<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0" ><tr><td valign="top" style="font: inherit;"><br><br><br>--- On <b>Tue, 12/16/08, Rashkae <i><ubuntu@tigershaunt.com></i></b> wrote:<br><blockquote style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;">From: Rashkae <ubuntu@tigershaunt.com><br>Subject: Re: Install problems with Partition Window<br>To: lpaz1@yahoo.com, "Ubuntu user technical support, not for general discussions" <ubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com><br>Date: Tuesday, December 16, 2008, 1:51 PM<br><br><pre>L Paz wrote:<br>> On with the continuing saga, I guess. I booted up from the Alternate CD,<br>as Charlie suggested, and when I try to install, I get to a screen that says No<br>Disks selected. if you know the driver you need , select it from the following<br>list:<br>> <br>> then there, is a long list of drivers to choose from.<br>> <br>> So, I guess my question is, if I go into
Grub and choose the 2.6.22-16<br>generic kernel to boot into, is there a command I can use that will tell me what<br>the hard drive driver is that currently is being used?<br>> <br>> Thanks again for all your assistance with this!<br>> <br>><br><br>Try the Device manager.. On my system, in can be found in System -><br>Preferences -> Hardware Information<br><br>(Why Preferences and not Administration? I haven't a clue.)<br><br>You should be able to find your hard drive in the long list, and<br>collapse the tree until you see the controller device. There should<br>also be an advanced tab for this device that tells you which "Linux<br>Driver" is being used.<br><br><br>However, unless you are trying to track this bug down for the kernel<br>devs, it's probably more productive to find out what you need to do to<br>get the default hardy kernel to auto-detect your system.<br><br>Some ideas you might pursue., at least to narrow down problem
suspects:<br><br>Make sure your hard drive is the only device on the IDE cable.<br>Sometimes the CD-ROM is plugged in to the same cable as the Hard drive.<br> Where possible, each device should be on it's own channel/cable.<br><br>If you must have 2 devices on an IDE cable, jumper them for<br>Master/Slave, rather than relying on Cable Select.<br><br>If you have only 1 device on the hard drive ribbon, verify that it is<br>jumpered correctly. Some Hard drives have different jumper<br>configurations for master when a slave is present and single drive.<br><br>In the Bios, disable RAID (if you have a raid chip function on your<br>mobo) (Note: this might be a bad idea if you really are using multiple<br>hard drives in a raid configuration)<br><br>And finally, or maybe this should be firstly, since you already have a<br>working system and don't need to install from scratch (or, at least, we<br>know installing from scratch won't resolve this issue.), be sure
to test<br>my idea of updating the Hardy kernel and see if the newer kernels<br>already fix this. There's no much point chasing your tail trying to fix<br>something that was already fixed last year.<br><br>================================================================<br>Ok, I tried your suggestion to runapt-get update and apt-get upgrade. The first time I ran apt-get update,<br>this message was towards the bottom:<br>Reading package lists... Done<br>W: Duplicate sources.list entry http://us.archive.ubuntu.com hardy/universe Packages (/var/lib/apt/lists/us.archive.ubuntu.com_ubuntu_dists_hardy_universe_binary-i386_Packages)<br>W: You may want to run apt-get update to correct these problems<br><br>So I ran apt-get update , again, and this time there were no warning messages when<br>it completed:<br>Reading package lists... Done<br><br>Ok, so now I ran apt-get upgrade, but it looks like the only thing that was upgraded<br>was the documents. I did not
see anything about the kernel, at any rate:<br>Reading package lists... Done<br>paz@paz-desktop:~$ sudo apt-get upgrade<br>Reading package lists... Done<br>Building dependency tree <br>Reading state information... Done<br>The following packages will be upgraded:<br> ubuntu-docs<br>1 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.<br>Need to get 3520kB of archives.<br>After this operation, 0B of additional disk space will be used.<br>Do you want to continue [Y/n]? y<br>Get:1 http://us.archive.ubuntu.com hardy-updates/main ubuntu-docs 8.06.1 [3520kB]<br>Fetched 3520kB in 56s (62.5kB/s) <br>(Reading database ... 125371 files and directories currently installed.)<br>Preparing to replace ubuntu-docs 8.04.2~hardy (using .../ubuntu-docs_8.06.1_all.deb) ...<br>Unpacking replacement ubuntu-docs ...<br>Setting up ubuntu-docs (8.06.1) ...<br>$<br><br>I will take the hard drive off and check the
manufacturer, and check the jumpers, as you suggest.<br>I will also check the Bios settings, as you suggest.<br><br>I am not certain of what all the ramifications are by running on the<br>Ubuntu 8.04.1, kernel 2.6.22-16-generic kernel, instead of the<br>Ubuntu 8.04.1, kernel 2.6.24-22-generic kernel?<br>But I guess one of the reasons I would like to either fix this or<br>reinstall is because my VPN connection with the Cisco VPN software does not<br>work, and I think it has something to do with me actually running the system<br>on the 2.6.22-16 generic kernel, but I am not positive.<br><br>Thanks again for your help with this!<br><br></pre></blockquote></td></tr></table><br>