payasam Posted September 15, 2006 Author Report Share Posted September 15, 2006 (edited) Arctic, I tried what you now suggest, but still could not get into MDV. Knoppix seemed to think it owned the whole damn machine. Since the MDV installation was fairly recent and didn't have much in it which wasn't backed up somewhere, and since I had been thoroughly cheesed off by the jumping desktop icons, I scrubbed it and installed PCLOS in its place. I couldn't tell you this, for which I'm sorry, but it was a spur of the moment decision. [EDIT] I think I said hda6 when I should have said hda7. Never could count. Glad to hear your headache is gone. This is the course that most colds take. There's terrific headache while the plumbing is choked with muck, but it goes away when the muck begins to run out. Sniffling people make a sorry spectacle, of course. Edited September 15, 2006 by payasam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
arctic Posted September 15, 2006 Report Share Posted September 15, 2006 I scrubbed it and installed PCLOS in its placeIf it works okay now, the there is nothing wrong with that. I always say: Use what works best for you. If it's Mandriva, fine. If it's PCLinuxOS, also fine... :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
payasam Posted September 15, 2006 Author Report Share Posted September 15, 2006 The usual teething troubles. I have only Mandrake/Mandriva RPMs, and not all are OK with PCLOS. The tar.gz installers have given no trouble so far. Then there's Synaptic. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ianw1974 Posted September 15, 2006 Report Share Posted September 15, 2006 Try this to get the ppp0 removed. Boot the Mandriva CD, the first one, and press F1. Then type: linux rescue when booting, press ESC to view the screen, and then choose the option to mount all partitions. They should be put under /mnt. Now, if you're not using ppp0, then we can remove it completely. So, do this: cd /mnt/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts look for a file, probably ifcfg-ppp0, and then: rm ifcfg-ppp0 this will delete the file and stop it trying to connect at boot. Then reboot your system, and you should be sorted. If you need it, then edit the file with vi, and change: onboot=yes to: onboot=no then you can come back to configuring ppp at another time. If not using it at all, then delete. It could have gotten configured by mistake. EDIT: forget that, just realised, you erased it and started again. However, there's the solution should it happen again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
payasam Posted September 15, 2006 Author Report Share Posted September 15, 2006 I did boot with CD1, Ian, including once with the rescue option, but then I had no idea what to do. Your explanation is simplicity itself. Remove or disable. I cannot see how the thing got roused from slumber. Let me see if something like it happens in PCLOS, though my current battle there is with a mulish CUPS. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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