freebsd-nq/release/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/installation/common/trouble.sgml
2001-11-06 21:24:59 +00:00

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<!--
$FreeBSD$
This file contains the comments of the old TROUBLE.TXT file.
-->
<sect1 id="trouble">
<title>Troubleshooting</title>
<sect2 id="repairing">
<title>Repairing an Existing &os; Installation</title>
<para>&os; features a
<quote>Fixit</quote> option in the top menu of the boot floppy.
To use it, you will also need either a
<filename>fixit.flp</filename> image floppy, generated in the same
fashion as the boot floppy, or the <quote>live filesystem</quote>
CDROM; typically the second CDROM in a multi-disc &os;
distribution.</para>
<para>To invoke fixit, simply boot the
<filename>kern.flp</filename> floppy, choose the
<quote>Fixit</quote> item and insert the fixit floppy or CDROM
when asked. You will then be placed into a shell with a wide
variety of commands available (in the <filename>/stand</filename>
and <filename>/mnt2/stand</filename> directories) for checking,
repairing and examining file systems and their contents. Some
UNIX administration experience <emphasis>is</emphasis> required to
use the fixit option.</para>
</sect2>
<sect2>
<title>Common Installation Problems, Q&amp;A</title>
<qandaset>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I go to boot from the hard disk for the first time
after installing &os;, the kernel loads and probes my
hardware, but stops with messages like:</para>
<screen>changing root device to wd1s1a panic: cannot mount root</screen>
<para>What is wrong? What can I do?</para>
<para>What is this
<literal>bios_drive:interface(unit,partition)kernel_name</literal>
thing that is displayed with the boot help?</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>There is a longstanding problem in the case where the
boot disk is not the first disk in the system. The BIOS
uses a different numbering scheme to &os;, and working
out which numbers correspond to which is difficult to get
right.</para>
<para>In the case where the boot disk is not the first disk
in the system, &os; can need some help finding it. There
are two common situations here, and in both of these cases,
you need to tell &os; where the root filesystem is. You
do this by specifying the BIOS disk number, the disk type
and the &os; disk number for that type.</para>
<para>The first situation is where you have two IDE disks,
each configured as the master on their respective IDE
busses, and wish to boot &os; from the second disk. The
BIOS sees these as disk 0 and disk 1, while &os; sees
them as <devicename>wd0</devicename> and
<devicename>wd2</devicename>.</para>
<para>&os; is on BIOS disk 1, of type
<literal>wd</literal> and the &os; disk number is 2, so
you would say:</para>
<screen><userinput>1:wd(2,a)kernel</userinput></screen>
<para>Note that if you have a slave on the primary bus, the
above is not necessary (and is effectively wrong).</para>
<para>The second situation involves booting from a SCSI disk
when you have one or more IDE disks in the system. In this
case, the &os; disk number is lower than the BIOS disk
number. If you have two IDE disks as well as the SCSI disk,
the SCSI disk is BIOS disk 2, type <literal>da</literal> and
&os; disk number 0, so you would say:</para>
<screen><userinput>2:da(0,a)kernel</userinput></screen>
<para>To tell &os; that you want to boot from BIOS disk
2, which is the first SCSI disk in the system. If you only
had one IDE disk, you would use '1:' instead.</para>
<para>Once you have determined the correct values to use,
you can put the command exactly as you would have typed it
in the <filename>/boot.config</filename> file using a
standard text editor. Unless instructed otherwise, &os;
will use the contents of this file as the default response
to the <literal>boot:</literal> prompt.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I go to boot from the hard disk for the first time
after installing &os;, but the Boot Manager prompt just
prints <literal>F?</literal> at the boot menu each time but
the boot won't go any further.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>The hard disk geometry was set incorrectly in the
Partition editor when you installed &os;. Go back into
the partition editor and specify the actual geometry of your
hard disk. You must reinstall &os; again from the
beginning with the correct geometry.</para>
<para>If you are failing entirely in figuring out the
correct geometry for your machine, here's a tip: Install a
small DOS partition at the beginning of the disk and install
&os; after that. The install program will see the DOS
partition and try to infer the correct geometry from it,
which usually works.</para>
