LinuxQuestions.org
Review your favorite Linux distribution.
Home Forums Tutorials Articles Register
Go Back   LinuxQuestions.org > Forums > Linux Forums > Linux - Newbie
User Name
Password
Linux - Newbie This Linux forum is for members that are new to Linux.
Just starting out and have a question? If it is not in the man pages or the how-to's this is the place!

Notices


Reply
  Search this Thread
Old 01-13-2004, 05:38 PM   #1
fire2501
LQ Newbie
 
Registered: Jan 2004
Posts: 22

Rep: Reputation: 15
Angry HELP!! Linux still doesn't work, boot problems


REDHAT 9 STILL DOESN'T WORK!!! i had so many problems trying to get redhat to even install and now it installed but wont boot properly, it just loads all the stuff at the begginning and freezes on the pcmcia slot detection, so someone told me to skip that by pressing i, but it still screws up and goes to a blue screen with a yes or no dialogue, with nothing asked or anything, and if u click yes, it comes up with another screen that tells u a bunch of boot problems, and at the very bottem it says no screen detected, and if you click no instead of yes it brings you to a black screen that asks u the hostname or user name and password, i can only type in the user name, and when it asks u the password it doesn't let me type anything, almost like the keyboard freezes, and it just keeps saying password or username incorrect. HELP PLEASE!! I REALY WANT LINUX!
 
Old 01-13-2004, 09:03 PM   #2
fire2501
LQ Newbie
 
Registered: Jan 2004
Posts: 22

Original Poster
Rep: Reputation: 15
PLEASE HELP SOMEONE!!!
 
Old 01-13-2004, 10:34 PM   #3
jschiwal
LQ Guru
 
Registered: Aug 2001
Location: Fargo, ND
Distribution: SuSE AMD64
Posts: 15,733

Rep: Reputation: 682Reputation: 682Reputation: 682Reputation: 682Reputation: 682Reputation: 682
Dumb question! What is in the pcmcia slot? If it's a modem, for example, can you remove it before powering up the computer. Does the boot process still freeze there?
What computer are you installing Red Hat on. More details might help solve your problem.
 
Old 01-14-2004, 07:05 AM   #4
objorkum
Member
 
Registered: Aug 2003
Location: Norway
Distribution: Slackware 10.0
Posts: 231

Rep: Reputation: 30
The reason that the password isn't coming is because it's hidden. It's being written but you can't se it (no **** marks the password)
 
Old 01-14-2004, 07:42 AM   #5
maxut
Senior Member
 
Registered: May 2003
Location: istanbul
Distribution: debian - redhat - others
Posts: 1,188

Rep: Reputation: 50
please give us more information about your hardware. then we will try to help u.
or u can try fedora .. its newer than redhat 9.0.. it supports more hardware.
 
Old 01-14-2004, 01:40 PM   #6
Texicle
Member
 
Registered: Oct 2002
Location: Northern Ontario, Canada
Distribution: Slackware 10.0
Posts: 789

Rep: Reputation: 30
When you click yes and you get errors about no screens detected, it's trying to boot you into X rather than into command line. You'll need to reconfigure X for your system.

When you click No and get the black screen with a command prompt asking for username/password, enter your username and password. You'll be logged into Linux at that point.

However, it sounds like you'll need to do some serious configuring for your hardware. Are you on a laptop? If not, why probe for pcmcia slots? If so, maybe you should try removing hardware until it stops giving errors. It sounds like you've got some stuff to deal with in your bios too, but I can't really tell until we get more information on your system and some more precise error messages.

BTW, once you get to the black screen with the username/password and enter in root for username and password for root as you set it during install, you should have no problems working through command line. You might have to reconfigure X for your hardware (not sure of the command in RedHat, but in Slack it's xf86config).

Another thing you can do is look at other distributions that might suit your needs better. Hope this helps.
 
Old 01-14-2004, 01:49 PM   #7
ianunderwood
Member
 
Registered: Apr 2003
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
Distribution: SuSE 9.2, VectorLinux 3.2
Posts: 68

Rep: Reputation: 15
Yeah, rh is the same. Type

Code:
/usr/bin/X11/xf86config
once you've logged in. You then go through a bunch of text-based menus.

Ian
 
Old 01-14-2004, 03:06 PM   #8
Shachaf
Member
 
Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Port Townsend, WA
Posts: 30

Rep: Reputation: 15
I don't think Red Hat has xf86config, but if it did it would be in /usr/X11R6/bin/xf86config. but with Red Hat, you should type redhat-config-xfree86.

When prompted for a username, type root, and for a password type the root password you gave the installer during the Red Hat linux installation (You won't see the password while you type it, but the keyboard isn't stuck).

Then, type redhat-config-xfree86 (case sensitive), and configure X through there.
 
Old 01-15-2004, 05:16 PM   #9
fire2501
LQ Newbie
 
Registered: Jan 2004
Posts: 22

Original Poster
Rep: Reputation: 15
thanks for all the responded, yea im on a brand new hp pavilion laptop. total newbie, never used linux before, but i heard some good things about it, and im sick of win xp and all the updates and problems all the time. Also my laptop has wi fi and stuff too, so im wondering if i will have any problems with that, In the linux installation i made a password, but it doesn't work, does it have to be root, or is it the password it asked me to create during set? THNX!
 
Old 01-15-2004, 05:39 PM   #10
Peacedog
LQ Guru
 
Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Danville, VA
Distribution: Slackware, Windows, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Mac OS X
Posts: 5,296

Rep: Reputation: 168Reputation: 168
Quote:
In the linux installation i made a password, but it doesn't work, does it have to be root, or is it the password it asked me to create during set?
that would depend on whether you logged in as root or as the user you created. if logging in as root, use the root password, if logging in as user created during install, use the password for that user. just a tip, while learning you may want to use the same password for user and root to keep things simple. later on as you become more familiar w/ the os a password for any user is easy enough to change.
good luck.
 
  


Reply



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off



Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Lost Linux boot and boot floppy doesn't work marquedios Linux - Newbie 9 05-22-2005 02:21 PM
Had dual boot w/2 HDs (XP+FC3), now want LINUX HD to work on it's own corepuncher Linux - General 2 03-26-2005 01:53 AM
Boot problems, carn't boot Linux anymore Thom_Redhat Linux - General 2 01-01-2004 08:21 AM
Problems adding a SCSI module to boot.img for ks to work newrhuser Linux - Hardware 0 09-12-2003 12:40 PM
Problems getting DSL to work in Linux. Manyguns Linux - Newbie 4 08-14-2001 01:44 PM

LinuxQuestions.org > Forums > Linux Forums > Linux - Newbie

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:20 AM.

Main Menu
Advertisement
My LQ
Write for LQ
LinuxQuestions.org is looking for people interested in writing Editorials, Articles, Reviews, and more. If you'd like to contribute content, let us know.
Main Menu
Syndicate
RSS1  Latest Threads
RSS1  LQ News
Twitter: @linuxquestions
Open Source Consulting | Domain Registration