09-16-2025, 06:00 PM
(This post was last modified: 09-16-2025, 06:00 PM by stevef.
Edit Reason: disable smilie face thing
)
To try to find out more about what is happening I would start the VM and load the iso as before.
Make a note of the VM time when the install process is started and the time at which it freezes.
Also note the times at key points e.g. when clicking next or continue during the install.
Once the installation sequence has frozen, open a terminal in the VM and examine the logs with journalctl
Replace hh:mm:ss with the start time.
It might show something significant - but no guarantee.
As an alternative, you could try booting the 7.4 VM and perform an in-series upgrade to 7.6.
Would this allow you to do your testing on 7.6 ?
Make a note of the VM time when the install process is started and the time at which it freezes.
Also note the times at key points e.g. when clicking next or continue during the install.
Once the installation sequence has frozen, open a terminal in the VM and examine the logs with journalctl
Replace hh:mm:ss with the start time.
Code:
journalctl -b --since hh:mm:ss
It might show something significant - but no guarantee.
As an alternative, you could try booting the 7.4 VM and perform an in-series upgrade to 7.6.
Would this allow you to do your testing on 7.6 ?
stevef
clueless
clueless