On 12/23/2014 04:04 AM, Henrique Lengler wrote:
> Hi,
 >
 > I decided to install openbsd by the first time a month ago, How I was
 > with no internet connection I needed to shutdown the computer in the
 > part that I need to download the packages, because I hadn't it on the
 > cd. I could not acess the command line so I clicked the reset button
 > on the front panel. When I tried to turn on again, the system didn't
 > boot. I discovered that it only worked if I remove the hard drive.
 > Thinking that the problem was the harddrive I sent it to warranty to
 > be repleaced. I took 10 long days (withou my computer) to arrive a
 > new one. When it arrived, I tested and I saw that now it is working.
 > I prepared a cable connection, and I started again the openbsd
 > setup. It sucefully downloaded and installed everything, so I
 > rebooted the system to boot my new fresh install. AND SHIT,
 > everything happened as before, the system don't boot as before, I
 > can't open the bios as before, and I got really mad.
 >
 > I don't know if I will be able to sent it to warranty again, but this
 > isn't the right thing to do now that I discovered that the problem
 > isn't with it, the problem is with Openbsd.
 >
 > Could someone please explain me why this happened? Can you think
 > about a way to fix this without send it to warranty? Any other
 > questions? send me a reply, I'm really in need of help
 >
Hi,

I can remember similar problems when I first tried to install OpenBSD on 
my current computer.
The problem were performance settings in BIOS, that were somehow set to 
high performance profile.
After setting that to Standard Profile - things went smoothly.

--
With best regards,
        Gregory Edigarov

Reply via email to