Harry Putnam <[email protected]> writes: > Soon as the install iso starts to load and a graphic is > displayed.. bang ... reboot.
I think I may have mislead somewhat... Above is a mis-statement and judging from the responses... may have mislead readers. I meant to say "Soon as the installed iso starts [...] reboot" That is I've been thru the install and now starting the installed OS. (Installed with official opensol-11. I'm currently running a full backup of that entire machine so cannot try any of the suggestions Some of Johnathan and comments can be answered though: Johannes Kastl <[email protected]> writes: > First check if you run out of RAM, i.e. you gave your VM more RAM than > wasn't used by your HOST OS. I will check that later but can tell you that I backed the ram allocation down high 600 something. Because I also have installed a successful opensol vm with VMware. (no there were not both running when the reboots have happened) [...] > The last thing that comes to my mind are the settings: Have you enabled > on of the many CPU-related settings? PAE/NX, IO APIC, APCI, ...? Maybe > one of them screws things up. I can tell your just from memory that one of the apci settings is on so I'll check that out once the backup is done. ===== * ===== * ===== * ===== Agile Aspect writes: [...] > Check your Event Viewer. > > Also, you might want to do a memory check. Both sound like solid tips... I'll check them out once the backup is through. Its going to take a couple of hours. _______________________________________________ vbox-users mailing list [email protected] http://vbox.innotek.de/mailman/listinfo/vbox-users
