13 Troubleshooting #
This section covers several common installation problems and describes possible solutions.
13.1 Checking media #
If you encounter any problems using the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server installation media, check its integrity. Boot from the media and choose › from the boot menu. A minimal system boots and lets you choose which device to check. Select the respective device and confirm with to perform the check.
On a running system, start YaST and choose
› . Insert the medium and click . The integrity check may take time.If errors are detected during the check, do not use this medium for installation. Media problems may, for example, occur when having burned the medium on DVD yourself. Burning the media at a low speed (4x) helps to avoid problems.
13.2 No bootable drive available #
If your computer cannot boot from USB or DVD drive, you have several alternatives.
- Using an external USB flash drive or DVD drive
Linux supports most existing USB flash drives and DVD drives. If the system has no USB flash drive or DVD drive, it is still possible that an external drive, connected through USB, FireWire, or SCSI, can be used to boot the system. Sometimes a firmware update may help if you encounter problems.
- Network boot via PXE
If the machine lacks both a USB flash drive and DVD drive, but it has a working Ethernet connection, you can perform a network-based installation. See Section 12.2.2, “Network installation using VNC” and Section 12.2.4, “Installation from network via SSH” for details.
- USB flash drive
You can use a USB flash drive if the machine lacks a DVD drive and a network connection. For details, see:
13.3 Booting from installation media fails #
The machine may fail to boot from the installation media due to an incorrect boot sequence setting in BIOS. The USB flash drive or DVD drive must be set as the first boot device in the BIOS boot sequence.
Enter the BIOS using the proper key shown by the boot routines and wait for the BIOS screen to appear.
To change the boot sequence in an AWARD BIOS, look for the Enter.
entry. Other manufacturers may have a different name for this, such as . When you have found the entry, select it and confirm withLook for a subentry called Page ↑ or Page ↓ until the USB flash drive or DVD drive is listed first.
or . Change the settings by pressingExit the BIOS setup screen by pressing Esc. To save the changes, select , or press F10. To save the modified settings, press Y.
Open the setup by pressing Ctrl–A.
Select
. The connected hardware components are now displayed.Make note of the SCSI ID of your USB flash drive or DVD drive.
Exit the menu with Esc.
Open Enter.
. Under , select and pressEnter the ID of the USB flash drive or DVD drive and press Enter again.
Press Esc twice to return to the start screen of the SCSI BIOS.
Exit this screen and confirm with
to boot the computer.
Regardless of what language and keyboard layout the installed system will be using, most BIOS configurations use the US keyboard layout as shown below.
13.4 Boot failure #
Some hardware types, mainly very old or very recent ones, fail to boot. Reasons can be missing support for hardware in the installation kernel or drivers causing problems on some specific hardware.
If installation fails using the standard
mode, try the following.With the installation media still in the drive, reboot the machine with Ctrl–Alt–Del or using the hardware reset button.
When the boot screen appears, press F5, use the arrow keyboard keys to navigate to , and press Enter to boot and initiate the installation process. This option disables the support for ACPI power management techniques.
Proceed with the installation as described in Chapter 9, Installation steps.
If this fails, proceed as above, but choose
instead. This option disables ACPI and DMA support. This option works with most hardware.
If both options fail, use the boot parameters prompt to specify the
kernel parameters to enable support for the hardware in use. For more
information about the parameters available as boot parameters, refer to the
kernel documentation located in
/usr/src/linux/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt
.
Install the kernel-source
package to view the kernel documentation.
There are other ACPI-related kernel parameters that can be entered at the boot prompt prior to booting for installation:
acpi=off
This parameter disables the complete ACPI subsystem on your computer. This may be useful if your computer cannot handle ACPI or if you think ACPI in your computer causes trouble.
acpi=force
Always enable ACPI even if your computer has a BIOS released before 2000. This parameter also enables ACPI if it is set in addition to
acpi=off
.acpi=noirq
Do not use ACPI for IRQ routing.
acpi=ht
Run only enough ACPI to enable hyper-threading.
acpi=strict
Be less tolerant of platforms that are not strictly ACPI-compliant.
pci=noacpi
Disable PCI IRQ routing of the new ACPI system.
pnpacpi=off
Enable this option to avoid issues caused by incorrectly configured device resources in BIOS.
notsc
Disable the time stamp counter. This option can be used to work around timing problems on your systems. It is a recent feature, so if you see regressions on your machine, especially time related or even total hangs, this option is worth a try.
nohz=off
Disable the nohz feature. If your machine hangs, enabling this option may help.
When you have determined the right parameter combination, YaST automatically writes them to the boot loader configuration to make sure that the system boots properly next time.
If errors occur when the kernel is loaded or during the installation, select
in the boot menu to check the memory. If returns an error, this usually indicates a hardware error.13.5 Graphical installer fails to start #
The machine boots into the installation interface, and the graphical installer does not start when you select
.There are several ways to deal with this situation.
Select another screen resolution for the installation dialogs.
Select
for installation.Perform a remote installation via VNC using the graphical installer.
Boot for installation.
Press F3 to open a menu from which to select a lower resolution for installation purposes.
Select Chapter 9, Installation steps.
and proceed with the installation as described in
Boot for installation.
Press F3 and select .
Select Chapter 9, Installation steps.
and proceed with the installation as described in
Boot for installation.
Enter the following text at the boot parameters prompt:
vnc=1 vncpassword=SOME_PASSWORD
Replace SOME_PASSWORD with the password to use for VNC installation.
Select Enter to start the installation.
then pressInstead of starting right into the graphical installation routine, the system continues to run in a text mode. The system then halts, displaying a message containing the IP address and port number at which the installer can be reached via a browser interface or a VNC viewer application.
When using a browser to access the installer, launch the browser and enter the address information provided by the installation routines on the future SUSE Linux Enterprise Server machine and press Enter:
http://IP_ADDRESS_OF_MACHINE:5801
A dialog opens in the browser window prompting you for the VNC password. Enter it and proceed with the installation as described in Chapter 9, Installation steps.
Important: Cross-platform supportInstallation via VNC works with any browser under any operating system, provided Java support is enabled.
Provide the IP address and password to your VNC viewer when prompted. A window opens, displaying the installation dialogs. Proceed with the installation as usual.
13.6 Only minimal boot screen is displayed #
You inserted the medium into the drive, the BIOS routines are finished, and the system launches a minimal, text-based interface. This may happen on any machine that does not have sufficient graphics memory for rendering a graphical boot screen.
Although the text boot screen looks minimal, it provides nearly the same functionality as the graphical one.
- Boot options
Unlike the graphical interface, the different boot parameters cannot be selected using the cursor keys of your keyboard. The boot menu of the text-mode boot screen provides keywords that can be entered at the boot prompt. These keywords match the options in the graphical version. Enter your choice and press Enter to launch the boot process.
- Custom boot options
After selecting a boot parameter, enter the appropriate keyword at the boot prompt or enter some custom boot parameters as described in Section 13.4, “Boot failure”. To launch the installation process, press Enter.
- Screen resolutions
Use the function keys (F1 ... F12) to determine the screen resolution for installation. If you need to boot in text mode, choose F3.
13.7 Log files #
For more information about log files created during installation, see Section 47.5, “Gathering information during the installation”.