I tried it on a MacPro G5 (64-bit) with the "netinst" CD. At the
"boot:" prompt I entered "install desktop=xfce", then answered the
usual questions and watched it happily install xfce.
So that works.
I have an xfce-CD1 CD that I intend to try with "install
desktop=gnome" and see which desktop (xfce or gnome, or both?) it
installs. The problem that I foresee here is the the yaboot.conf file
on the xfce-CD1 already has its own clause <append="desktop=xfce --">
which may conflict with the user's.
I'll report on that later.
We may have to figure out how to only include the extra instructions
(about desktops) on the netinst CDs, which would be no real loss,
because all the other desktops have dedicated CD1's of their own.
I haven't tried it on a G4 (32-bit) machine yet. I'll report on that
later, too.
Thinking about 64-bit vs 32-bit, I don't think the code that prints
the "boot:" prompt (and the preceding boot.msg file) is aware of the
bit-width of the hardware. So we may have to either make the added
text more comprehensive to warn the user about "install desktop=kde"
vs "install32 desktop=kde", or find some other way of dealing with the
problem.
Which raises the question of do we dare make boot.msg any longer? It
may already be too long -- long enough that most folks won't bother to
read all of it, and miss something important.
An alternate approach would be to refer folks to the appropriate
section of the installation manual, where there should be a fully
comprehensive discussion of the available boot options and why you
might want to use them. Something like this:
The following desktop environments are available:
gnome, kde, xfce and lxde. The default is gnome.
If you prefer a different one, append
"desktop=<your choice>"
Details are discussed in the installer manual at
<URL>
Enjoy!
Rick
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