I am trying to get QNX RTS to work on a second computer. The installation
went fine, but froze when I booted it up. I disabled video bios caching and
it stopped freezing at that point. It gives a message about not being able
to allocate a resource, I assume this is because the video bios caching was
disabled??? It was able to get past detecting my harddrive and mounting fat
partitions and the cdrom. After that I am prompted with the message
“You have more then one .diskroot file which wants to mount at /”
1 /dev/hd0t79
2 /fs/hd0-qnx4/boot/ds/qnxbase.qfs
which one do you want to use
When I select either of them I get the error message:
warning /pkg/base/safe-config/etc/system/package/packages doesn’t exist
fs-pkg: open config /etc/system/package/packages
…
failed opening package configuration
unable to access packages.
It freezes at that point.
The system is a P133 Asustek P/I-P55TP4XE motherboard award 4.51PG bios,
Matrox Millenium 2, Maxtor 4.2gb eide drive. Thanks for any help.
This is exactly the error that I get when I try to load the new nto CD on my
DELL OptiPlex machine.
It has a 450Mhz PentiumIII - 192 MB ram - with a primary and secondary IDE
on the DELL mainboard. The 8GB hard drive is on the primary and the CD-ROM
is on the secondary.
I just set my cdrom to the primary slave and tried to reinstall qnx but qnx
could not mount it. Strange it can mount it on the secondary master but not
the Primary slave. I tried a another cdrom drive on the primary slave and it
worked, no more package error messages. Try and put the cdrom on the Primary
and see if it works.
This is exactly the error that I get when I try to load the new nto CD on
my
DELL OptiPlex machine.
It has a 450Mhz PentiumIII - 192 MB ram - with a primary and secondary IDE
on the DELL mainboard. The 8GB hard drive is on the primary and the
CD-ROM
is on the secondary.
I killed my DELL trying to get the CD and HD on the primary - soooo… I
thought I would try a Toshiba Satellite 2595 CDS Laptop - but it died in
just the same manor. The FS-PKG can’t find any package files after
selecting either of the two .diskroot options. Strange, isn’t it!