Debian Installer RC1 Is Out
rekt writes "The Debian crew has just announced the release of debian-installer RC1.
You can find versions of it for 11 different architectures at the d-i page.
This is one of the most flexible, modular installer architectures out there. As we near the release of sarge (debian 3.1) next month, it's important that we find and work out any bugs in the installer. Grab a copy and give it a shot!"
.. available at suprnova.org.
Debian 3.1 (Sarge) Release Candidate 1 - CD 1 of 12 ...
Belief is the currency of delusion.
Security support for sarge is scheduled to begin today. Woody users may want to consider upgrading to sarge now, testing the upgrade path, and help out with reporting/fixing any bugs they encounter.
Only the md5sum needs to be hosted somewhere official.
Isn't the installer supposed to be sort of a GUI-based installer this time? So uh.. why haven't I seen any screenshots of this? I'm not going to toss together a new machine and burn an ISO and go through the install process just to see what the installer looks like now. Not that i have any intention of installing a new version of debian on my production box, but...
Yes, it looks like documents are new and improved. http://d-i.alioth.debian.org/manual/
The important thing is not to stop questioning --Albert Einstein.
Screenshots please. Is it based on Progeny Anaconda
In short words: At least - with the bits taken from RHs Anaconda the installer ist "just more fun". Sarge looks very promising, but lets hope the next release will not take 5 years and more again. GO Debian!
http://people.debian.org/~madduck/d-i/screenshots/
Because I love all of you.
Grab a copy and give it a shot!
I've downloaded a copy, burned it on a CD and gave it a few shots.
This is the result.
But they were different links under different domains each time! One was the original and the other (this one) was a link to another domain which then redirected to the other.
:P
Fortunately, it's simple enough to close one browser window without killing your whole session. Also, fortunately enough, my girlfriend already knows I'm a latent gaymo.
Whats the difference?
I've used the nightly builds (>beta4) about 6 times for installations on seperate occations within the last 2 weeks. Everything works much better than previous versions. No problems when it tried to probe my DHCP internet account. I'm now back at school where my pppoe which isn't DHCP based and obviously it failed detection.
Thankfully the pppoeconf package is unpacked before the initial reboot and is available after the bootstrap. Ran pppoeconf and got my connection. Still, though, I had to do this via virtual console. For the first-time debian user, they may not know pppoeconf as the name to get around this and will be stuck unable to do any sort of net-install.
my blog
Well I'm looking forward to seeing this go stable, my experiences with the beta installers were quite good. Really clears out one of the last stereotypical complaints against Debian and all ("installer is an ancient piece of cruft", which really, part of it was.) I'm more of a slackware user these days, but I often list Debian as the "other" distro that I like. But once sarge gets stable, I might just give it another go. Maybe, I might even go ahead an buy a cd set, since on dialup, downloading packages and such can be rather a pain. Anyone have any suggestions of the best place to get debian cds from?
Erm.. no, sir. THAT is funny.
The resulting system.
Knoppix is stripped-down.
Hey, the main problem I had with woody was that I never got X to install. Did they get that fixed?
And if you want the non-i386 archs it's probably a couple more. Here's the rest of the i386 set:
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 2 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 3 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 4 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 5 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 6 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 7 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 8 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 9 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 10 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 11 of 12.
Debian 3.1RC1 (Sarge), CD 12 of 12.
I'm sort of new to this linux thing, but there's this directory on my new install of Debian 3.1 called "/usr/bin". It was all messed up when I first went in there. None of the files had descriptive names, and it took me like an hour to figure out they were executables, since none of them had .exe on the end of them. Furthermore, whenever I double click them, they just pop up a command prompt for a few seconds then go away.
I was gonna delete them, but I got kinda afraid that they might be my kernel, so I fiugred I'd ask. It's ok to delete this stuff, right?
Let's not forget that one can hate his government, but love his country.
Anyone know which discs are needed for what installation you might want? I would assume that a few of those are for different platforms, or maybe include all the source packages. But I am just a normal i386 user who doesn't have any need for source packages, and also don't really feel like downloading 4-6GB worth of data to figure out which. Any information on which discs to obtain would be great.
