In the last few days I finally decided to install some software on my
eCS partition on this notebook, having noticed eCS is fairly stable on
it (just have to try ACPI 3.17/3.18, but all works well until now,
except for USB; only the fan is a little too loud, compared to the XP
install).
Too bad I seem unable to install any program which relies on the old
IBM OS/2 Installer.
PMView, Embellish, CERES Sound Studio and many other programs complain
there's not enough disk space. This may be due to the big volumes I
set for eCS install (circa 2 GB) and for apps/data volume (over 80
GB).
I feel that the correct solution would be unpacking all the software
and trying to repack it, maybe via WarpIN to replace the old
installer.
Some ideas anyone?
TIA
Mentore
A quick fix would be to install them to a ram drive to unpack.
Don't forget about the installer not being able to handle spaces in
pathnames.
Dave
> I feel that the correct solution would be unpacking all the software
> and trying to repack it, maybe via WarpIN to replace the old
> installer.
There was a program called spacehog that would allocate dummy empty files to use
up free space so that you could do installs like this. Once installed you can
remove the spacehog files. Hopefully it's still on hobbes.
--
Trevor Hemsley, Brighton, UK
Trevor dot Hemsley at ntlworld dot com
Lars
ProNews/2 User schrieb:
Hi guys,
> Do you by chance have a C: drive that is unaccessible (for example because it is NTFS) but otherwise not hidden ?
> In that case, you need to hide that drive.
> An alternative is to set environment var EPFINSTDIR that determines where temporary files are to be created (normally the installer tries to create them on the C: drive if it is visible).
If the error is EPFIE602, try pointing EPFITMPDIR to a directory to
hold the temporary files. This is usually sufficient.
Steven
--
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Steven Levine <ste...@earthlink.bogus.net>
eCS/Warp/DIY etc. www.scoug.com www.ecomstation.com
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> Do you by chance have a C: drive that is unaccessible (for example because it is NTFS) but otherwise not hidden ?
> In that case, you need to hide that drive.
Maybe this is the real problem. The C: and F: volumes are reserved to
a Windows system (which I'm not using anymore; after an official
upgrade, it simply stopped booting, and I'm finding it more useless
time after time).
Mentore
you always have the ultimate solution :-)
Lars
Hi Lars,
> you always have the ultimate solution :-)
If only that were true more often. :-)
Many of us would consider an un-bootable Windows system
as being put to its _best_ use. :-)
Happy New Year
Jonesy
Well, for me I'm sure the best use for a Windows volume is to be
recycled for OS/2 :)
--
Mentore Siesto