Arch install on Imac G5-SOLVED

Trying to install Arch on a G5-Imac.CD boots normally but when trying to start the installer it gives an "Invalid memory access at SRR0 and SRR1 (with big numbers)"
Any idea what is going on here?
ARCHPPC finally running on 64-bit with 32-bit userland
Last edited by mianka (2010-04-09 15:41:22)

It gets the yaboot prompt,as far as I can see the kernel boots (on a white characters on black screen) then the colors invert with following messages:
done
found display etc; etc ...done
copying OF device tree...
building dt strings...
building dt sttructure ...
Device tree strings 0x02fcc000 -> 0x02fcd4e0
Device tree struct  0x02fce000 -> 0x02fd8000
Callind quiesce...
DO-QUIESCE finishedreturning from prom-init
Invalid memory access at   %SRR0:  00000000.0140399c  %SRR1:    10000000.00083030
ok
0 > _
END OF THE MESSAGE AS SEEN ONSCREEN
At this prompt it is impossible to give any command.
Hope this can help you.
So long.

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    Permissions were all repaired. New drive and other HDs were all verified. All devices were disconnected for install attempts. Tons of space on newly formatted drive, as well as other external drives I tried this on. So it's not the media, and it's not the hard drives.
    I am using third-party RAM. Tech tool indicates that it is okay. Perhaps I should try installing with only the RAM that came with the machine.
    I contacted Applecare several days ago and they said the usual. Repair disc. Repair Permissions. Try install. No good? Then try reformat from Tiger and install Leopard on clean HD. No luck. The next thing they would suggest is forwarding the issue to a specialist within applecare.

  • How do i wipe and re install my imac

    im trying to wipe and re install my imac any help appreciated     i have no disc.

    Welcome to the Apple Support Communities
    If your iMac didn't come with DVDs, follow these steps:
    1. Hold Command, Option (Alt) and R keys while your computer is starting to start in Internet Recovery. You may need to connect the iMac to a Wi-Fi network.
    2. On the OS X Utilities window, open Disk Utility, select "Macintosh HD" on the sidebar, go to Erase tab and erase the disk.
    3. Close Disk Utility and reinstall OS X.
    This will reinstall the original OS X version that came with the iMac. If you want to reinstall the actual version, hold Command and R keys instead of Command, Option and R keys. The reinstall may take hours because the Mac has to download OS X from the App Store

  • How can I install my iMac's Aperture on my MacBrookPro

    How can I install my iMac's Aperture on my MacBrookPro

    What is your MacOS X version? Is your Aperture version the recent Aperture 3.5.1? Your profile signature "Mac OS 9.1.x? " cannot be right; do you mean Mac OS 10.9.1.x? And is the system the same on both Macs?
    If you bought Aperture from the AppStore, launch the AppStore on your MBP:
    Sign into the AppStore  with the AppleID you used to buy Aperture on your iMac.
    Download Aperture from the "Purchased" tab and let it install.
    If you bought Aperture  as a boxed retail version, use the Installer CD/DVD and serial number to install Aperture  on your MBP.
    If you bought Aperture online as a trial version, and bought a serial number to unlock the trial, use the trial installer you downloaded.
    If you no longer should have the installation media or the downloaded trial installer, you can convert your working Aperture installation to an AppStore licence by upgrading your iMac version to Aperture 3.5.1.  Then you can install and reinstall from the AppStore on all your Macs, if they are running Mavericks.

  • TS3824 How can we install the iMac Graphics Firmware Update if the screen is white and I can't get to the Apple menu?

    How can I install the iMac Graphics Firmware Update 2.0, if the screen is white and I can't get to the Apple menu?  My computer has 5 vertical purple lines against white screen at startup before the Apple logo appears and the spinning gear...then everything disappears and the screen hangs on the white screen.  I have tried unplugging and removing all my peripherals and the COMMAND, OPTION, P & R set of keys and still nothing.  I have tried COMMAND C to start up from cd and it only tells me to turn off the computer and turn it back on.  I found information on Apple's Support pages regarding the iMac Graphics Firmware Update but I am unable to download and install if I can't get to the Apple menu.  Can anyone help?

    You may have hardware problem, I think a visit to your local Apple Store or AASP is in order.