I've done four installs with a just-slightly-pre-RC1 netinst snapshot, and in all cases the installer produced a working system with a functional KDE desktop (yes, working X out of the box).
The X settings were pretty conservative, but they were functional.
This was such a shock to me that I really believed I'd burned too much karma and was likely to be hit by a bus on the way home.
I can actually recommend using the native installer instead of Knoppix to do a Debian install now.
You have violated Robot's Rules of Order and will be asked to leave the future immediately.
Anyone who still thinks that Debian is hard to install, please think again
A big up to Debian developers everywhere!
Co-operation beats competition
Here's the summary of the debian-installer from one of the main developers...
t ive-2004-08-07-19-46.html
//fatal
Joey Hess blog entry: http://kitenet.net/~joey/blog/entry/d-i_retrospec
...for the upcoming release (and mostly for the new installer), I have observed that a few of the Debian developpers have been less than responsive to major bug reports (like, big common average things not detected automagically as it is with other distros). This, with the fact that Joey Hess quit as release manager just recently, i.e. at a critical stage of the Sarge release, has me starting to wonder about Debian's future.
Has Debian hit the ceiling in terms of what a volunteer org. can acheive? I mean, are projects of this size be developped and delivered successfully by orgs such as Debian?
It took *forever* for Sarge to come out and my impression (I hope I am wrong) is that the installer will compare negatively with other distros installers. This and other config/post-install details that are bad in my mind make me truly wonder if Debian can continue in its current shape.
Is it because of the incessant splitting of hairs on "political" issues or what, I don't know. But to push Joey Hess to quit, something bad must be happening at the core of Debian.
Maybe I'm overly pessimistic because I'm transposing my personal non-tech feelings on everything today (I am in the doghouse with the girl-friend, long story), but the bad vibes I got when learning of the resignation of the Debian Sarge release coordinator do pre-dates my current predicament.
I wonder if Joey Hess did say anything (interview, somewhere?) about all of this. Joey, if you are reading this, can you comment with some insider's perspective?
There's no need to use suprnova. You can get the .torrent files from the
offical site
I'm running gentoo and I like it but that doesn't mean that it is superior to other distros, nor that everyone has to like it too, nor that it meets everyones needs.
So please do yourself, slashdot and most of all gentoo a favor and STFU! Trolls like you are giving gentoo a bad name and the people working on gentoo clearly don't deserve that.
... N/T
get a REAL bob.
Pretending to be bob is never experimentally valid.
I've started using Debian about a year ago (or even longer ago) and from what I can remember I've never used an other installer for Debian than the one I see in the screenshots posted in this thread.
Have I just been using the beta version of the installer all along or is this install just a minor version update over the previous installer?
I thought Woody still uses 2.2 kernel? Doesn't a jump to another kernel series merit a major version upgrade?
Then it gets more and more weird until you realize it's a quite funny joke.
What made it work was the lead up. I guess Seinfeld et al could do better, but the point is that you have to think through the path that the readers/users will think when reading the joke. (I've read that artists think the same way when {composing, writing, painting}).
My point is that software and documentation is usually better when you've thought through the way the user thinks will be thinking and accessing it. But (if it's not a joke) you need to put those assumptions at the top of what you write.
Sorry for this irrelevant rant -- which probably is too obvious for people other than me -- but this is something I've been thinking about for a while. (-: And if some of you guys (names withheld) read this and grokks, I've made the world a better place for all of us! :-)
On topic, I installed with a Beta a month or two ago and it worked well (except for not setting the partition type when it formatted partitions(!) which made grub confused, which confused me. -- yes, I reported the bug).
Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
Knoppix is a stripped-down Debian.
Okay, I'll bite.
I couldn't use any of the games...immediately took the disk out, rebooted, and did some real work in Windows.
Hee.
toresbe
'll probably repeat this useless exercise a couple years from now.
