I  have the same type of CDROM. I used the goldstar cdrom driver (gscd). I
works fine. Try that driver and you should have full access to the CD.

It is possible to use dselect without the the packages file - but I don't
recommend this. I have done it that way and it can lead to problems. When I
did use dselect, I only copied one package file - do to HD space limits. It
will function but you may not find some of your .debs. If you copy the
package file from contrib non of the non-free  packages will be reflected.
Then you would need to dpkg those debs. If you use the DOS or HARDRIVE
installs you will need the full path names that you have saved your debs to.
Packages does need to be in one of the directories listed in your dselect
setup.

Hope this helps. If you want more details let me know.
Rod.....


        -----Original Message-----
        From:   Lyndon Fletcher [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
        Sent:   Wednesday, December 16, 1998 10:38 AM
        To:     debian-user@lists.debian.org
        Subject:        Help!!!!!! Package install problems!!!

        Hi,
           I'm reposting this message with a few clarifications in the hope
that
        someone will answer my questions.

        I was recently lent an old 486 PC by a friend so that I could do
some
        Web server development. The machine is not mine and not readily
        upgradable so I HAVE to work with what I have. First limitation is
that
        the machine only has ~360Mb of hard disk space, limitation number 2
is
        that the machine has an old CDROM drive with an ISA based
proprietary
        controller card. This card is NOT supported by Linux, though I have
a
        DOS boot disc with the nescessary drivers for DOS. I also have
        Cheapbytes version of the Debian 2.0 CD.

        OK. Now I cann't load Debian directly off of the CD because the
CDROM
        drive is not supported. So I got base installed on the machine by
        creating a 30MB Dos partition and copying the basic installation
files
        on to it from DOS. Install went OK up to the point where I need to
        install packages, then the lack of the CD (and space on the HD for
        temporary storage) became a problem. I need parts of about 8 or 9
        packages some of which will involve loading up to 80MB at a time in
        temporary storage if I can't use the CD as source.


        My problem is how to load the rest of the packages. I have a couple
of
        ideas and would like to know the answers to a few specific
questions.

        1) Idea 1

        I could copy a few packages at a time onto the 30Mb Dos drive and
        install from there. 

        Question 1 --- To run dselect do I only need the .deb files or do I
need
        the "packages" files too? 

        Question 2 --- If I do need the "packages" file do I have to edit it
to
        reflect the actual path to the .deb files? If not how do you deal
with
        loading packages from paths different from those in the package
file?

        Question 3 --- What constitutes a package? I have several
directories
        called things like "net" do I copy the whole directory or just the
.deb
        files I seem to need?


        Idea 2

        I also have a laptop PC with a working CDROM (running win95) on
which
        I've installed an FTPD for win95. 

        Question 4 --- when I try to use this machine as an FTP source,
Dselect
        seems to expect a specific layout dist/stable/main et al

        Unfortunately my CD has the form d:/debian/hamm/hamm... How can I
change
        this so that Dselect can read fron the remote drive?

        Question 5 --- the "packages" file has the paths to the files listed
as
        dist/stable/main etc. However, the layout of my CD is
        D:/debian/hamm/hamm/binary-i386/... would I need a new packages file
        with the paths corrected?

        Question 6 --- is it possible to use a "packages" file in a
different
        path from where the .deb files are stored?

        Hope that you can send me some answers... I've been pulling my hair
out
        over this all week.

        Thanks

        Fletch


        -- 
        Unsubscribe?  mail -s unsubscribe
[EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null

Reply via email to