the kickstart file in a local install ? I mean
> lets say I boot up the Fedora 31 live cd, th
Is there any way to use the kickstart file in a local install ? I mean lets
say I boot up the Fedora 31 live cd, then how would I start Anaconda with
the Kickstart file ?
On Sat, Apr 4, 2020 at 7:07 PM wrote:
>
> On Sat, 04 Apr 2020 18:51:03 +0530 Sreyan Chakravarty wrote:
>
> > What do you do a
Thanks, this is interesting. Let me try it out.
On Sat, Apr 4, 2020 at 7:07 PM wrote:
>
> On Sat, 04 Apr 2020 18:51:03 +0530 Sreyan Chakravarty wrote:
>
> > What do you do after the logical volumes are setup ? Run the Anaconda
> > installer ?
>
> No. We are doing network install specifying a kic
On Sat, 04 Apr 2020 18:51:03 +0530 Sreyan Chakravarty wrote:
> What do you do after the logical volumes are setup ? Run the Anaconda
> installer ?
No. We are doing network install specifying a kickstart file with the
inst.ks= parameter to the kernel.
See:
https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/f
41 PM wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On Sat, 04 Apr 2020 06:00:54 - "Sreyan Chakravarty" wrote:
>>
>> > The current Anaconda installer is unable to install Fedora to an
>> > encrypted partition. Is there anyway I can have one big encrypted
>> > partiti
How do I install via command line ? You have given me the partitioning
scheme, not how to install.
On Sat, Apr 4, 2020 at 6:41 PM wrote:
>
>
> On Sat, 04 Apr 2020 06:00:54 - "Sreyan Chakravarty" wrote:
>
> > The current Anaconda installer is unable to instal
On Sat, 04 Apr 2020 06:00:54 - "Sreyan Chakravarty" wrote:
> The current Anaconda installer is unable to install Fedora to an
> encrypted partition. Is there anyway I can have one big encrypted
> partition, decrypt it, create a LVM and install Fedora.
I don't kn
The current Anaconda installer is unable to install Fedora to an encrypted
partition. Is there anyway I can have one big encrypted partition, decrypt it,
create a LVM and install Fedora. It seems I can't do that with the current
Anaconda. If I have to use encryption and LVM what it do
I wrote:
> Well, not so fast. suomi's example did not involve LVM but LVM is
> the default for Fedora. Trying to follow the example and adjusting
> for LVM doesn't work for me. With these kickstart commands,
>
> bootloader --driveorder=sda --location=mbr --boot-drive=sda
> clearpart --none --i
suomi () wrote:
> as far as possible I do the installation(s) using a kickstart file.
> It is not possible, when you install from a Live CD.
> My disk-partitionning in the kickstasrt file looks like:
>
> # System bootloader configuration
> bootloader --location=mbr --boot-drive=nvme0n1
> # Partiti
suomi () wrote:
> as far as possible I do the installation(s) using a kickstart file.
> It is not possible, when you install from a Live CD.
> My disk-partitionning in the kickstasrt file looks like:
>
> # System bootloader configuration
> bootloader --location=mbr --boot-drive=nvme0n1
> # Parti
On 6/18/19 3:55 PM, CLOSE Dave wrote:
On a default Fedora installation with a sufficiently large disk, /home
is a separate filesystem and should not contain any required system
files. Thus it ought to be possible to completely re-install Fedora, the
same version as was previously installed
1
suomi
On 19/06/2019 02.14, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
On Tue, 18 Jun 2019 22:55:57 +
CLOSE Dave wrote:
On a default Fedora installation with a sufficiently large disk, /home
is a separate filesystem and should not contain any required system
files. Thus it ought to be possible to completel
On Tue, 18 Jun 2019 22:55:57 +
CLOSE Dave wrote:
> On a default Fedora installation with a sufficiently large disk, /home
> is a separate filesystem and should not contain any required system
> files. Thus it ought to be possible to completely re-install Fedora,
> the same ve
On a default Fedora installation with a sufficiently large disk, /home
is a separate filesystem and should not contain any required system
files. Thus it ought to be possible to completely re-install Fedora, the
same version as was previously installed, without over-writing /home.
I'd like
On 11/28/2017 04:37 PM, Richard Shaw wrote:
Is SecureBoot enabled?
With my wife's new HP Core-i5 8250U I used the F27 live install method
from a USB stick and everything "just worked". I inherited her old Acer
i5-6200U and it was quite a bit more work.
I had to disable SecureBoot in order fo
Is SecureBoot enabled?
With my wife's new HP Core-i5 8250U I used the F27 live install method from
a USB stick and everything "just worked". I inherited her old Acer i5-6200U
and it was quite a bit more work.
I had to disable SecureBoot in order for it to boot from the USB stick (but
left it in U
Lately, I wanted to install Fedora 27 on the above HW. It uses UEFI
instead of BIOS. Install, that means:
1. Download the Fedora Server Netinstall
Fedora-Server-netinst-x86_64-27-1.6.iso and dd it to a micro SD card.
2. Create an approp ks file on the local Web http://install.lan.
3. Boot from
e the SSD
> - if the SATA options is set to "AHCI", F25 live is able to see the SSD and I
> can install Fedora, but Windows 10 crashes after the boot.
I had the same issue. After switching to ahci, windows did not boot
anymore. I think that back to Raid on did not make window
ndows 10 is happy but F25 live is
> not able to see the SSD
> - if the SATA options is set to "AHCI", F25 live is able to see the SSD and I
> can install Fedora, but Windows 10 crashes after the boot.