We await the results with interest. Do let us know how you get on.
Next you are going to tell me the Gentoo installation is easier than Debian huh? Oh and its faster too. Right... I don't think even a skilled user needs to have or even most packages custom compiled. I usually use binaries for everything that I don't need anything out of the ordinary for (I like having my own LAMP packages, etc) Yes Gentoo is good, and I like it, but it is very much for the hobbyist and I feel is really only "fun" the first time around
-kaplanfx
Visualize Whirled Peas
Yes, yes, parent is a troll. But...
Debian (stable) is geared towards server, the whole Gentoo thing is geared towards desktop or experimental.
Debian has always had the philosophy of free distribution and legal safety, I've seen none of this in Gentoo. I love the Debian philosophy.
Debian is a mature distribution with a strict QA, I still don't believe Gentoo has a decent QA "department" at all.
None of the datacenters/dedicated servers facility that I know offer Gentoo, for each one you mention supporting Gentoo, I can name 25 supporting Debian.
Gentoo has bleeding edge stuffs, that's why I don't want it.
Debian has complete support forum (debianplanet), a portal (debianplanet), ten times the number of mailing lists than Gentoo, local user groups, not to mention SEVERAL newsletters with real content.
Debian has Knoppix, etc based on it.
Debian has at least twice the number of worldwide mirrors compared to Gentoo;
As for "versions", you can upgrade from between Debian versions pretty much seamlessly.
I can get linux up and running from a stage 3 gentoo install much faster than I can with Debian. Any why wouldn't you custom compile all you packages? Isn't that a big part of linux -- being able to customize everything?
Joey Hess has written up a
retrospective on the new installer. It's a good read.
In 2005 the software in Sarge will be as old as Woody is now. (Think Gnome 1.3.)
In 2005 Sid will be unstable
In 2005 testing will not have security updates. (unless they change the rules)
In 2005 Debian will not offer a stable state of the art Linux distribution with security updates.
Only when there is a need. Otherwise it's a waste of time. When you run servers for $$$ that stuff matters.
In 2005 Gentoo will be best desktop for the hobbyist.
In 2005 Red Hat/Suse/Knoppix/Whatever will be the best desktop for the non-hobbyist.
In 2005 Debian will be the best server.
Tell us something we don't know.
I'm sort of new to this windows thing, but there's this directory on my new install of windows called "c:\windows\system32". It was all messed up when I first went in there. None of the files had descriptive names, and it took me like an hour to figure out they were executables, since none of them had any extensions on the end of them. Furthermore, whenever I double click them, they just pop up a command prompt for a few seconds then go away.
I was gonna delete them, but I got kinda afraid that they might be my kernel, so I fiugred I'd ask. It's ok to delete this stuff, right?
Be sure to send that link on to congress..
12 disks.. damn..
---- Booth was a patriot ----
[nt]
I want to gunzip the boot.img.gz directly onto my usb drive and then boot from that. As per the instructions at: http://d-i.alioth.debian.org/manual/en.i386/apb.ht ml
But how the hell do i get the boot.img.gz onto the usb drive? I could do it if I was already running linux apparently, but I'm not. Any ideas? I can gunzip it fine, but I need to write it directly to the usb drive. From what I can find, there's no program which can currently do that in windows. Th e catch 22 is that i would need linux first to do it. If anyone can please,please help tell me how to write the .img to a usb drive using windows then please please do! That's currently the only thing stopping me using linux.
Nope, its still console based ( i asked this last time this came up around here.. )
But, if you are running a i386, you can goto progeny.com and get a sarge+anaconda installer set..
That said, the 'new' debian installer isnt bad for someone that knows what they are doing, the main target for stock Debian anyway...
---- Booth was a patriot ----
I'm glad to have both Debian and Gentoo.
The most sensible answer to this stupid troll thread.
Knoppix is NOT stripped down.. It's a heavily preconfigured and tweaked Debian. Of course it can not hold averything tahat makes debian but it's still 2GB of software.
Anyone know if this installer supports the ARM architecture?
