[ltp] Linux (Red Hat 9.0) on T40p (2373-G1G to be exact)
Andrew Biggadike
linux-thinkpad@linux-thinkpad.org
21 Jul 2003 17:40:58 -0400
Frank,
I shrank a partition near the end of my disk (about 35 gigs in) and
created a type 'a0' filesystem. When I boot off the CD I don't get a
menu choice to re-initialize a hibernation partition.. just create a new
partition and create a file. Choosing create a partition gives an error
that there are no free partition entries in the partition table.
Any ideas? Is it possible that this program can't see that far into the
disk and I need to stay below the 1024th cylinder? I can't find much
documentation out there on this..
Thanks,
Andrew
On Mon, 2003-07-21 at 04:01, Frank Schaeckermann wrote:
> Steve,
> I have no way of putting the image on the net somewhere - yet. But I'll
> send it to you via e-mail. What I did was to create a partition by hand
> giving it the type 'a0' (IBM Thinkpad Hibernation Partition) BEFORE I
> booted the CD-ROM. Then a menu came up with choices like
>
> 1. Create New Hibernation Partition
> 2. Re-Initialize Existing Hibernation Partition
> 3. Reboot
>
> and I chose 2. After a few minutes (My partition is pretty big since I
> have 1.5GB of memory and 64MB Video RAM in the machine) the menu came
> back and I chose 3 (after removing the CD *wink*). Linux booted without
> problems and now Fn-F12 works like a charm! I am using APM so - see my
> kernel-config file posted before. Apparently ACPI is not up to the job
> yet. Also I figured, that the machine's BIOS will still now best how to
> send it into hibernation...
>
> The bootable CD-image is on it's way. By the way - I am using a
> re-writable CD to create bootable images *grin* That way I can fool
> around until I got it right without wasting loads of media... even
> though with ISOLINUX and MEMDISK it worked pretty well and without too
> many tries.
>
> Steve Krulewitz shooz-at-myrealbox.com |Linux on ThinkPads| wrote:
> > Frank --
> >
> >
> >>If you want, I can send you the image of the bootable CD I created to
> >>run the utility without having a floppy drive.
> >
> >
> > If you could make this available I would appreciate it -- I can't tell you
> > how many CDs I burned through the last time I tried to make a bootable CD.
> >
> > So you're saying that the BIOS's suspend to disk works with Linux and you
> > can tell it which partition you want to use (or tell it where to create a
> > partition for it in unpartitioned space?) I have a 2GB FAT partition at
> > the end of my drive that I could shrink to make room for this... would this
> > work?
> >
> > cheers,
> > -stvee
> >