Thanks for your help. I will try another burn. I'm using cdrecord and am using (I believe) good media. What command parameters for cdrecord would you recommend? For fun I tried booting with a different external CD-ROM drive ... with identical results. I will also try the disk out on a R4600 Indy. Thanks for your hard work. MikeMartin On 1/22/07, Kumba wrote: > > Mike Martin wrote: > > I recently downloaded and attempted to boot an Octane with this disk. It > > died mounting the root partition: > > > > mount: Mounting /newroot/dev/loop0 on /newroot/mnt/livecd failed: > > Invalid argument > > > > Not sure what happened. I assume I burnt the disk correctly else it > > wouldn't have made it that far. Any suggestions? > > > > MikeM > > > It's really hard to say. I tested it on all of my systems before > uploading, and > with the Octane, this means an external drive (funny enough, an O2 CD > drive > jammed into a Sun 411 case). And that booted fine on both my Octane and > Indy. > > "Invalid Argument" from mount could mean a wide array of things (yay for > Unix's > legacy of non-descriptive, ambiguous errors). The process that occurs on > an SGI > bootcd for us is a rather complex one: > > 1. arcload boots from the DVh partition of the CD > (yes, these CDs have partitions) > 2. arcload finds and boots a kernel > 3. kernel loads, and executes /init in an embedded initramfs file linked > into the kernel > 4. /init does some prep work, and launches `getdvhoff` to scan the CD > for the offset of the next partition (where / lives), and passes a > number representing this offset back to `losetup`. > 5. losetup uses this number to "point" /dev/loop0 at this offset, which > effectively makes /dev/loop0 a block device with data on it. > 6. mount tries to mount /dev/loop0 and pivot_root into the real Gentoo > filesystem. > > > Quite likely, step #5 might've failed somewheres along the line. The > offset has > to be exact to the bit, so maybe something got whacked in the burn and the > detected offset is invalid. Hard to say without more information. Thus, > when > it got to step #6, boom. > > I'd try re-burning the disk at a slower speed, use only CD-R's of decent > quality > (TDK, Memorex, Sony, Ricoh/Ritek, etc,.. brands), and use cdrecord (or > whatever > license-unencumbered version is out there. stupid license wars). A few > people > reported getting it to work with a windows burn tool, but we have little > data on > that, thus why cdrecord is the suggested tool. > > Mostly, you were able to read the kernel into memory, which is ~8MB. It's > possible the disc you burned was good enough to get those 8MB off to boot > the > kernel, but when it went looking for the meat, it got denied and pwned. > > > > --Kumba > > -- > Gentoo/MIPS Team Lead > > "Such is oft the course of deeds that move the wheels of the world: small > hands > do them because they must, while the eyes of the great are > elsewhere." --Elrond > -- > gentoo-mips@gentoo.org mailing list > >