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Date:      Fri, 29 Aug 1997 15:27:03 +0930
From:      Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
To:        MR KEN L YOUNG <TPKJ56A@prodigy.com>
Cc:        questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Missing file XF86-CX.TGZ
Message-ID:  <19970829152703.17190@lemis.com>
In-Reply-To: <199708290520.BAA13048@mime4.prodigy.com>; from MR KEN L YOUNG on Fri, Aug 29, 1997 at 01:20:20AM -0500
References:  <199708290520.BAA13048@mime4.prodigy.com>

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On Fri, Aug 29, 1997 at 01:20:20AM -0500, MR KEN L YOUNG wrote:
> I bought the Freebsd 2.2.2 CD rom and was using setup.exe
> to copy the files onto a DOS partition for installing. A message from
> setup.exe said file XF86-CX.TGZ was not found. I scanned the CD Rom
> and it was not on the CD. It would not let me continue the copy - I
> wanted to continue the copy and download the missing file if it was
> missing due to an error in the distrubution CD. What am I to do????

Always consider the DOS-based installation as a last resort.  The
FreeBSD-based installation works much more smoothly.

It's true that there is no file XF86-CX.TGZ on the CD-ROM.  This isn't
a bug, though, it's a feature: the file names are longer and more
descriptive.  Unfortunately, DOS can't handle them, so the
installation has to resort to trickery to install them at all.  In
this case, I can't even guess which of the following files, all in the
directory XF8632, might be intended:

X329NKV.tgz X32Ma64.tgz X32cfg.tgz X32lk98.tgz X329NS3.tgz X32Ma8.tgz
X32doc.tgz X32lkit.tgz X329SPW.tgz X32Mono.tgz X32f100.tgz X32man.tgz
X329TGU.tgz X32P9K.tgz X32fcyr.tgz X32nest.tgz X328514.tgz X329WEP.tgz
X32S3.tgz X32fnon.tgz X32prog.tgz X329480.tgz X329WS.tgz X32S3V.tgz
X32fnts.tgz X32ps.tgz X329EGC.tgz X329WSN.tgz X32SVGA.tgz X32fscl.tgz
X32set.tgz X329GA9.tgz X32AGX.tgz X32VG16.tgz X32fsrv.tgz X32vfb.tgz
X329GAN.tgz X32I128.tgz X32W32.tgz X32html.tgz X329LPW.tgz X32Ma32.tgz
X32bin.tgz X32lib.tgz

You'll notice the mixed case in these names.  This is significant.

I would suggest one of two ways to solve your problem:

1.  Make a boot floppy and install from FreeBSD.  It's *much* less
    prone to error.
2.  Install the rest of the system, and then install XFree86 manually
    after you've rebooted.

The first way is definitely the easiest.

Greg



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