<para>The following tip is no longer recommended, but is left here
for reference:</para>
<blockquote>
<para>If you are setting up a truly dedicated &os;
server or workstation where you don't care for (future)
compatibility with DOS, Linux or another operating system,
you've also got the option to use the entire disk (`A' in
the partition editor), selecting the non-standard option
where &os; occupies the entire disk from the very first
to the very last sector. This will leave all geometry
considerations aside, but is somewhat limiting unless
you're never going to run anything other than &os; on a
disk.</para>
</blockquote>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
</qandaset>
</sect2>
<sect2>
<title>Known Hardware Problems, Q&amp;A</title>
<note>
<para>Please send hardware tips for this section to &a.jkh;.</para>
</note>
<qandaset>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>The &man.mcd.4; driver keeps thinking that it has
found a device and this stops my Intel EtherExpress card
from working.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>Use the UserConfig utility (see
<filename>HARDWARE.TXT</filename>) and disable the probing
of the <devicename>mcd0</devicename> and
<devicename>mcd1</devicename> devices. Generally speaking,
you should only leave the devices that you will be using
enabled in your kernel.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>&os; claims to support the 3Com PCMCIA card, but my
card isn't recognized when it's plugged into my
laptop.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>There are a couple of possible problems. First of
all, &os; does not support multi-function cards, so if
you have a combo Ethernet/modem card (such as the 3C562), it
won't work. The default driver for the 3C589 card was
written just like all of the other drivers in &os;, and
depend on the card's own configuration data stored in NVRAM
to work. You must correctly configure &os;'s driver to
match the IRQ, port, and IOMEM stored in NVRAM.</para>
<para>Unfortunately, the only program capable of reading
them is the 3COM supplied DOS program. This program must be
run on a absolutely clean system (no other drivers must be
running), and the program will whine about CARD-Services not
being found, but it will continue. This is necessary to
read the NVRAM values. You want to know the IRQ, port, and
IOMEM values (the latter is called the CIS tuple by 3COM).
The first two can be set in the program, the third is
un-settable, and can only be read. Once you have these
values, set them in UserConfig and your card will be
recognized.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>&os; finds my PCMCIA network card, but no packets
appear to be sent even though it claims to be working.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>Many PCMCIA cards have the ability to use either the
10-Base2 (BNC) or 10-BaseT connectors for connecting to the
network. The driver is unable to <quote>auto-select</quote>
the correct connector, so you must tell it which connector
to use. In order to switch between the two connectors, the
link flags must be set. Depending on the model of the card,
<option>-link0 link1</option> or <option>-link0
-link1</option> will choose the correct network connector.
You can set these in &man.sysinstall.8; by using the
<literal>Extra options to ifconfig:</literal> field in the
network setup screen.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>The system finds my &man.ed.4; network card, but I
keep getting device timeout errors.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>Your card is probably on a different IRQ from what is
specified in the kernel configuration. The ed driver does
not use the `soft' configuration by default (values entered
using EZSETUP in DOS), but it will use the software
configuration if you specify <literal>?</literal> in the IRQ field of your
kernel config file.</para>
<para>Either move the jumper on the card to a hard
configuration setting (altering the kernel settings if
necessary), or specify the IRQ as <literal>-1</literal> in UserConfig or <literal>?</literal>
in your kernel config file. This will tell the kernel to
use the soft configuration.</para>
<para>Another possibility is that your card is at IRQ 9,
which is shared by IRQ 2 and frequently a cause of problems
(especially when you have a VGA card using IRQ 2!). You
should not use IRQ 2 or 9 if at all possible.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I have a Matsushita/Panasonic drive but it isn't
recognized by the system.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>Make certain that the I/O port that the &man.matcd.4; driver
is set to is correct for the host interface card you have.
