Meh, the #OpenSuse
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Natasha Nox πΊπ¦π΅πΈreplied to Yuki Linux last edited by
@eliteamdgamer I don't need a GUI at all, haha.
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Momoreplied to Natasha Nox πΊπ¦π΅πΈ last edited by
@Natanox
How much RAM does it have? I remember running in trouble when I tried to install OpenSUSE on VMs with 1G and lower. I had to set it up to 2G during the installation. Afterwards I lowered it back to 1G or 512M and it worked fine. But the installer is hungry and I don't get why! -
Natasha Nox πΊπ¦π΅πΈreplied to Momo last edited by
@momo 2G, however .5G are used for the IGP. I slowly raised that limit from 32M, however didn't make a difference at some point.
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Johannes Kastlreplied to Natasha Nox πΊπ¦π΅πΈ last edited by
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Natasha Nox πΊπ¦π΅πΈreplied to Johannes Kastl last edited by
@johanneskastl The installer doesn't boot. Screen turns off after hardware initialization.
I can get into the installer shell, however the GUI can't start. To be fair, I didn't check the log files. -
HankBreplied to Natasha Nox πΊπ¦π΅πΈ last edited by
@Natanox I recently installed Debian on a J1900 with 4GB RAM with no difficulty.
I probably used the netinst installer in text mode.
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Natasha Nox πΊπ¦π΅πΈreplied to HankB last edited by
@HankB Debian does work, the partition manager doesn't give me the necessary freedom though. I'll probably just use Arch at this point.
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Andreas, DJ3EI, he/himreplied to Natasha Nox πΊπ¦π΅πΈ last edited by
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> Debian installer gives you the option to define partitions
I'm pretty sure it does, but I'm not sure how obvious/easy it is to use. Definitely an advanced kind of thing.
I usually choose default partitioning (and maybe /home on a different partition) or I'm installing with root on ZFS which is not a typical installation.
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Natasha Nox πΊπ¦π΅πΈreplied to HankB last edited by