
Hi John,
No problem. At the beginning i also thought it was me or speakup or other stuff. but now this topic has more or less changed to basically grml doing something different.
great that its not just me. *smile* normally its always me who runs into such stuff.
greetings, simon Am 12.02.2016 um 19:21 schrieb John G Heim:
Oh, sorry. But the thread is titled "grml accessibility features". Naturally, I was assuming you were asking about grml's accessibility features. Anyway, I think the daily build is probably just broken. On my system, it goes into a loop where itdisplays a login prompt, times out, bleeps, and then displays the login prompt again. That's not so much an accessibility problem as a boot problem. But at any rate, I can confirm the bug.
On 02/12/2016 10:26 AM, Simon Eigeldinger wrote:
John,
I don't know if you don't get it or don't understand: I am using grml for years now and had the quick menu before as well. now with the new cd there you are taken to the login prompt. I used this iso: http://daily.grml.org/grml32-full_sid/latest/grml32-full_sid_latest.iso
I wonder if there has been a major change in the system recently.
greetings, simon Am 12.02.2016 um 17:17 schrieb John G Heim:
Oops, it occurs to me that if you are booting from a CD, you can't do an eject. I always run grml from a thumb drive. That is why I forgot about that. By the way, it runs way better from a thumb drive than from a CD.
Here is a script I use to build a grml bootable thumb drive. You can set the environmental variables GRMLDEVICE and GRMLISO and just run it. Or you can pass them in as parameters. Or you can just run the script and it will ask. GRMLDEVICE is the device name of your thumb drive and GRMLISO is the path to a grml iso file. The script will format the thumb drive and then run grml2usb for you.
#!/bin/bash
test ! -z "$1" && GRMLDEVICE="$1" if [ -z "$GRMLDEVICE" ]; then DEFAULT=/dev/sdb echo -n "Device (default=${DEFAULT}): " read GRMLDEVICE test -z "$GRMLDEVICE" && GRMLDEVICE="$DEFAULT" fi
test ! -z "$2" && GRMLISO="$2" if [ -z "$GRMLISO" ]; then for DEFAULT in grml64-full_*; do continue; done echo -n "GRML iso file (default=$DEFAULT): " read GRMLISO test -z "$GRMLISO" && GRMLISO="$DEFAULT" fi echo "Building grml on $GRMLDEVICE using $GRMLISO"
P1SIZE=2G parted ${GRMLDEVICE} mklabel msdos parted ${GRMLDEVICE} mkpart pri fat16 512 ${P1SIZE} parted ${GRMLDEVICE} mkpart pri ext2 ${P1SIZE} 100% parted ${GRMLDEVICE} set 1 boot on sync
mkfs.vfat -n grml "${GRMLDEVICE}1" mke2fs -L persistence "${GRMLDEVICE}2"
grml2usb --bootoptions="persistence" --bootoptions="mypath=/home/grml/persistent" "${GRMLISO}" "${GRMLDEVICE}1"
MOUNTPOINT=/tmp/loop test ! -d "$MOUNTPOINT" && mkdir "$MOUNTPOINT" mount "${GRMLDEVICE}2" "$MOUNTPOINT" cat /dev/null > "${MOUNTPOINT}/persistence.conf" echo "/home/grml/persistent" >> "${MOUNTPOINT}/persistence.conf" umount "$MOUNTPOINT" rmdir "$MOUNTPOINT" # EOF
On 02/12/2016 10:07 AM, John G Heim wrote:
There is a menu that comes up when you boot grml. Could that be what you are getting? You should be able to press the Q key to get a command prompt. And then try the eject command to see if it opens your CD drawer. If you don't have a CD drive, you could also try beep. Once you're sure you are at the command prompt, you can type in the commands to start speech. You probably already know this but just in case, the commands are:
modprobe speakup_soft espeakup
On 02/12/2016 08:51 AM, Simon Eigeldinger wrote:
Hi,
it seems that there is a login screen coming up by default after the cd has stopped spinning.
greetings, simon
Am 12.02.2016 um 14:52 schrieb John G Heim:
If you have a smart phone and the KNFB reader, you might be able to get it to read enough of the screen to you to tell if it's stuck part way through the boot. I've had maybe a 50% success rate with that technique. Another thing you can do is to try commands like beep and eject. If those work, you know you're at the command line. If you are typing in the commands to get speech and it's not working, then it's probably a sound issue.
On 02/12/2016 05:33 AM, Simon Eigeldinger wrote: > Hi, > > I was having this on for a few minutes after it stopped spinning > so to > make sure this might be it. > but maybe there might be an error message. > tested the 32 bit latest daily sid build. > when i have a set of eyes around i will recheck and write back. > > greetings, > simon > > > Am 12.02.2016 um 00:46 schrieb covici@ccs.covici.com: >> On my system, it takes quite a long time till the musical tone >> comes up, >> it usually is at least 2-3 minutes. It must be a network >> timeout. This >> is with betas as of beginning of January. >> >> Simon Eigeldinger simon.eigeldinger@vol.at wrote: >> >>> Hi all, >>> >>> I just refreshed my rescue cd with the latest grml sid daily. >>> so according to the wiki page at >>> http://wiki.grml.org/doku.php?id=accessibility >>> i just have to wait until a musical tune will come up during boot. >>> what i hear is the beep of the boot prompt but the musical tune is >>> missing. >>> ok the document has been last modified in 2013 so there could be >>> have >>> been a lot of changes. >>> >>> >>> could someone please tell me how to start grml using software >>> speech >>> using speakup? >>> should be the old way but it seems it doesn't reach the console. >>> >>> greetings and thanks, >>> simon >>> >>> --- >>> Diese E-Mail wurde von Avast Antivirus-Software auf Viren geprüft. >>> https://www.avast.com/antivirus >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Grml mailing list - Grml@ml.grml.org >>> http://ml.grml.org/mailman/listinfo/grml >>> join #grml on irc.freenode.org >>> grml-devel-blog: http://blog.grml.org/ >>> >> >