Activity log for bug #954197

Date Who What changed Old value New value Message
2012-03-13 16:27:59 Colin Watson bug added bug
2012-03-13 16:28:35 Colin Watson description I have a Supermicro P6SBA motherboard with a 700 MHz Pentium III, 512 M of ram, 20G and 120G hard drives, and a DSL Internet connection. This system has been running Windows 98 for years, and I wanted to try Ubuntu 10.04. Using the network kernel and initrd, the systems boots OK and downloads the rest of the installer OK from the default mirror (us.archive.ubuntu.com) except for one small problem (see below). Everything seems OK until I try to load the base system. After downloading files for about 3.5 minutes (often when it is trying to get the file libklibc), I see the network activity stop, and soon after I get an error message stating that it has failed to load that file (all others up to that point were OK). After about 2 more minutes, during which time one or more additional files fail to load, the network activity goes back to normal, and all the remaining files for the base system download OK. Due to the failed files, I get the error message that the base system has failed to install. I did successfully download the failed files using wget into /target/var/cache/apt/archives while the automatic download was still in progress using a console, but after the above failure. The system still thinks that the files were not successfully downloaded, and I don't know how to tell the system that they are there and OK. I have tried using many different mirrors at different times of the day, and both http and ftp, all fail as above. Using a similar technique, I was able to successfully load Debian 5.08, so I think the hardware is OK, but I would really like to try the Ubuntu. To try to rule out any problem with the DSL, I downloaded a very large file that took 10 minutes of continuous running under Windows. Then I went back to the 10.04 install and did the same thing using wget at a console, just after partitioning the hard drive, and just before starting the base install, and it worked fine. While loading the installer, one file did fail to load, but you were given the opportunity to retry, which took care of the problem. I wish the base install allowed retries instead of just "go back" and "continue", which don't seem to make any additional attempt to retry. Any help would be appreciated. Gary [This bug was originally reported by Gary Potwin in https://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubiquity/+question/158404] I have a Supermicro P6SBA motherboard with a 700 MHz Pentium III, 512 M of ram, 20G and 120G hard drives, and a DSL Internet connection. This system has been running Windows 98 for years, and I wanted to try Ubuntu 10.04. Using the network kernel and initrd, the systems boots OK and downloads the rest of the installer OK from the default mirror (us.archive.ubuntu.com) except for one small problem (see below). Everything seems OK until I try to load the base system. After downloading files for about 3.5 minutes (often when it is trying to get the file libklibc), I see the network activity stop, and soon after I get an error message stating that it has failed to load that file (all others up to that point were OK). After about 2 more minutes, during which time one or more additional files fail to load, the network activity goes back to normal, and all the remaining files for the base system download OK. Due to the failed files, I get the error message that the base system has failed to install. I did successfully download the failed files using wget into /target/var/cache/apt/archives while the automatic download was still in progress using a console, but after the above failure. The system still thinks that the files were not successfully downloaded, and I don't know how to tell the system that they are there and OK. I have tried using many different mirrors at different times of the day, and both http and ftp, all fail as above. Using a similar technique, I was able to successfully load Debian 5.08, so I think the hardware is OK, but I would really like to try the Ubuntu. To try to rule out any problem with the DSL, I downloaded a very large file that took 10 minutes of continuous running under Windows. Then I went back to the 10.04 install and did the same thing using wget at a console, just after partitioning the hard drive, and just before starting the base install, and it worked fine. While loading the installer, one file did fail to load, but you were given the opportunity to retry, which took care of the problem.  I wish the base install allowed retries instead of just "go back" and "continue", which don't seem to make any additional attempt to retry. Any help would be appreciated. Gary
2012-03-13 16:28:40 Colin Watson affects ubiquity (Ubuntu) debootstrap (Ubuntu)
2012-03-13 16:28:58 Colin Watson bug task added base-installer (Ubuntu)
2012-03-13 16:49:50 Colin Watson bug watch added http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=618920
2012-03-13 16:49:50 Colin Watson bug watch added http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=283600
2012-03-13 16:50:15 Colin Watson bug task added debootstrap (Debian)
2012-03-13 16:50:43 Colin Watson bug task added base-installer (Debian)
2012-03-13 16:50:53 Colin Watson base-installer (Ubuntu): status New Triaged
2012-03-13 16:50:56 Colin Watson base-installer (Ubuntu): importance Undecided Medium
2012-03-13 16:50:59 Colin Watson debootstrap (Ubuntu): status New Triaged
2012-03-13 16:51:01 Colin Watson debootstrap (Ubuntu): importance Undecided Medium
2012-03-13 16:51:55 Colin Watson attachment added test-proxy https://bugs.launchpad.net/debian/+source/base-installer/+bug/954197/+attachment/2863923/+files/test-proxy
2012-03-13 17:44:21 Bug Watch Updater base-installer (Debian): status Unknown New
2012-03-13 17:47:51 Colin Watson debootstrap (Ubuntu): status Triaged In Progress
2012-03-13 17:57:23 Bug Watch Updater debootstrap (Debian): status Unknown New
2012-03-14 09:57:12 Colin Watson debootstrap (Ubuntu): status In Progress Fix Released
2012-03-15 01:05:49 Bug Watch Updater debootstrap (Debian): status New Fix Released