I want to use Debian, but not on x86.
; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
I just spent the better part of Friday night and yesterday reading, downloading and installing debian "Woody" via jigdo-lite. Damn, back to the drawing board.
{{throws hand in the air}}
I don't have a 128MB usb drive... But this is what I would try..
.gz file seems to have an bootable filesystem image. Extract it using wizip, winrar or gzip/gunzip. Get the rawrite2 utility and use it to put it on the USB drive using the USB drives letter. Download the "Debian netinst CD image" (as stated on the page you linked to) and copy it to the now correctly formated USB drive........ Profit!?... :) ... Please post success/failiure reports.. :D
The
Disclaimer: these are just suggestions and I haven't tried it mywelf! If you damage your hardware.... then you must have done something pretty wild..
Cheers...
$HOME is where the
-- silver_p
You have stated an opinion that differs from the majority "correct" opinion. Please report to your nearest LUG center for reprogramming. Thank you.
Seriously, that's exactly what happened with the Windows XP SP2 RC2 the other day. Some guy couldn't get 3/5 of his PCs back up, and suddenly from a sample size of 5 PCs everybody laughs and points at the 60% failure rate. Give me a fucking break.
OFFTOPIC:
Does anybody know if there is a way to crack or otherwise get around the 24 hour reboot in Windows PE?
I'm tired of all the "I don't want to compile everything" gentoo trolls. Gentoo now has binary packages for quick installs. I personally love the customization, but there are other options.
Jay | http://oldos.org
In 2005 the software in Sarge will be as old as Woody is now. (Think Gnome 1.3.)
I don't understand why anyone believes this is a meaningful complaint. I know plenty of people still using Windows 95 and 98 on desktop systems, and I've installed Debian Woody on plenty of desktop systems. My desktop machine tracks unstable only because I need it for development. For the end-user, do you honestly think they want to install a new version of their OS every six months (or download 100+ MB of updates every month and sort out the problems those updates cause?)
The vast majority of computer users do not want to live on the bleeding edge. Your grandma does not know how to pick the optimal compiler flags. She doesn't know how to resolve errors with dpkg or rpm. Why force this nonsense on her?
Stop being an elitist prick and come with some constructive ideas!!
i just picked up the 12 3.1 sarge fiscs form the debian stand at this weekends http://www.ukuug.org/events/linux2004/. cool huh?
havent installed them yet i think i lost cd 1 d'oh!
anywayys.
I always get my *nix CDs from ebay, it's much cheaper than the official sets, and there are loads of people who burn in bulk and sell cheap.
Windows is only $500 if your time is worthless.
I succeded in transfering the filesystem to the USB drive from windows but my comp seems to be unwilling to boot from the USB device. Try what I did and maybe your comp will react better.
:)
This is what I did...
1 Get the dd utility from here. Unzip it and put it into your c:\winnt directory (unless you want to mess with env. variables [PATH]).
2. Get the boot.img.gz image from here. For some unexplainable reason Windows unpacked it for me to its real size (ca 123 Mb). Maybe because I have winrar installed? Maybe not. Winrar should be able to unpack it anyway.
3. Get the bootbf2_4-xfs_iso.zip and read this to be able to unpack it. I like this ISO because it the kernel has XFS support. Choose any other you prefer.
4. Start a cmd.exe and use "dd --list" to see your devices so that dd can use them. (dd is used to copy raw data). My usb device was I: and in the listin I could read:
\\.\Volume{45e7b0b0-e981-11d8-be69-00a0c9ca4794}\
Mounted on i:\
5. After finding your USB device in the list dd the boot.img to the device:
dd boot.img.gz \\.\Volume{45e7b0b0-e981-11d8-be69-00a0c9ca4794}\
6. If that worked copy the unpacked bootbf2.4-xfs.iso file to your USBs root directory.
7. Reboot the comp and enter the BIOS setup. Set it to boot from your USB (or USB-ZIP) device.
The filesystem on my friends USB drive is fine and I can mount it from windows and Linux. The filesystem si 128Mb big and the device is 256 so it seemd to have worked fine (since the iso was supposed to have a 128Mb fs). I have one comp that is supposed to be bootable from USB but the USB device (mp3-player) itself seems to not react untill the OS is up. maybe that's why it won't boot? I hope. Hope you have better luck!..
