On 7/6/2015 6:11 PM, g wrote:
optical drives do not fair well burning a lot of dvd's.
thru the years of dealing with cd/dvd burners, i have found the above
trouble shooting checks to prove out bad drives due to the increased
voltage needed for dvd burning shortens laser's life.
good burners wi
On 07/06/15 18:06, C Linus Hicks wrote:
> On 07/06/15, g wrote:
>> you might try verifying that system you are getting error message on
>> has a good cd/dvd drive.
>>
>> burn another dvd at at least 4 speeds slower.
>>
> if runs ok, bad drive.
>>
> if still fails, bad drive.
>>
> another way you
On 07/06/15, g wrote:
you might try verifying that system you are getting error message on
has a good cd/dvd drive.
burn another dvd at at least 4 speeds slower.
if runs ok, bad drive.
if still fails, bad drive.
another way you can check is to pull iso on system you are having
problem with and
On 07/05/15 22:25, C Linus Hicks wrote:
<>
> Ran the check again, same thing. Took that DVD back to the machine I
> burned it on, downloaded the MD5SUM from one of the mirrors and checked
> the file I downloaded. That checks. Used cmp to compare the .iso file to
> the image on the DVD, they matc
On 07/05/2015 08:25 PM, C Linus Hicks wrote:
Now I'm thinking, wait, it says "Failed to start media check" is that
a poorly worded message or does it really mean what it says?
I'm not entirely sure, but at this point I'd suggest that you use a
different media type. Maybe a USB drive.
___
On 07/05/15, Gordon Messmer wrote:
That's not the same as checking the media for corruption. You may be
able to read all of the files, but if the data is corrupt, rpm may throw
and IOError.
So, the next thing to do is check your media. The DVD should offer to
do that first when you boot from
On 07/05/2015 04:38 PM, C Linus Hicks wrote:
anaconda will try to delete an rpm file if it gets an IOError. Your
media may be corrupt. Check that first.
- Above quoted -
No such luck. On the system where I'm doing the install, I used dd to
read the entire DVD and also copied every .rpm
On Sun, 05 Jul 2015 18:38:39 -0500 (CDT)
C Linus Hicks wrote:
> No such luck. On the system where I'm doing the install, I used dd to read
> the entire DVD and also copied every .rpm to /dev/null and didn't get any I/O
> errors.
Did you verify the checksum?
--
MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Real D 3D Digit
On 07/05/15, Gordon Messmer wrote:
anaconda will try to delete an rpm file if it gets an IOError. Your
media may be corrupt. Check that first.
- Above quoted -
No such luck. On the system where I'm doing the install, I used dd to read the
entire DVD and also copied every .rpm to /dev/
On 07/05/2015 02:02 PM, C Linus Hicks wrote:
02:40:54,292 DEBUG packaging: File "/usr/libexec/anaconda/anaconda-yum", line
342, in inst_open_file
02:40:54,292 DEBUG packaging: os.unlink(txmbr.po.localPkg())
02:40:54,292 DEBUG packaging: OSError: [Errno 30] Read-only file system:
'/run/install/r
On 07/05/2015 09:17 AM, lin...@verizon.net wrote:
> Someone please tell me what I did to screw this thing up so badly.
On 07/05/15, Gordon Messmer wrote:
Have you looked at the log files in /mnt/sysimage/root/?
- Quoting broken in this mailer
So I looked in /mnt/sysima
On 07/05/2015 09:17 AM, lin...@verizon.net wrote:
Someone please tell me what I did to screw this thing up so badly.
Have you looked at the log files in /mnt/sysimage/root/?
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I must be doing something horribly wrong and I hope somebody can help.
The Areca arc-1224 is not supported by the Areca driver included driver in 7.1
so I have to supply that when starting the install. Documentation provided by
Areca and in the Red Hat install guide say the same thing, put the d
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