williwaw wrote: Fri Dec 30, 2022 5:44 pmgov,
Everything went south again
sorry to hear that.
1. what did you do just before everything went south?
2. what were you expecting to happen after you did it?
3. what actually happened?Code: Select all
Every time I booted from the the #2 boot menu entry (RAM), I noticed an icon that popped up which was not on the desktop when I booted from the first menu item. Since it was only on the RAM desktop, I thought its action would be exclusive to the RAM menu entry. It was to save RAM to disk, and I thought is was a way to save the settings when booting from the RAM menu entry. I discovered quickly that this was a big mistake: it ruined everything and I could no longer boot. I tried booting from my puppy thumb drive and re-installing puppy to part#4, but that didn't even work. I ended up reformatting both drive 3 and 4 and then reinstalling puppy and thereafte restoring limine.cfg. I just now had a successful boot on my NVME drive where my settings returned. But the next time I tried it it didn't work. I am now booted from my puppy thumb drive. I understand how things can go wrong if I do something wrong, but I don't understand how a successful boot can be followed by a failed boot when I have changed nothing. There are many dangerous things in Linux. (How was I to know how dangerous it is?), and I am not used to being surrounded by danger when operating a computer. Linux is like a minefield. Even the rtcwake command is dangerous.
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https://postlmg.cc/4mqJ22zB
the good news!
this is in fact a savefolder. it was the one limine pointed to that made for your earlier success. for some reason unknown to me, it lacks an icon file inside which
changes the external appearance of the folder in the rox. It had me guessing for a while.
no matter, leave it where it is, it seems to work without the icon just fine, and do not create any other folder or file with the same name anywhere, or make a copy of it anywhere.
we can relocate it, should you wish, along with any needed edits to limine.cfg, later on, once we get things working well.It seems like Puppy insists on using the wrong savefolder:
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Why are you trying to run Limine installer? it generates copies of limine.cfg
we just now figured out which limine.cfg is the one that is booting the machine, and are in the process of removing conflicting copies.when you try to boot the laptop, do you see "fossapup RAM" offered as a second choice in the boot menu?
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The fossapup64save-test was not created at the top level, but can I move it and change the limine.cfg accordingly?
I booted again successfully from the first entry in the boot menu and my settings including screen settings returned. I was not given any choices during the boot process though.I am sorry, but I lost the test folder, but I thought I could make a new one.
yes, please move it to the top level right next to the fossapup64save you supplied the screen shot of. hopefully it will appear as a choice when you boot again. do not edit limine.cfg at this time.
Hopefully a puppy user, who uses multiple savefolders, can share a psave=??? kernel line boot parameter that works when there are multiple savefolders in the top directory.
If I can't get my settings saved and get my setup to the point where I can boot reliably, I will have to leave my computer turned on constantly and just never turn it off. Well, at least the puppy symbol has returned in pmount(!) At this point, whatever it takes, even if I have to reformat all my partitions and start over. Now that I know how dangerous Linux is, I will ask before doing ANYTHING at all. It seems nuts, but apparently that is how it is.