Inplace "upgrade" or migration from WinXP to Ubuntu 6.06 - Forums Linux |
- Inplace "upgrade" or migration from WinXP to Ubuntu 6.06
- eth0 not activating at startup | RHEL 4
- vsftpd chroot for users
- Cannot connect to the internet
- Fedora 5 What is Beagle?
- Modem Problem with Suse Version 10.1
- Where is mozilla installed?
- Test of Posting to Newsgroup
- gdm login screensaver
- problems mounting external drive
- Debian installer does not recognise ataraid array
- PC Problem on boot up
- debian setup PCI devices
- wireless and madwifi installation problem.
- WARNING: Hard link count is wrong for /selinux
- No sound on headphones
- URGENT please help
- kernel upgrade ethernet and printer problem
- Motherboards
- installation failed
- Disk Controller Problem of SiS 5571 chipset in LINUX ???
Inplace "upgrade" or migration from WinXP to Ubuntu 6.06 Posted: 21 Jul 2006 08:15 AM PDT On Fri, 21 Jul 2006 08:15:03 -0700, SpankyTClown wrote: <snip> I don't agree. Incremental backups can save you a lot of work. _Your_ data is what is most important to _you_. You can always reinstall the OS if necessary, but you can't recreate your "birthday party pictures." Your excuse about it "being hard" may land you in hot water if something goes wrong with your install (or with your hardware- hard disks are known to fail, you know). You should assess what you have on backup, and what you need to make that set complete. Otherwise, be prepared to "kiss it goodbye." Note: comment inline. You seem to know what you are doing, but I won't be the one to guarantee that nothing will go wrong with your install. Shit happens. Humans make mistakes. I'd backup I were you. -- http://www.palantir.net/2001/tma1/wav/error.wav |
eth0 not activating at startup | RHEL 4 Posted: 21 Jul 2006 07:45 AM PDT Neither - server NIC built right into the mobo (Tyan). I think I've figured it out - will try to supply summary at some later date. |
Posted: 21 Jul 2006 07:09 AM PDT Michael Heiming <michael+heiming.de> writes: Yup or if those users need to have regular accounts as well, give them an ftp account different from the usual one. |
Cannot connect to the internet Posted: 20 Jul 2006 12:57 AM PDT "kaari" <com> writes: Run pppconfig as root and follow the instructions. Then use 'pon' to start the connection and 'poff' to stop it. If you need a pointy-clicky interface install gpppon. You should have been given an opportunity to run pppconfig during the installation. -- John Hasler gt.org Dancing Horse Hill Elmwood, WI USA |
Posted: 19 Jul 2006 10:10 PM PDT Keith wrote: Hit up Google, I just put in "Fedora core 5 beagle" and got a few hits on what it is. From what I gathered, it looks like it's some sort of desktop search tool. cheers, Anthony |
Modem Problem with Suse Version 10.1 Posted: 19 Jul 2006 07:54 PM PDT On Thu, 20 Jul 2006 20:38:05 -0500, Clois Beckwith wrote: <CUT> <snip> <snip> <PASTE> Please don't top post. I have moved your response to follow the format adopted by this newsgroup. I noticed after I posted that you are using a Intel-537EP. There is a separate source/driver for that chipset. My links refer to Intel-536EP, and that is the wrong driver. It appears version 2.7.95.0 is the latest driver for the 537EP: (split url, again:) http://downloadfinder.intel.com/scripts-df-external/T8Clearance.aspx? url=/9284/eng/Intel-537EP-2.70.95.0-suse9.3.tgz&agr=Y&ProductID=1230&DwnldID=9284&lang =eng You said you have tried two versions of Suse. I see that Intel supports Suse version 9.3 directly with a binary driver. Suse 9.3 is a little old, though. The source is the best way, but you'll need to be able to follow their instructions carefully. -- Douglas Mayne |
Posted: 19 Jul 2006 07:16 PM PDT "linz lovez" <com> writes: I would copy all four of those files into /usr/lib/mozilla-firefox*/plugins |
Posted: 19 Jul 2006 06:02 PM PDT On Thu, 20 Jul 2006 15:59:38 -0400, "Chris F.A. Johnson" <com> Gave us: Were you in the movie "Blazing Saddles" and do people ask you that all the time? |
Posted: 19 Jul 2006 01:33 PM PDT On 2006-07-20, chuckcar <car> wrote: Just because nobody's using the console doesn't necessarily mean nobody's using the computer... :-) -- John (dhs.org) |
problems mounting external drive Posted: 19 Jul 2006 09:54 AM PDT "onetitfemme" <com> wrote in message news:googlegroups.com... Your drive needs to be repartitioned and formatted to something other than what it is (MAC OS?) |
Debian installer does not recognise ataraid array Posted: 18 Jul 2006 03:14 AM PDT magnate <demon.co.uk> wrote: [snip details of your plan to try again using the Debian d-i installer's "bf2.6" installation flavour] Chris, I read your post last night, and at the time was very impressed with your thorough approach to both the testing process and recounting of same on this newsgroup. Like Michael Heiming, who kindly posted the link to my Linux on SATA page, I have little practical experience with fakeraid controllers -- and just about everything I know on the subject is already on the aforementioned page. I've not yet found one, and I've really looked extensively (though not lately). In addition to the dmraid resources linked from my SATA page, please see if the udev-related entries on http://linuxmafia.com/kb/Kernel are any use to you -- since hotplug, udev, sysfs, and the devicemapper all work closely in 2.6. Anyway, my understanding is that the ataraid software layer is 2.4-specific, and dmraid _is_ ataraid for 2.6. (You may have meant simply "Linux parsing of ATA fakeraid disk semantics", in which case no criticism intended, and I'm just being careful to disambiguate.) Correct. My impression is that you're not missing anything, except the extremely high likelihood that the current Debian installer ("d-i") doesn't have dmraid support in the installation kernel. Now, what you _could_ do