I select the language, and select "Install Xubuntu". The system instantly reboots and brings me back to the menu.
Any ideas? It's hard to google for this issue, because there's not much to describe.
I select the language, and select "Install Xubuntu". The system instantly reboots and brings me back to the menu.
Any ideas? It's hard to google for this issue, because there's not much to describe.
BetterSense;
An excess of 4 primary partitions on the disk to be install on (msdos partition scheme) ?
Greater than 3TB disk to be installed on ?
Dual booting where Windows is using all the available partitions ?
UEFI ?
SSRT ?
Intel smart response ?
SSD -> raid a factor ?
cpu not pae and sse2 enabled ?
And I am sure many other possibilities.
So what are your hardware specs and your current partitioning ?
hey gotta start somewhere
New 1TB hard drive
Old Pentium 4 system
No raid
System was working yesterday until the hard drive started clicking. So the hardware should really be fine.
UPDATE: I have been able to get as far as the "choose a password" before the system reboots. It just reboots, instead of going to the next step in the installer, and I'm back to the "choose your language" screen.
UPDATE UPDATE: I'm just sitting here re-trying it over and over, and about 15 times now it just insta-boots after I select "install Xubuntu"
Also, how did the system auto-populate my old hostname? The new hard drive is totally blank...
Last edited by BetterSense; July 18th, 2013 at 09:40 PM.
Update:
I tried a USB drive, made by unetbootin, and it does the auto-reboot thing, even when I choose something like "check memory for defects".
When I choose "test memory" I get an error saying " Cannot load a ramdisk with an old kernel image".
BetterSense;
All I can think of presently is to try and format/partition the new drive with GParted.
Then see what GParted has to say about that disk.
And yes I have had experiences with a new install to an alternate disk that if that old disk is available, the new install is populated with the older install. That a time or too did save my bacon a time or two in my formative years.
hey it's a thought
I am not sure from your description if you have tried running Xubuntu as a live system or have gone straight to the "Install Xubuntu" option, but it may be worth trying the "Try Xubuntu without installing" option.
You may again be thrown straight back to the reboot, but if so it could suggest that the ISO file you used is corrupt, or the DVD/CD you burned is a bad burn. You should check the iso file with the listed md5sums shown at UbuntuHashes - MD5sum . All instructions on doing so are at the site linked, or on other sites linked to from that one.
Code-tags --- Boot-Repair --- Grub2 wiki & Grub2 Basics --- RootSudo --- Wireless-Info --- SolvedThreads --- System-Info-Script
The alternate CD has no "try without installing".
I tried the Xubuntu alternate both CD and flash drive.
I tried a LinuxMint also, and got instant reboot.
I tried Ubuntu 12.04 and got to disk partitioning before reboot
It almost seems like I have a hardware problem. However, the system was doing fine yesterday. Is there anything specific that can cause this type of issue? Anything I can check to help troubleshoot?
BetterSense;
Pops to mind... best I recall the p4 boards were IDE interface for the hard drives;
The new 1.5 TB drive is sata is it not ?
Recon there is a problem in the IDE/Sata adapter ?
If this is the case, I would do some googleing to see what problems such an adapter has presented.
there are solutions
Bringing old hardware back to life. About problems due to upgrading.
Please visit Quick Links -> Unanswered Posts.
Don't use this space for a list of your hardware. It only creates false hits in the search engines.
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