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diff --git a/release/doc/fr_FR.ISO8859-1/installation/common/trouble.xml b/release/doc/fr_FR.ISO8859-1/installation/common/trouble.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 817329e..0000000 --- a/release/doc/fr_FR.ISO8859-1/installation/common/trouble.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,535 +0,0 @@ -<!-- - The FreeBSD Documentation Project - The FreeBSD French Documentation Project - - $Id$ - $FreeBSD$ - Original revision: 1.5 - - This file contains the comments of the old TROUBLE.TXT file. ---> -<sect1 xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" version="5.0" xml:id="trouble"> - <title>***Non traduit***Troubleshooting</title> - - <sect2 xml: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 filesystems and their contents. Some - UNIX administration experience <emphasis>is</emphasis> required to - use the fixit option.</para> - </sect2> - - <sect2> - <title>Common Installation Problems, Q&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 <filename>wd0</filename> and - <filename>wd2</filename>.</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&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 <filename>mcd0</filename> and - <filename>mcd1</filename> 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 an 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 a 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> |