Having problems with the Gentoo Handbook? If you're still working your way through it, or just need some info before you start your install, this is the place. All other questions go elsewhere.
I just got my new pc running again and I'm going to install Gentoo, so I downloaded the newest version (2004.3).
When I hit F2 to go to Verbose mode, I saw that the system was doing "autoconfigure".... and the little "status" bar had filled up the entire line and the flashing cursor was just spinning at the righ tside of my screen. I've installed Gentoo many times, and have never seen this. ANy ideas?
it loaded up, but didn't detect or bring up my eth0 card... i couldn't tell which because it wasn't bootsplash, which meant it was huge text and i couldn't read all that when it flew by on the screen
any idea why that would turn off my nic?
it's onboard, gigabit ehternet on a gigabyte motherboard
I have an IBM ThinkPad G40 laptop and I have a similar problem. No matter what options I seem to pass to the kernel (gentoo-nonfb), I can't seem to get past the pci-hotplug probe initilization. The system will just sit there doing nothing. I tried it in VMWare virtual machine, and it worked just fine like that so I'm not exactly sure what to do here. I also have worked with Gentoo before and didnt have any such issues with the old 2004.2 on a ThinkPad R30.
i still can't get this to work, and the 2004.2 cd gives me problems when tryin to install it. i got it installed once, but then i got a kernel panic on my first bootup, so i think i messed it up.
so i got fed up, installed suse 8.1 and my ethernet doesn't work!
No offense, but that's really sad. What brand and model of ethernet adapter do you have? Also, have you tried resetting your BIOS settings to their defaults? If doing so fixes the problem, work backwards, reconfiguring your BIOS to its previous settings gradually until you figure out what was causing the problem.
Have you tried the company website and/or sourceforge for any drivers? You might also try one of the generic drivers, such as tulip/rhine. Those work for a lot of devices to one extent or another.