Linux install party: Difference between revisions

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The "operating system" is GNU/Linux. We will be installing the [http://debian.org Debian] [[wikipedia:List of Linux distributions|distribution]]. At other times in the course, we've also used [http://gentoo.org Gentoo] and [http://ubuntu.com/ Ubuntu].
The "operating system" is GNU/Linux. We will be installing the [http://debian.org Debian] [[wikipedia:List of Linux distributions| linux distribution]]. At other times in the course, we've also used [http://gentoo.org Gentoo] and [http://ubuntu.com/ Ubuntu].


( see [http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/69/DebianFamilyTree1210.svg debian family tree])
( see [http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/69/DebianFamilyTree1210.svg debian family tree])

Revision as of 14:10, 4 February 2014

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The "operating system" is GNU/Linux. We will be installing the Debian linux distribution. At other times in the course, we've also used Gentoo and Ubuntu.

( see debian family tree)

FOSDEM 2014

Tools

unetbootin

http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/

Unet bootin is a cross platform (window, mac, and linux) program to create bootable USB sticks.

boot-repair-disc

  • Useful when things go wrong with booting

http://sourceforge.net/projects/boot-repair-cd/

Mac / OS X

Generally, the idea is to use the Mac's Disk Utility to shrink the main OSX/hfs partition and then to (USB) boot to install linux in the free space you create.

Work around: copy a lot of data off the hard drive (temporarily), say your Movies folder, and then try to resize again. Once the partition has successfully be resized, you can copy the files back.

Windows

Pressing shift while selecting restart (in the Power "charm") seems to bring up the UEFI settings.

Notes

Max's MacBook Pro, running 10.6, booted from the Debian NetInstall AMD64 USB stick using Alt key on bootup. Debian standard installer works, asking for wireless driver.

brcm/bcm43XX-0.fw

Got Lidia's machine working, BCM4331 wireless support still not in kernel.

Installed debian on Artyom's machine, and GRUB installed itself rather agressively and doesn't work -- Linux is broken and he needs to press the ALT key to manually select OSX now each startup... to be continued.

Installed debian on Caetano's Lenovo with Win8 and again the boot stuff isn't setup right. Tried using EasyBCD but choosing debian results in a windows error (is grub maybe not setup right?)