(Some SoundBlaster DOS drivers report a hardware I/O port
address for the CD-ROM interface that is 0x10 lower than it
really is.)</para>
<para>If you are unable to determine the settings for the
card by examining the board or documentation, you can use
UserConfig to change the 'port' address (I/O port) to -1 and
start the system. This setting causes the driver to look at
a number of I/O ports that various manufacturers use for
their Matsushita/Panasonic/Creative CD-ROM interfaces. Once
the driver locates the address, you should run UserConfig
again and specify the correct address. Leaving the 'port'
parameter set to -1 increases the amount of time that it
takes the system to boot, and this could interfere with
other devices.</para>
<para>The double-speed Matsushita CR-562 and CR-563 are the
only drives that are supported.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I booted the install floppy on my IBM ThinkPad (tm)
laptop, and the keyboard is all messed up.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>Older IBM laptops use a non-standard keyboard
controller, so you must tell the keyboard driver (atkbd0) to
go into a special mode which works on the ThinkPads. Change
the atkbd0 'Flags' to 0x4 in UserConfig and it should work
fine. (Look in the Input Menu for 'Keyboard'.)</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>When I try to boot the install floppy, I see the
following message and nothing seems to be happening. I
cannot enter anything from the keyboard either.</para>
<screen>Keyboard: no</screen>
</question>
<answer>
<para>Due to lack of space, full support for old XT/AT
(84-key) keyboards is no longer available in the bootblocks.
Some notebook computers may also have this type of keyboard.
If you are still using this kind of hardware, you will see
the above message appears when you boot from the CD-ROM or
an install floppy.</para>
<para>As soon as you see this message, hit the space bar,
and you will see the prompt:</para>
<screen>>> FreeBSD/i386 BOOT
Default: x:xx(x,x)/boot/loader
boot:</screen>
<para>Then enter <userinput>-Dh</userinput>, and things
should proceed normally.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I have a Matsushita/Panasonic CR-522, a
Matsushita/Panasonic CR-523 or a TEAC CD55a drive, but it is
not recognized even when the correct I/O port is set.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>These CD-ROM drives are currently not supported by
&os;. The command sets for these drives are not compatible
with the double-speed CR-562 and CR-563 drives.</para>
<para>The single-speed CR-522 and CR-523 drives can be
identified by their use of a CD-caddy. </para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I'm trying to install from a tape drive but all I get
is something like this on the screen:</para>
<screen>sa0(aha0:1:0) NOT READY csi 40,0,0,0</screen>
</question>
<answer>
<para>There's a limitation in the current &man.sysinstall.8;
that the tape <emphasis>must</emphasis> be in the drive
while &man.sysinstall.8; is started or it won't be detected.
Try again with the tape in the drive the whole time.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I've installed &os; onto my system, but it hangs
when booting from the hard drive with the message:</para>
<screen>Changing root to /dev/da0a</screen>
</question>
<answer>
<para>his problem may occur in a system with a 3com 3c509
Ethernet adapter. The &man.ep.4; device driver appears to
be sensitive to probes for other devices that also use
address 0x300. Boot your &os; system by power cycling
the machine (turn off and on). At the
<literal>Boot:</literal> prompt specify the
<option>-c</option>. This will invoke UserConfig (see
<xref linkend="repairing"> above).
