Date: Sun, 3 Oct 2004 20:45:32 -0400 (EDT) From: Dru <dlavigne6@sympatico.ca> To: Dan Pelleg <daniel@pelleg.org> Cc: freebsd-mobile@freebsd.org Subject: Re: install hangs on IBM Thinkpad X23 Message-ID: <20041003203032.R584@dru.domain.org> In-Reply-To: <u2s4qlbo5y7.fsf@lank.wburn> References: <20041003120806.M584@dru.domain.org> <8cb27cbf04100311161d726215@mail.gmail.com> <u2s4qlbo5y7.fsf@lank.wburn>
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On Sun, 3 Oct 2004, Dan Pelleg wrote: <snip> > I'm about to update that page for -5.X. On my 2662-E5U I successfully > installed 4.5, some early 5 release (either 5.1 or 5.2.1), and > 5.3-beta3. All of them from a USB cd-rom, none of them while docked. I > don't recall ever seeing that error. So at this point I tend to think it's > something that can be fixed by changing some BIOS option. Possibly along > the lines of: > http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2004-January/019435.html Yes, I suspect it is a BIOS option. Unfortunately, my current BIOS doesn't have the particular option listed in the above URL. > PS: if you don't have MS-Windows on that machine, and your desired BIOS > change is not supported in the startup menus, you can download the PS2 tool > from IBM's website to change it. At least, in theory you can. In practice, > they don't provide floppy or iso9660 images. You need to ignore the > misleading instructions on: > http://www-3.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/document.do?lndocid=MIGR-4ZFPEG Not having too much joy at that site. The only MS machine I have access to at the moment is 2000. Internet Explorer was hanging on the "I agree" popup box; now I can't even get it to give me the popup box. Grrr. I downloaded the file no prob in BSD and sneaker-netted it over to 2000 but I get a 16-bit MS-DOS subsystem illegal instruction message whenever I try to run it. Zippo extraction. > And then download the .exe and run it on a Windows machine (not necessarily > a thinkpad). Don't try to run what it extracted - it probably won't > work. But you can copy the UTILITY directory that it creates to a floppy > and run that. > That is, if you have a floppy. I don't. I had to grab images from DOS > floppies, mount them on a vn(4), and manipulate them so I had one image for > a bootable floppy and another one with the contents of the IBM tools. I have the exact opposite problem: built-in floppy, external CDROM attached to a PCMCIA adapter. Hmmm, I wonder if they make adapters that go from the external CDROM to a USB port?? I do believe the NIC has a PROM chip; my best bet might be to make a PXE server and install that way... Dru
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