  • Arch install experience / install CD uses devfs path names

    Hey, all I'm new to the forums, very happy arch user. I can't remember how I found arch, it must've been fate. I did my share of distro hopping. Actually, I plunged into the deep end with my first Linux install by choosing to run Gentoo. To their credit I was able to get it installed by relying on their solid documentation, even though I was an absolute novice at the time. Still I had to leave Gentoo because on the whole I'm too impatient to compile every single program from source.
    I then drifted to Mandrake for a short time, and then Fedora for a longer time. I became intimately familiar with dependency hell, and tracking down specific versions of libraries. I like using a few bleeding edge programs that are compiled out of CVS or SVN, and I found that it was a nightmare satisfying dependencies and dealing with package conflcts. I also ran Ubuntu for literally about 5 minutes. I won't get into why that lasted such a short time.
    I was on irc the the other day in a dev channel for bmpx, attempting to get the newest version of bmpx to run (still am). One of the devs asked me if I was running FC4 (Fedora Core 4). My response:
    Me: "I don't think I'd have a snowball's chance in hell of getting this working under FC."
    Dev: "I'm running FC5."
    I had to swallow my words. Here I am, a proud arch user with a seg faulting bmpx while the dev is running it on FC. Moral of the story: that guy must be a magician. That or FC is much more up to date now. Still, nothing could convince me to abandon pacman and go back to RPMs. Pacman is a Godsend. The whole ABS system is beautiful.
    I just recently reinstalled a fresh version of arch after something of a hiatus. A while ago I borked my system (I had an ugly situation with my partition table, among other things) and I didn't get around to resurrecting my install for a while.
    Now this was before Xorg7, and uDev, and ArchCK's move to initramfs. Obviously I was upgrading after those things were introduced. To further enrich this unhealthy mix, I have an ATI Radeon 9800, 2 ethernet cards (onboard), and 2 sound cards (PCI, and onboard). It might go without saying that I had a rocky install experience. It was like putting together a jigsaw puzzle blindfolded. Then I came to the Arch site and read about all the changes. Even then it was a messy experience, what with uDev simultaneously loading modules and whatnot (turns out that this can be a problem on systems with multiple soundcards or NICs). Finally after a boatload of troubleshooting, and much reading of the Wiki and the forum, I got everything setup. Queue angelic choir: I even got 3d acceleration via fglrx to work thanks to Iphitus's drivers, and posts in the forum by Cerebral.
    So I'm once again a happy arch user, but I'm glad it wasn't my first arch install. My first install was ultra smooth by comparison.
    If you're still reading you're probably wondering if I'm going to make a point. Well since, I'm new to the forum I figured I'd give a little background for anyone interested, and a little hope to to anyone wrestling with their install.
    Actually I do have a question which I alluded to in the subject of this post. I did an FTP install from a CD I downloaded several months ago.
    The Grub installer gives this message:
    "Arch Linux supports two /dev device systems, DevFS and uDev. You can select the one you want by modifying your bootloader's configuration."
    Obviously now only uDev is supported so that message is outdated. Plus the auto-generated fstab and menu.lst use the DevFS device paths by default.
    So my question is do the newer install CDs generate fstab and bootloader config files using the uDev naming scheme or do they still default to DevFS? I realize I was using an older CD, but it was confusing not knowing that DevFS had been completely abandoned.
    Also there should be an initrd line added to the autogenerated bootloader config (can't remember if it's there or not).
    Maybe these issues have already been addressed in newer install CDs. Hopefully they have for the sake of first-time installers.
    Whew okay I'm done, thanks guys.

    jesus franco wrote:It seems you have 0.7 even though 0.7.1 fixes all those devfs,initrd issues.
    Yea I think I do have the 0.7 CD. I just do FTP installs anyway so I didn't bother downloading a new CD. I was kinda guessing that the newer CD probably sorts out the uDev / DevFS issue but I wasn't sure. Nothing to worry about then!

  • Is the Arch install process the same as Mint's?

    1.)Taking into consideation that it took me a few trys to even register for the forum (facepalms) and that I have only ever been a Mint user, how does the Arch install process compare to that of Mints?
    2.)Will the install for a duel boot with Windows 7 be just as easy with Arch as it is with Mint?
    3.)Are my questions an indication that I am probably not ready for Arch? (laughs)
    4.)I really only use the Linux half of my duel boot when I am on unsecure networks while travleing and it makes me feel safer etc.. and when I do use it it's really just for browsing the internet. Should I just stick with Mint if thats all I really do?
    I have heard only good things about Arch and if it's not going to make me want to rip out my hair, I would certinly like to reaplce Mint with Arch. Thank you for your time and help.

    I came from Mint to Arch, via Debian and LFS. With regards to Grub, I'm still using the same grub installed by Mint two years ago, even though I no longer have Mint on the system. However, I do use a separate /boot partition and I'm comfortable editing grub.cfg directly when required. It does, however, mean that I never have to worry about adding a new OS for dual boot. Having said that, it's certainly not something I would suggest to anyone with limited experience.
    Don't let others put you off with the "Arch is high maintenance" thing. If I'm honest, I don't find Arch significantly more high maintenance than any other Linux distro, though certainly during install and initial set up it helps if you have a reasonably good understanding of how the system is configured. Whereas the likes of Mint and other pre-built general distros have most of the system configuration done for you out of the box, on Arch you have to walk the extra mile and do it yourself. Linux is like women. The more you have to do to get them, the more you will get out of them in the end
    Nevertheless, I fully agree with the "Test in a VM and get comfortable" philosophy first. This will help when you eventually come to a full install significantly. I did two test installs before a complete one, noting down where I had to pay particular attention. Also make sure that you don't need any firmware files, especially for network, when installing for real, or at least get the files and put them on a USB stick. Nothing worse than installing a system them not having any network to get the firmware required to get the network working. Catch 22 anyone?
    Last edited by Roken (2012-04-23 10:46:23)

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