Woot! As I also have an x60 and I would be very interested in the installer you used to get things this far if you are able to provide it somewhere?
If not, then I will simply use your achievement as motivation to build one myself :-) Best wishes, Alex David Thompson writes: > Ludovic Courtès <l...@gnu.org> writes: > >> David Thompson <dthomps...@worcester.edu> skribis: >> >>> ext2fs_check_if_mount: Can't check if filesystem is mounted due to >>> missing mtab file when determining whether /dev/sdb1 is mounted. >>> fsck.ext4: No such device or address while trying to open /dev/sdb1 >>> Possibily non-existent or swap device? >>> 'fsck.ext4' exited with code 8 on /dev/sdb1 >> >> It could be that (1) it’s not called that way, or (2) additional kernel >> modules need to be loaded so that the device is visible. >> >> For (1), you could try using a partition label rather than the actual >> device name in the ‘file-system’ declaration. >> >> For (2), you could check in the kernel log whether sdb is detected. > > The problem was a little bit of 1 and 2. > > When I am installing, the disk is known as sdb, but when I boot it's > known as sda. So, I made that change in the file-system declaration. > > The initrd doesn't have modules for ahci by default, so I took a little > snippet that Mark Weaver was using in his operating-system declaration: > > (initrd (cut base-initrd <> #:extra-modules '("libahci.ko" "ahci.ko"))) > > And now for the best news: I have a working installation of the GNU > system! Thanks for all of your help! -- Sent with my mu4e