You're Amelia!
You're late!
Amelia Pond! You're the little girl!
I'm Amelia, and you're late.
You're late!
Amelia Pond! You're the little girl!
I'm Amelia, and you're late.
Saturday, November 21
Shoot Me Now
Linux gets the job done. It may not be actually good in comparison with what is possible, with what has been achieved in the past (and indeed the present) in some minicomputer and mainframe operating systems. But it turns inexpensive commodity hardware into a powerful and flexible computing platform.
And it doesn't require a reboot to change the hostname.
Linux gets the job done. It may not be actually good in comparison with what is possible, with what has been achieved in the past (and indeed the present) in some minicomputer and mainframe operating systems. But it turns inexpensive commodity hardware into a powerful and flexible computing platform.
And it doesn't require a reboot to change the hostname.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
11:53 PM
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Friday, November 20
Dear Fedora People, You Suck
Of course, this is the default behaviour. Nice testing there.
Yeah, I know, open source, plenty of betas etc etc. But you'd think someone would have bothered to actually install it at some point.
Update: Oops, I'm wrong. The default behaviour is to install the bootloader to the MBR. However, that doesn't work either. I'm now trying it with the bootloader actually on the RAID array. If that doesn't work, I'll try fdisking it with the rescue CD. If that doesn't work, then screw it, I'll run an un-RAIDed boot partition. Of course, by that point I will have installed it SEVEN TIMES.
Update: The Fedora installer is a blight.
Apart from being entirely unable to set up a proper software RAID boot partition (something Linux has supported for years), it crashed twice during disk partitioning,* once skipped the package selection stage entirely, and once failed to load the video driver. Oh, and once it just failed in the middle of the install process with a read error, though that's not necessarily its fault.
On top of that, the install menu doesn't support my keyboard. The keyboard works in BIOS, works after the install menu, but won't work in the menu itself. I had the exact same problem in openSUSE, though... Actually, openSUSE also failed to boot after installation just like Fedora.
Anyway, what with three failed attempts to get a working RAID /boot, one trial of a non-raid /boot, one trip into rescue land, one read error, and four outright installer failures, it's taken me ten tries to do a fairly simple install of a modern version of Linux. And that's ignoring the failure with openSUSE. And I'm hardly an inexperienced user; I've been using Linux continuously since RedHat 6.1.
This is just crap.
* Not an outright crash, but the installer's error handling is basically nil. At the first sign of trouble, you get a dialog box that allows you to reboot. No options, just reboot.
If you install Fedora 12 with /boot on a RAID array - either as its own
partition or as part of a root partition that is on a RAID array - and
also install the bootloader to that partition rather than to the system
MBR, the partition will not be marked as bootable, as it should be.
This renders the installed Fedora unbootable. To work around this
issue, you must manually mark the appropriate partition as bootable
with a tool such as fdisk
.
Yeah, I NOTICED.Of course, this is the default behaviour. Nice testing there.
Yeah, I know, open source, plenty of betas etc etc. But you'd think someone would have bothered to actually install it at some point.
Update: Oops, I'm wrong. The default behaviour is to install the bootloader to the MBR. However, that doesn't work either. I'm now trying it with the bootloader actually on the RAID array. If that doesn't work, I'll try fdisking it with the rescue CD. If that doesn't work, then screw it, I'll run an un-RAIDed boot partition. Of course, by that point I will have installed it SEVEN TIMES.
Update: The Fedora installer is a blight.
Apart from being entirely unable to set up a proper software RAID boot partition (something Linux has supported for years), it crashed twice during disk partitioning,* once skipped the package selection stage entirely, and once failed to load the video driver. Oh, and once it just failed in the middle of the install process with a read error, though that's not necessarily its fault.
On top of that, the install menu doesn't support my keyboard. The keyboard works in BIOS, works after the install menu, but won't work in the menu itself. I had the exact same problem in openSUSE, though... Actually, openSUSE also failed to boot after installation just like Fedora.
Anyway, what with three failed attempts to get a working RAID /boot, one trial of a non-raid /boot, one trip into rescue land, one read error, and four outright installer failures, it's taken me ten tries to do a fairly simple install of a modern version of Linux. And that's ignoring the failure with openSUSE. And I'm hardly an inexperienced user; I've been using Linux continuously since RedHat 6.1.
This is just crap.
* Not an outright crash, but the installer's error handling is basically nil. At the first sign of trouble, you get a dialog box that allows you to reboot. No options, just reboot.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
11:38 PM
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