hi, i think i found 2 bugs in the suse config. but i am curious if any others have experienced the same. i installed suse 7.1 on a gateway 7210 server with eepro100 card. problem 1: it could not save to modules.conf file. i have installed suse 7.1 at least 4 times. everytime, after activating the network card, i got a message, error occurred while saving modules.conf. when you reboot afterward, you see an error duing booting up, saying could not add default route because eth0 no such device. before i installed suse 7.1, i had redhat 7.0, so i saved modules.conf file. after i copied the file over, everything is good. the process does not even write to modules.conf file. in /etc, there is a file called modules.conf.- . problem 2: i noticed that my time is always wrong, my time zone is us eastern. it is always 4 hours behind. so, i changed the time. when i reboot, it lost the time again. then i noticed that /etc/localtime is linked to the wrong file, it is linked to ..//usr/share/zoneinfo/US/Eastern. obviously that is wrong. so i lined it to the correct file. when i reboot, the bad link is back again. anybody knows where during the boot up process, /etc/localtime is linked? i think suseconfig is the bad boy. anybody else experienced it? also, i want to upgrade to kernel 2.4.2 kernel using rpm. how do you do that? thanks __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Auctions - buy the things you want at great prices http://auctions.yahoo.com/
On Sun, May 06, 2001 at 01:05:41PM -0700, Zhigang Wang wrote:
problem 1: it could not save to modules.conf file. i have installed suse 7.1 at least 4 times. everytime, after activating the network card, i got a message, error occurred while saving modules.conf. when you reboot afterward, you see an error duing booting up, saying could not add default route because eth0 no such device. before i installed suse 7.1, i had redhat 7.0, so i saved modules.conf file. after i copied the file over, everything is good. the process does not even write to modules.conf file. in /etc, there is a file called modules.conf.- .
This is a known bug in YaST2 (that I ran into) if your /tmp directory is on a different partition. There's a fix for it at the SuSE FTP update site. You can either unmount /tmp and try again, or get the RPM and update your system and try again. -tara
participants (2)
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Tara L Andrews
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Zhigang Wang