I had download the iso of Open SUSE 11.2, 11.3 and 11.4 and confirmed with the MD5 code. Then, I burned them using the lowest speed which the system supported. But the error message “Make sure that CD number 1 is in your drive.” is always displayed while installing OS.
How can I do?
Environment:
CPU i7-2710QE.
PCH: B1 stepping.
Platform: Huron River based.
RAM: 2Gx1 unbuffered none ECC RAM.
Target OS: Open SUSE 11.2, 11.3 and 11.4 for 32bit.
Hdd: WD 160G SATA HDD using IDE mode by setting setup.
DVD: Pioneer DVR-217BK.
USB keyboard/mouse.
Onboard VGA port for display output.
Which iso’s did you download? There are different ones (full dvd, live cd
for gnome, kde, net install cd).
This message is shown by the net install disk when it cannot get a network
connection and asks for a local installation medium.
–
PC: oS 11.3 64 bit | Intel Core2 Quad Q8300@2.50GHz | KDE 4.6.3 | GeForce
9600 GT | 4GB Ram
Eee PC 1201n: oS 11.4 64 bit | Intel Atom 330@1.60GHz | KDE 4.6.0 | nVidia
ION | 3GB Ram
On 05/24/2011 02:36 PM, haminpe wrote:
>
> I had download the iso of Open SUSE 11.2, 11.3 and 11.4
did you download them from http://software.opensuse.org/ or some other
site? if another, which…give full URL please…
–
dd CAVEAT: http://is.gd/bpoMD
[NNTP via openSUSE 11.4 [2.6.37.6-0.5] + KDE 4.6.0 + Thunderbird 3.1.10]
Dual booting with Sluggish Loser7 on Acer Aspire One D255
I encountered this error when installing openSUSE-11.3 and later openSUSE-11.4 on an ancient HP notebook PC that was using an external USB drive (where that notebook belongs to our LUG (Linux Users Group)). Your PC is light years newer and faster in comparison.
The solution that worked for me was when the error appeared, to eject the DVD and re-insert the DVD (which did not work) and then switch between <CTRL><ALT><F1> display (when there I typed ‘fdisk -l’ , ‘df -Th’ and ‘lspci’ and ‘lsusb’ ) and back to the main install display with <CTRL><ALT><F7> and then select the “RETRY” on the warning menu, and I do that a few times (going back and forth) and eventually the install would recognize the DVD and continue the install.
Its an annoying bug, but my access to the LUG laptop is not sufficiently guaranteed that I can support a bug report on this.
On 06/08/2011 05:36 AM, haminpe wrote:
>
> However, I still can not install anyone until now. Could you kinldly
> provide the suggestion?
what happens if you download, burn and boot from a Live CD? how does the
live image run?
did you do this with the DVD images you burned, before you tried to
install: http://tinyurl.com/2ebcf27 (and, be sure to do that before
running the live CD)
since you are having the same trouble with three different versions of
openSUSE, it is most likely a hardware problem (as oldcpu spoke of)…
did you try oldcpu’s bug work around?
–
dd CAVEAT: http://is.gd/bpoMD
via NNTP openSUSE 11.4 [2.6.37.6-0.5] + KDE 4.6.0 + Thunderbird 3.1.10
Acer Aspire One D255, 1.66 GHz Atom, 1 GB RAM, Intel Pineview graphics
When your gecko is broken you have a reptile dysfunction! *
What about creating a bootable usb as a workaround? You can do that with the
live cd images.
Or you just burn the net installer cd (I understand that you can boot from
the cd and your problem comes later) and perform a pure network install.
–
PC: oS 11.3 64 bit | Intel Core2 Quad Q8300@2.50GHz | KDE 4.6.3 | GeForce
9600 GT | 4GB Ram
Eee PC 1201n: oS 11.4 64 bit | Intel Atom 330@1.60GHz | KDE 4.6.0 | nVidia
ION | 3GB Ram
Because this is the test for OS installation, I need to make sure there is no problem to install the OS from SATA port 0 and port 1 with IDE mode on my platform. So I can not install it from USB key or use very special workaround to do this test.
Using the Network version is successful to install this OS, but there is the same message “Insert Installation CD-ROM or DVD.” after clicking “Check Installation Media”. I think the SATA DVD does not work after loading kernel screen, and the “Eject” option of the menu is failed, too. Is the driver properly for SATA ODD to work?
I think the problem maybe the driver does not support the Intel 6 Series Chipset. Why I say that? Because I compare the platform named Calpella(i7 + Intel 5 Series Chipset) and Huron River(i7 + Intel 6 Series Chipset) installing information about SATA IDE controller. The result is as below:
In Calpella,
Before install an ata driver, the system shows “Intel 5 Series/3400 Series Chipset 4 Port SATA IDE Controller”.
In Huron River,
Before install an ata driver, the system shows “Intel IDE Interface”.
I think there is no driver for Intel 6 Series Chipset Family 4 port SATA IDE Controller in DVD or others. So that the DVD is always failed to use. Is this right?
On 2011-06-09 05:36, haminpe wrote:
> Using the Network version is successful to install this OS, but there
> is the same message “Insert Installation CD-ROM or DVD.”
This happens when it can not find the network, and reverts to local install.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.4 x86_64 “Celadon” at Telcontar)
“Insert Installation CD-ROM or DVD.” happens only when I clicking “Check Installation Media” using Network version. But it does not happen when I click “Install”.
On 2011-06-10 04:06, haminpe wrote:
>
> “Insert Installation CD-ROM or DVD.” happens only when I clicking “Check
> Installation Media” using Network version. But it does not happen when I
> click “Install”.
Interesting. Could be a bug, you may report it in Bugzilla and make sure.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.4 x86_64 “Celadon” at Telcontar)
We had that case in german SUSE forum.
I could remember a friend of mine having similar problem long time ago.
I rememered that the solution was to change SATA mode from IDE to AHCI (in BIOS).
This change was the solution for the guy in german forum.
But this may result in bluescreen when booting windows on a dualboot system.