>
> I'have tried to disable fastboot of Windows as suggested somewh
f the SATA options is set to "AHCI", F25 live is able to see the SSD and I
can install Fedora, but Windows 10 crashes after the boot.
I'have tried to disable fastboot of Windows as suggested somewhere on Internet
but It didn't work.
Any ide
2016-12-02 00:41 skrev Michael Schwendt:
On Thu, 1 Dec 2016 11:34:02 -0500, William Biggs wrote:
15 min
That's a lot. I would have gotten nervous after a few minutes
already and would have switched through the virtual consoles in
hope of noticing activity/error messages.
I have the same pro
On 1 Dec 2016 at 23:13, Jon LaBadie wrote:
Date sent: Thu, 1 Dec 2016 23:13:09 -0500
From: Jon LaBadie
To: users@lists.fedoraproject.org
Subject:Re: Anyone install Fedora 24 or 25 on old Dell
PowerEdge
2800 server?
Send reply
On Fri, Dec 02, 2016 at 01:18:31PM +1000, Michael D. Setzer II wrote:
> Got a handme down Server from MIS, it is a Dell PowerEdge 2800 with dual
> processors 4G Ram and 4 130G SCSI disks. I was able to get it to install
> Fedora 24 from an USB flash of the Live CD, but was having big is
Got a handme down Server from MIS, it is a Dell PowerEdge 2800 with dual
processors 4G Ram and 4 130G SCSI disks. I was able to get it to install
Fedora 24 from an USB flash of the Live CD, but was having big issues with
the video. Had to add the vga=ask on kernel boot line, and eventually one
On Thu, 1 Dec 2016 11:34:02 -0500, William Biggs wrote:
> 15 min
That's a lot. I would have gotten nervous after a few minutes
already and would have switched through the virtual consoles in
hope of noticing activity/error messages.
___
users mailing li
15 min
On Thu, Dec 1, 2016 at 10:58 AM, Michael Schwendt
wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:20:33 -0500, William Biggs wrote:
>
> > yes I did it was the same
>
> You haven't answered the second initial question, probably because you're
> too used to top posting and not reading full replies. So:
>
>
On Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:20:33 -0500, William Biggs wrote:
> yes I did it was the same
You haven't answered the second initial question, probably because you're
too used to top posting and not reading full replies. So:
How long have you waited for anything to happen?
Please give an answer as accu
thanks
On Wed, Nov 30, 2016 at 6:13 PM, Andreas M. Kirchwitz
wrote:
> William Biggs wrote:
>
> > I burn the iso or 25 to usb and I also did it to a dvd same error . When
> I
> > click the install I get the the part to select English . Then I click
> > continue . Then the install locks up it wi
William Biggs wrote:
> I burn the iso or 25 to usb and I also did it to a dvd same error . When I
> click the install I get the the part to select English . Then I click
> continue . Then the install locks up it will not get past the point at all
> it just set there . I also have try to re down
yes I did it was the same
On Wed, Nov 30, 2016 at 4:58 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
> On 11/30/2016 07:05 AM, William Biggs wrote:
> > Sorry gnome version
>
> Have you verified the checksum to ensure you got the correct image?
> After you download the ISO image, run:
>
> sha256sum .iso
>
> an
On 11/30/2016 07:05 AM, William Biggs wrote:
> Sorry gnome version
Have you verified the checksum to ensure you got the correct image?
After you download the ISO image, run:
sha256sum .iso
and compare that output to one of these:
Fedora-Workstation-netinst-x86_64-25-1.3.iso =
6a1e69416b
Sorry gnome version
On Nov 30, 2016 10:03 AM, "William Biggs" wrote:
>
>
> Workstation
>
>
> On Nov 30, 2016 7:08 AM, "Michael Schwendt" wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, 29 Nov 2016 22:53:57 -0500, William Biggs wrote:
>>
>> > I burn the iso or 25
>>
>> Which one exactly?
>>
>> > to usb and I also did it to
Workstation
On Nov 30, 2016 7:08 AM, "Michael Schwendt" wrote:
On Tue, 29 Nov 2016 22:53:57 -0500, William Biggs wrote:
> I burn the iso or 25
Which one exactly?
> to usb and I also did it to a dvd same error . When I
> click the install I get the the part to select English . Then I click
> c
On Tue, 29 Nov 2016 22:53:57 -0500, William Biggs wrote:
> I burn the iso or 25
Which one exactly?
> to usb and I also did it to a dvd same error . When I
> click the install I get the the part to select English . Then I click
> continue . Then the install locks up it will not get past the poin
I burn the iso or 25 to usb and I also did it to a dvd same error . When I
click the install I get the the part to select English . Then I click
continue . Then the install locks up it will not get past the point at all
it just set there . I also have try to re down it same thing i have tried
more
On 06/08/14 23:28, Rejy M Cyriac wrote:
On 08/02/2014 07:57 AM, Roger wrote:
I have Fedora 20 LVM but cannot access it due to grub error which
defaults to grub rescue.
Can I reinstall Fedora without touching the /home directory on an LVM
please
thanks
Roger
Yes, it is possible. During install,
On 08/06/2014 06:58 PM, Rejy M Cyriac wrote:
> On 08/02/2014 07:57 AM, Roger wrote:
>> I have Fedora 20 LVM but cannot access it due to grub error which
>> defaults to grub rescue.
>> Can I reinstall Fedora without touching the /home directory on an LVM
>> please
>> thanks
>> Roger
> Yes, it is pos
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