Hi!
The convention on Debian mailing lists is to post new information at
the bottom. (It would not be my personal choice, but... "When in
Rome, do as the Romans...")
I've re-arranged the parts of this as if that convention had been
followed, then added my own comments at the end.
Rick
--- On Sun, 7/25/10, Mathieu Malaterre
<[email protected]> wrote:
From: Mathieu Malaterre <[email protected]>
Subject: Installing Debian Lenny on MacMini G4
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, July 25, 2010, 4:46 PM
Hi there,
I am trying to install Debian 5.0.5 on a used MacMini G4.
I have followed instructions from:
http://sowerbutts.com/linux-mac-mini/
However I could not get the MacMini to boot onto the debian
installer.
I tried the:
- 'C' holding approach (does not work at all)
- 'Options' holding approach (Only the hard drive icon shows up)
- 'Option'+'Command'+'o+'f' opens a terminal:
Apple PowerMac10, 1 4.8.9f4 BootROM build on 03/23/05 at 14:22:23
...
0 > boot cd:,\\tbxi DISK-LABEL: read block0 failed
ATAPI-DISK: open of DISK-LABEL failed can't open: cd:,\\tbxi
Can't open device or file
0 > eject cd: ok
0 > boot cd:,\\tbxi DISK-LABEL: read block0 failed
ATAPI-DISK: open of DISK-LABEL failed can't open: cd:,\\tbxi
Can't open device or file
I tried the 'eject' approach as mentioned in the bugzilla bug
number 162046...
I have one cdrom burned from my debian/amd64 laptop and one cdrom
burned from the MacMini, both fails as shown above. Both cdrom
opens
fine on my debian/amd64 laptop.
References:
http://sowerbutts.com/linux-mac-mini/
http://mac.linux.be/content/booting-open-firmware
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=162046
http://www.powerlinux.com/mini/
http://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/5.0.5/powerpc/iso-cd/debian-505-powerpc-netinst.iso
I would really appreciate *any* help !
Thanks in advance,
--
Mathieu
On Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 7:10 PM, Chris Reich <[email protected]
> wrote:
Mathieu,
You say that both the CDs you are trying open fine on your amd64
laptop. It sounds like you may be trying to use an AMD/Intel
architecture installation disk in a Power PC architecture
computer. That won't work.
You'll need to download and burn the iso file of the Power PC
architecture of Debian 5. Here is the url to the page from which
you can download the DVD:
http://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/5.0.5/powerpc/iso-dvd/
and here is the url from which you can download the CD:
http://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/5.0.5/powerpc/iso-cd/
You should be able to use the DVD on your Mac Mini.
I hope this helps you. Debian on old Macs rocks.
All my best - Chris Reich; Rochester, New York
twittername: chrisreich
On Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 7:27 PM, Mathieu Malaterre
<[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Chris,
As mentioned in my previous email I used:
http://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/5.0.5/powerpc/iso-cd/debian-505-powerpc-netinst.iso
The cdrom opens fine on my laptop, dmesg reveals:
ISO 9660 Extensions: RRIP_1991A
I tried booting from them, but it simply fails. I am guessing
they contains ppc code and thus fails on my amd64 laptop.
HTH
On Jul 25, 2010, at 2:11 PM, Mathieu Malaterre wrote:
BTW I actually meant to write:
boot cd:,\\:tbxi
This command does not work on my debian installation cd, but does work
on the official Tiger Mac install cd...
thanks !
Mathieu,
If you tried both the "C" holding approach and the "Option" holding
approach, and neither of them recognized that the CD is a bootable
PowerPC Mac CD, then there must be something wrong with the CD.
Either the iso is malformed, or the burn from the iso did not work
properly.
To check the first possibility, did you verify the download by
comparing the checksum of the iso file against either the MD5SUMS or
the SHA1SUMS file in the same directory as you downloaded the iso from?
To check the second possibility, you can compare the burned CD with
the iso file using, for example, something like:
cmp /dev/cdrom xxxxxx.iso
A third possibilty, though remote, is that the iso was improperly
built. I'll verify that myself and get back to you.
Have you tried booting the Mac mini G4 from another Debian CD? try,
for example, the businesscard CD at
http://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage/daily-builds/daily/arch-latest/powerpc/iso-cd/
If that at least boots (it may fail to install a working Debian
PowerPC for other reasons, but it should at least boot) then you know
your CD drive is OK. If it fails, you may have a hardware problem...
Hope this helps!
Rick
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