From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Tue, 15 Aug 1995 09:28:31 -0400 From: Ture P}lsson ture@lysator.liu.se Subject: [comp.os.linux.misc] Help wanted, Plan9 a piece of junk! Topicbox-Message-UUID: 16621d08-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19950815132831.yur_xYges8_vc79eNDV66KSbZDvsaUR_F_4Bul7UhEM@z> > >[...] > >I want to recover my more than half-year work, since I don't have tape > >backup. > > HAHAHAHA!! Stop it, you're killing me! Seriously, I don't like the way the 4-disk set is supposed to magically figure out what partition on my disk to install on. I have a farily complicated partition setup, and I want to tell Plan 9 to "go onto /dev/hda3, period!" (Or whatever Plan 9 calls the third partition on the first disk). However, I haven't managed to get as far as actually installing the thing. During the fist stage, copying files to C:\PLAN9, it says "problem copying file: file does not exist" about a file which most certainly is on the floppy -- both DOS and Linux can read it. (Naturally, I left my notes at home so I don't remember the exact name of the file...) After rebooting into DOS, there's no trace of Plan9 on C:, but when I reboot from the first Plan9 floppy it tells me that Plan9 is already on my disk, and asks whether I want to reconfigure. I'm beginning to suspect that the installation program somehow gets confused by my setup, and tries to copy the floppy onto itself, or something similarly stupid. Is that possible? I _am_ two megabytes showt of RAM (i.e, I have only 6 MB). Is 8 Mbytes a "hard" limit, or is it just a "it-will-run-but-not-very-fast" limit? (Even Solaris can run in 8 Mbytes, and I though Plan9 was supposed to be small?) My setup is: Noname asian-made 386+387sx, AMI BIOS, Trident 8900C, two Seagate IDE disks (102 + 545 Mbytes, on the same controller), one 3.5" (known by dos as A:) and one 5.25" floppy.