Scheduled Maintenance: We are aware of an issue with Google, AOL, and Yahoo services as email providers which are blocking new registrations. We are trying to fix the issue and we have several internal and external support tickets in process to resolve the issue. Please see: viewtopic.php?t=158230
Xserve installation
Xserve installation
I'm trying to install this on a 32 bit EFI Xserve. I used the 8.8 multi arch x86-64 dvd iso and Debian successfully booted and installed in 64 bit mode. Now it will not boot from the hdd. I tried using refind and it sees a 32 bit efi and 64 bit for debian and either one freezes. How do I get this working?
https://i.imgur.com/KNJmZFE.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/KNJmZFE.jpg
-
- Emeritus
- Posts: 2435
- Joined: 2010-12-07 19:55
- Has thanked: 14 times
- Been thanked: 54 times
Re: Xserve installation
Have you tried searching for an answer?
Have you seen e.g. https://blog.christophersmart.com/2009/ ... y-machine/ and https://mattgadient.com/2016/07/11/linu ... 06-models/ ?
Have you seen e.g. https://blog.christophersmart.com/2009/ ... y-machine/ and https://mattgadient.com/2016/07/11/linu ... 06-models/ ?
Re: Xserve installation
Those guides were created before Debian made a multi arch install disk or refind was available. I already installed debian using the multiarch disk booting in 32 bit and installing the 64 bit. After this refind should should boot grub and be able to boot the debian kernel file I would assume. Instead it just freezes and I don't even understand what part is freezing it. Kinda weird considering the install went so smoothly and you would think the debian multi arch disk would install the 32 bit bootloader so I am not sure why I need refind but the computer doesn't do anything without it.
Re: Xserve installation
So I got it to boot using nomodeset for the video in grub. Even with that it still complains about the radeon. Then it hangs on initializing network card for like 3 minutes before it figures it out and continues (not sure why it does this). I also had to add some other command to grub to get the system to stop echoing an error message every 5 seconds.
Why does Debian make apt get check the non-existent CD by default? That makes no sense. I am going to have to mess around with it more to get it to auto boot without a disc but for now this works fine.
Why does Debian make apt get check the non-existent CD by default? That makes no sense. I am going to have to mess around with it more to get it to auto boot without a disc but for now this works fine.
Re: Xserve installation
Comment the appropriate line in your /etc/apt/sources.list file like so, to stop asking for the optical media:
Code: Select all
# deb cdrom:[Debian GNU/Linux stretch-DI-rc3 _Stretch_ - Official... yada, yada.
Nobody would ever ask questions If everyone possessed encyclopedic knowledge of the man pages.
Re: Xserve installation
Why does Debian do that? All that does is stump newbies and add an extra step for everyone else.
Re: Xserve installation
You obviously installed off-line. If you were connected to the internet during installation, it wouldn't have done that.
ASRock H77 Pro4-M i7 3770K - 32GB RAM - Pioneer BDR-209D
Re: Xserve installation
Smokin' fast broadband Internet connectivity is not a ubiquitous commodity.
Nobody would ever ask questions If everyone possessed encyclopedic knowledge of the man pages.
- dilberts_left_nut
- Administrator
- Posts: 5346
- Joined: 2009-10-05 07:54
- Location: enzed
- Has thanked: 13 times
- Been thanked: 66 times
Re: Xserve installation
It's a "sensible default".
Internet connection during install? - enable network mirrors, disable (soon to be out of date) local media.
No connection? - disable network mirrors, enable local media.
Internet connection during install? - enable network mirrors, disable (soon to be out of date) local media.
No connection? - disable network mirrors, enable local media.
AdrianTM wrote:There's no hacker in my grandma...
Re: Xserve installation
Please post the output of:Ozfer wrote:So I got it to boot using nomodeset for the video in grub. Even with that it still complains about the radeon.
Code: Select all
lspci -k | grep -iEA3 "display|3d|vga"
ASRock H77 Pro4-M i7 3770K - 32GB RAM - Pioneer BDR-209D
Re: Xserve installation
Well I was connected to the internet during installation and Debian has done this before on other computers while connected to the internet. Other distros like Ubuntu and mint don't do that. I will be able to tinker around more with this and can post the results later this week.
Re: Xserve installation
And therrrrre's your answer!Ozfer wrote:Other distros like Ubuntu and mint don't do that.
Re: Xserve installation
I am giving a suggestion to fix what appears to be broken as I was told it should not do this but it does. This is a problem I see many times asked by newbies on the forums and other places around the internet. If anyone here cares about this and wants to make it user friendly I would recommend fixing it. If your solution is to get the heck out instead of make it user friendly this is honestly why the linux user share of OS is so low.
I would also like to point out Dasein and GarryRicketson are both stalking my posts just to complain.
I would also like to point out Dasein and GarryRicketson are both stalking my posts just to complain.
Re: Xserve installation
Wow. You seriously need much better meds.Ozfer wrote:Dasein and GarryRicketson are both stalking my posts...
What I posted here is nothing more than a pointer towards the root cause of your "problem." (Although I daresay that your problems are far deeper and more numerous than any technical issues you may have.)
Re: Xserve installation
Hi Ozfer,
did You manage to get Xserve runing Debian?
I have two Xservers and would like to put Debian on it. Any suggestions?
did You manage to get Xserve runing Debian?
I have two Xservers and would like to put Debian on it. Any suggestions?