Cheers...
$HOME is where the
-- silver_p
I didn't get errors either.. But my comps are too old for this fancy-shmancy USB stuff I guess.. ;) .. Go to bed? Oh you're in europe too.. :)
$HOME is where the
-- silver_p
i am a debian user (four boxes, desktop is sid, NAT/gateway is woody, ramsey fm10 yardcasting sound source is sarge and my xbox dual boots to woody) and installing was never a huge problem. i'd like to see some nice tools that do hardware detection and interact when you want to roll your own kernel from source rather than an eye candy GUI installer. but that's just the lazy me. and i'm annoyed by the qt powered xconfig that kernel 2.6.x brings forth, i liked the old tcl deally. o well, progress i spose.
i don't do update/upgrades till late Sunday evening on my sid box. so far so good.Serenity now, insanity later.
To add to the parent:
In contrast, those wanting to use Debian on a desktop and use the bleeding edge stuff can do that too, using Sid (unstable).
What Debian calls "stable" more accurately should be called "static", because the Debian folk assure non-breakage and long-term stability by literally not allowing anything to change (except security fixes). To Debian, "unstable" is called unstable merely because it is constantly changing. However, "changing" doesn't always imply "broken", or even "constantly breaking", since Debian's package system and the QA makes updating stuff moderately painless for most folks, and the possibily of major problems only occur with a small number of critical packages (which for the most part are managed by the smartest and most responsible of the Debian folk).
Hundreds, probably thousands, of others, myself included, routinely update their systems against Debian's "unstable" tree on a monthly, weekly, or even daily(!) basis, in order to get the latest stuff, and a large majority do so without problems. I myself have had one major breakage and maybe 2 or 3 dozen small breakages in the last ~2.5 years, while updating 2 to 3 times per week to Sid. With almost all of these problems, the solution was simply to put the broken packages on hold in aptitude, wait a few days for the packages to be fixed, and uploaded to Debian, then install/reinstall/upgrade them. No sweat on my part, the Debian Developers do all the work for me (thanks guys). For something really important, you can revert to the old version immediately if you really need that package to continue working, but since we are talking about desktop systems, this shouldn't be as much of an issue as it is with servers.
To be fair, that one major breakage, involving glibc, was fairly nasty, but frankly, a) I don't see it as all that different with other distros that are regularly (more than once every 3 months) updating their systems (Debian Sid is being upgraded continously, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week), and b) when you want to live on the bleeding edge, you have to be willing to pay the price, and the occasional minor problem, and the relatively rare major problem is the price that must be payed.
I've seen the complaints about "unstable", but you have to keep in mind the sheer number of people using Debian, the fact they are using it for different reasons and purposes, and are therefore using different packages or different combinations of packages that may create problems, but only for the people who have the exact same combination, and the fact that since unstable is in a constant state of flux, it might get broken for an hour or two, or four, until the DD (or someone else) hears about the problem and uploads a fix, which means a few unlucky people have some pain (maybe a lot of pain), but the majority of users who upgrade later never see that problem.
My suggestions:
Be sure to file your installation reports here:e port-template
http://www.nl.debian.org/devel/debian-installer/r
my blog
While Debian is my favorite distro and I run testing as my primary desktop, my one problem with it has always been setting up ALSA drivers. On the current setup I have now, I just stuck with the OSS drivers, setting up ALSA was too much of a pain in the a$$. anyone know if the stable release of sarge will include better alsa-driver compatability?
"goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
you don't need any CD, floppy nor USB key to boot most linux installers. Feeding the kernel and the initrd image to LILO or GRUB or LOADLIN is enough. You just need some operating system already working on the machine.
m l
http://marc.herbert.free.fr/linux/win2linstall.ht
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it