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Operating Systems Linux Strange Disk problem on Install Post 302117300 by leenux_tux on Saturday 12th of May 2007 04:42:54 AM
Old 05-12-2007
Strange Disk problem on Install

Hello Forum,

I am getting a very strange symptom whilst doing an install of CentOS on to an X64 system and I was wondering if anyone else had seen this problem.

I have two disks (PATA) installed to IDE0 (master) and the CDROM installed to IDE1 (slave) as a slave device.
When I boot up the machine the BIOS see's all three devices, when I begin the installation of Linux, hda, hdb, and hdd are being seen by the linux boot process, however, when it comes to choosing the disk(s) to install to, nothing is listed !. If I remove the power cable from the slave disk (hdb) then the install process see disk hda. I have already partitioned the disks using "GPARTED" as I have very specific setup I want to follow, do I have a duff disk ?? even though the BIOS on the machine sees the disk and the Linux installation initially sees the disk ?

Thanks in advance

leenux_tux
 

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dtc_install_centos(8)					      System Manager's Manual					     dtc_install_centos(8)

NAME
dtc_install_centos - bootstrap a CentOS install to use in a chroot or VM SYNOPSIS
dtc_install_centos <install root> <yum environment> DESCRIPTION
This shell script is part of the dtc-xen package, generally to be used by the dtc panel to install a new a Xen VPS server. This script is called by dtc_reinstall_os when the user chooses to install the CentOS operating system. How it works: it generates a temporary yum configuration in the yum environment directory, that directs yum to act inside the install root instead of in the base system; then it kindly requests yum to install the basesystem, centos-release and yum packages onto it. Yum then uses the configuration to download the required (usually, security-updated) packages and then perform the RPM installation process under the install root. It requires both RPM and yum. It does work under Debian (it was developed in Ubuntu first). It should also work on RPM-based systems without destroying the system-wide RPM and yum configurations. OPTION
<install root> Target directory where CentOS will be deployed. Must exist beforehand. <yum environment> Directory where yum will store the repository manifests and configuration. Will be automatically created. Cached RPMs and manifests will be left, as usual, in a directory var/cache/yum inside the install root. EXAMPLE
dtc_install_centos /root/yum /xen/13 This will setup the operating system in /xen/13, with the CentOS configuration folder in /root/yum. BUGS
It's limited to CentOS 5 at the moment. It must be run as root. Under some circumstances, the installation process itself may kill processes running on the host machine. The chroot yum does should be sufficient to avoid this, but we haven't been able, yet, to ascertain why this fails sometimes. SEE ALSO
dtc_reinstall_os(8) VERSION
This documentation describes dtc_install_os version 0.3.1. See http://www.gplhost.com/software-dtc-xen.html for updates. dtc_install_centos(8)
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