----- Original Message -----
From: "Aaron Konstam" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 20, 2002 6:38 AM
Subject: Re: Installation problems Red Hat 7.1


> On Tue, Mar 19, 2002 at 04:44:57PM -0800, Bjarki Bjorgulfsson wrote:
> > Hello everyone,
> >
> > I'm having huge problems with my Red Hat 7.1 Linux installation. The
> > computer always freezes during the installation process (when the
packages
> > are being installed/copyed)
> > I have partitioned my drive with a Windows partition at the beginning
and
> > Linux at the end of the drive(/ = 6Gig, 512swap and about 2Gig /home). I
> > have tried the text installation method but it also crashes.
> >
> > I have pretty shitty hardware in this machine, it is one of those
integrated
> > systems with the NIC, soundcard and AGP bundled into the motherboard.
The
> > video card is Alladin RIVA TNT2 with 32 MB memory. Intel Pentium 800Mhz
> > processor and 20 GB drive. It has one 256MB RAM chip and 52x CD ROM. I
do
> > know that I can't run Win 2000 nor Win XP on this machine due to shitty
> > hardware. Only Win 98 works on it.
> >
> > I'm starting to think that the RedHat CD is bad or something. I bought
the
> > Red hat 7.1 Bible and got the CD with it. The weird thing is that I do
have
> > an old Redhat 5.2 system CD that installs fine from the CD rom. What
does
> > that tell you?
> >
> > Is it possible to install from the FAT32 Windows partiton, if I copy the
> > RPMS and Base to it? I have tried it but the Linux installation program
> > always says that the directory I point to doesn't have the CD images or
> > something like that. Isn't it enough to copy the base folder and RPMS
folder
> > into a directory on the Windows Partition and point to that directory
during
> > the install? I have tried copying only the RPMS and Base directories and
> > also the whole CD but neither does work.
> >
> > Do you guys have any suggestions?
> >
> > my best,
> > Bjarki Bjorgulfsson
> I am not sre from your description what you did. What you should do
> is start with the Linux CD and partition the disk, The Linux
> partitions should be ext2 and the swap partition should be swap
> partitioned. The Windows partition should be identified as Fat32.
> After Linux is installed then install the windows. The windows could
> be installed first but the partitioning needs to be done first with
> the Linux CD>

Aaron,

I already have Windows 98 installed on the first partition and I don't want
to loose any data from it. I used Partition magic to resize the Windows
partition down from 20 to 10Gig and then I used Linux Fdisk during the Linux
Installation process from the CD to make a root partition / about 6Gig,
512MB swap and about 2Gig for /home in the free space that Partition Magic
had created. Those partitions are formatted with the correct file format
(ext2 and swap). It is my intention to use a boot disk when starting Linux,
and later I will make a little Dos Startup utility that will allow me to
boot to linux. Maybe I will install GRUB later, but I don't think that has
anything to do with my setup crashing during the installation, when
installing from the Linux CD, which is my problem. That is why I wanted to
try to install Linux from the Windows partition, because the CD ROM
installation always crashes during the file copy process just to see if it
would work any better.

My best
- Bjarki

> --
> -------------------------------------------
> Aaron Konstam
> Computer Science
> Trinity University
> 715 Stadium Dr.
> San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
>
> telephone: (210)-999-7484
> email:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Seawolf-list mailing list
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