is to install some other leading-edge distribution, e.g., FC5, and then do a chroot installation of Debian, using the other distro's infrastructure support for dmraid to accomplish the job. You'd then compile a dmraid-supporting kernel inside the chroot jail before rebooting. (See: "Installers" on http://linuxmafia.com/kb/Debian on how to do chroot installs. It's actually pretty easy, and interesting to do.) See also: http://www.redhat.com/archives/ataraid-list/2005-July/msg00014.html The existence of this "udeb" package suggests that my suspicion about d-i is correct: Such packages are useful in constructing custom installer images. (There are lots of such custom installer images catalogued on the aforementioned "Installers" page; might be one with dmraid support.) http://packages.debian.org/unstable/debian-installer/dmraid-udeb That package should not be confused with userspace package "dmraid", which is the glue to control fakeraid operations via devicemapper: http://packages.debian.org/unstable/admin/dmraid Good luck. -- Cheers, English is essentially Pictish that was attacked out of nowhere by Rick Moen Angles cohabiting with Teutons who were done in by a drunk bunch of rick@linux Vikings masquerading as Frenchmen who insisted they spoke Latin and mafia.com Greek but lacked the Arabic in which to convey that. -- Bill Hammel |
Posted: 17 Jul 2006 08:16 PM PDT ***** charles wrote: I never meant to suggest that the OS is the cause, it was just something that had changed. I looked at the capacitors and some do seem to be swelled at the top. I do not think it is the power supply though, I might swap it out just to see. I know that it would be easier to replace the computer, but it is just my fooling around computer that I was using to run linux. I do not really need to replace it, but I would like to have another working computer here. I might try replacing some of the capacitors to see if that works. If it does not, then I might just keep the case and rebuild it. There was mention of putting in a installer disc, but the problem happens exactly the same when I try to boot with one of those discs. I fear it is a motherboard problem and I will have to replace it. Suck. |
Posted: 17 Jul 2006 06:11 PM PDT iforone wrote: whoops -- perhaps 'wlan0' (rather than ath0)?? This appears to be Debian specific; www.sown.org.uk/index.php/DebianHostAp but all elements may not apply... Regards |
wireless and madwifi installation problem. Posted: 17 Jul 2006 03:10 PM PDT >about my system: I have a laptop t42 (ibm) with fedora 5. wireless OK, that means that the driver is either not loaded or had problems when it tried to load. Look in /etc/modprobe.conf to see if there is something there (ie some driver to be loaded). If there is, run modprobe nameofdriver and see if there are online errors or errors at the end of dmesg|tail That means that you do not have the kernel source installed. Look on your installation CDs (or whereever you installed from ) for an rpm that starts with kernel-source and ends with .i386.rpm Install it rpm -Uhv /path/to/your/CD/kernel-source*i386.rpm Yes, it means that the interface wifi0 does not exist, which iwconfig already told you ( actually wifi0 is not an interface name any driver I know of uses anyway). You need either a native driver for your wirelss card lspci|less and look for the wireless card. or you need to use ndiswrapper ( ndiswrapper should be on the installation CD. Install it with rpm and then do ndiswrapper -l <nameofwindowsfile.inf> where the argument is the path to and the name of the inf file for the windows driver from the windows CD that came with the wireless/laptop. |
WARNING: Hard link count is wrong for /selinux Posted: 17 Jul 2006 12:21 PM PDT Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote: Thank you guys for your help but didn't work! looks have to study some books or ask other groups to solve it. it takes time for newbies. Although I'm a linux fan but I have seen that because of varieties of linux distributions, everybody says something different about a problem or question :( what I'm trying to say is that there is no a standard and formal or unique way to solve a problem. Once again thanks |
Posted: 15 Jul 2006 09:49 AM PDT "alexLIGO" <phys.lsu.edu> writes: a) Talk to Dell. This is a hardware problem not usually software. B) Make sure you are plugging into the soundcard output not input. (try both) |
Posted: 15 Jul 2006 12:39 AM PDT "iforone" <com> wrote in news:googlegroups.com: except they're not modems because they don't deal with sound. modem= MODulator-DEModulator i.e. translating between sound and digital and vice versa. -- (setq (chuck nil) car(chuck) ) |
kernel upgrade ethernet and printer problem Posted: 13 Jul 2006 11:22 AM PDT <com> wrote in message news:googlegroups.com... The prior posters' advice is still legit. Do a clean install of the latest version of Fedora, CentOS etc.... Then the kernel will get along much friendlier with the supporting software..... later.... |
Posted: 13 Jul 2006 05:24 AM PDT Mike Stewart wrote: No offense but your posts would be easier to follow if you spelled correctly and used periods to designate the end of your sentences. This last post consisted of one long sentence that was 6 lines long and I lost what you were trying to say after the 3rd line. just an FYI |
Posted: 13 Jul 2006 02:31 AM PDT nix wrote: Well, yes, but which one are you using? |
Disk Controller Problem of SiS 5571 chipset in LINUX ??? Posted: 12 Jul 2006 11:37 AM PDT Susan wrote: This chipset uses and old version of SiS 5513 IDE controller that doesn't support UDMA only MWDMA-16 (according to the sources of sis5513.c). So there isn't any problem with Linux/*BSDs is a limitation of the chipset itself. Hope this helps. |
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