Use the <literal>disable</literal>
command to disable the device probes for all devices at
address 0x300 except the ep0 driver. On exit, your machine
should successfully boot &os;.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>My system can not find my Intel EtherExpress 16 card.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>You must set your Intel EtherExpress 16 card to be
memory mapped at address 0xD0000, and set the amount of
mapped memory to 32K using the Intel supplied
<filename>softset.exe</filename> program.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>When installing on an EISA HP Netserver, my on-board
AIC-7xxx SCSI controller isn't detected.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>This is a known problem, and will hopefully be fixed
in the future. In order to get your system installed at
all, boot with the <option>-c</option> option into
UserConfig, but <emphasis>don't</emphasis> use the pretty
visual mode but the plain old CLI mode. Type:</para>
<screen><userinput>eisa 12</userinput>
<userinput>quit</userinput></screen>
<para>at the prompt. (Instead of `quit', you might also
type `visual', and continue the rest of the configuration
session in visual mode.) While it's recommended to compile
a custom kernel, dset now also understands to save
this value.</para>
<para>Refer to the FAQ topic 3.16 for an explanation of the
problem, and for how to continue. Remember that you can
find the FAQ on your local system in /usr/share/doc/FAQ,
provided you have installed the `doc' distribution.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I have a Panasonic AL-N1 or Rios Chandler Pentium
machine and I find that the system hangs before ever getting
into the installation now.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>Your machine doesn't like the new
<literal>i586_copyout</literal> and
<literal>i586_copyin</literal> code for some reason. To
disable this, boot the installation boot floppy and when it
comes to the very first menu (the choice to drop into kernel
UserConfig mode or not) choose the command-line interface
(<quote>expert mode</quote>) version and type the following
at it:</para>
<screen><userinput>flags npx0 1</userinput></screen>
<para>Then proceed normally to boot. This will be saved
into your kernel, so you only need to do it once.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I have this CMD640 IDE controller that is said to be
broken.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>Yes, it is. &os; does not support this controller
except through the legacy wdc driver.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>On a Compaq Aero notebook, I get the message <quote>No
floppy devices found! Please check ...</quote> when trying to
install from floppy.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>With Compaq being always a little different from other
systems, they do not announce their floppy drive in the CMOS
RAM of an Aero notebook. Therefore, the floppy disk driver
assumes there is no drive configured. Go to the UserConfig
screen, and set the Flags value of the fdc0 device to 0x1.
This pretends the existence of the first floppy drive (as a
1.44 MB drive) to the driver without asking the CMOS at
all.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>When I go to boot my Intel AL440LX
(<quote>Atlanta</quote>) -based system from the hard disk the
first time, it stops with a <literal>Read Error</literal>
message.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>There appears to be a bug in the BIOS on at least some
of these boards, this bug results in the &os; bootloader
thinking that it is booting from a floppy disk. This is
only a problem if you are not using the BootEasy boot
manager. Slice the disk in <quote>compatible</quote>mode
and install BootEasy during the &os; installation to
avoid the bug, or upgrade the BIOS (see Intel's web site for
details).</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>When installing on an Dell Poweredge XE, Dell
proprietary RAID controller DSA (Dell SCSI Array) isn't
recognized.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>Configure the DSA to use AHA-1540 emulation using EISA
configuration utility. After that &os; detects the DSA
as an Adaptec AHA-1540 SCSI controller, with irq 11 and port
340. Under emulation mode system will use DSA RAID disks,
but you cannot use DSA-specific features such as watching
RAID health.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>My Ethernet adapter is detected as an AMD PCnet-FAST
(or similar) but it doesn't work. (Eg. onboard Ethernet on
IBM Netfinity 5xxx or 7xxx)</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>The &man.lnc.4; driver is currently faulty, and will
often not work correctly with the PCnet-FAST and
PCnet-FAST+. You need to install a different Ethernet
adapter.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>I have an IBM EtherJet PCI card, it is detected by the
&man.fxp.4; driver correctly, but the lights on the card don't
come on and it doesn't connect to the network.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>We don't understand why this happens. Neither do IBM
(we asked them). The card is a standard Intel EtherExpress
Pro/100 with an IBM label on it, and these cards normally
work just fine. You may see these symptoms only in some IBM
Netfinity servers. The only solution is to install a
different Ethernet adapter.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>When I configure the network during installation on an
IBM Netfinity 3500, the system freezes.</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>There is a problem with the onboard Ethernet in the
Netfinity 3500 which we have not been able to identify at
this time. It may be related to the SMP features of the
system being misconfigured. You will have to install
another Ethernet adapter and avoid attempting to configure
the onboard adapter at any time.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>When I install onto a drive managed by a Mylex PCI
RAID controller, the system fails to boot (eg. with a
<literal>read error</literal> message).</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>There is a bug in the Mylex driver which results in it
ignoring the <quote>8GB</quote> geometry mode setting in the
BIOS. Use the 2GB mode instead.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
</qandaset>
</sect2>
</sect1>