On 10/06/2017 10:56 AM, Rick Thomas wrote:
I tried the latest: "Debian GNU/Linux 9.0 "Sid" - Unofficial ppc64 NETINST
20171005-07:56”
I did an “expert” mode install. At partitioning time, I created an 8MB
bootable partition and a 250MB ext2 partition for /boot.
There was no “grub” entry in the main menu of the installer [*], so I went
ahead and installed yaboot.
Oh, this must have broken recently. I will give it a try later today and see
why that's the case. The
grub-installer package is definitely now officially built for ppc64 and sparc64
[1], so I'm not sure
why it's not showing up for you.
It booted fine. After booting I installed the “grub2” packages (and all its
dependent packages)
mounted the bootstrap HFS partition at /boot/grub, and tried to run
grub-install. This ran for a
bit then errored out with the message:
error cannot write to `/boot/grub/…` No space left on device.
looking at what it had written, all 8MB was indeed nearly full. The largest
part was 4.1MB taken
up by /boot/grub/locales and 1.5MB of fonts.
Ok. Thanks for testing that.
I didn’t use any options for grub-install. There may be some way to trim down
the un-needed stuff,
but I didn’t dig into it that far. If not, then 8MB isn’t enough space for
Grub.
It shouldn't be a problem to increase the default partition size in this case
to something
like 10-16 MiB, depending on what we need. The 8 MiB limitation exists on PREP
only if
I understand correctly.
Adrian
[1] https://buildd.debian.org/status/package.php?p=grub-installer&suite=sid
--
.''`. John Paul Adrian Glaubitz
: :' : Debian Developer - [email protected]
`. `' Freie Universitaet Berlin - [email protected]
`- GPG: 62FF 8A75 84E0 2956 9546 0006 7426 3B37 F5B5 F913