Help installing Bookworm (Debian) on Acer laptop - eviltoast

Howdy yā€™all! This is my first post, so please let me know if Iā€™m doing something wrong.

Iā€™ve been fighting to get the latest Bookworm installed over my existing Bullseye installation. I think I might need to wipe and start over šŸ˜¢

My previous install was with xfce primarily, but I had installed Gnome to see whatā€™s up with Wayland. I had forgotten all about Gnome until I updated to Bookwormā€¦

The install appeared fine at first, but much much slower loading up.

When it booted, I had no Wi-Fi. 8 figured, okay, letā€™s get that installed the same way I did it before.

Welp, it identified as an Intel AC adapter. Itā€™s actually an a/b adapter. I checked logs, and the system couldnā€™t load the driver. So I installed atheros-firmware (correct driver) and rebooted. Still no.

So I read and read and saw that Gnome could conflict. So I booted into Gnome.

And my heart fluttered at the huge difference. šŸ˜ Still no Wi-Fi, but holy freaking cow was it buttery smooth! No dropped frames!! No compositor shoe horned in!

I immediately started removing XFCE4. Couldnā€™t get very far before the system tried to remove Gnome with it.

I went through and marked each file individually for complete removal and checked the pop up for what would be removed with it to ensure gnome would be left alone.

While doing that, I also removed the atheros package.

A few reboots, and still no Wi-Fi, so I reinstalled the atheros package and rebooted.

Boom! Wi-Fi works! Awesome!!

But the computer is VERY slow booting, and the log that runs at boot still says none of the drivers are loading. Errors everywhere.

I donā€™t know these things, but since Gnome loads eventually with everything workingā€¦ it feels like Gnome is duplicating the boot scans and thatā€™s resulting in a full 6 minutes before the cursor appears (and another 2 minutes before thereā€™s anything to click on)

The laptop also has a touch screen that randomly touches itself and screws up everything. I eventually found a way to disable it, still not sure exactly what worked.

Iā€™ve got a 120Gig SSD that should fit, but the current 1T HDD is real nice to have for downloadsā€¦ so I would prefer to keep it if possibleā€¦

What are yā€™allā€™s input on this?

Why is it so slow to boot?

What can I do to get drivers to load on boot? Does it matter, since it all works?

Is my Wi-Fi driver really not loading? But some compatibility thing is making it work?

What other Wayland issues should I be aware of? Like how xinput is useless?

Iā€™m thinking of doing a fresh install, but if Iā€™m going to have the same issuesā€¦

ā€œYouā€™ve chosen to hold back some packagesā€

No, I did not.

Iā€™ve used Synaptic to mark things as automatic install, and dpkg to clear that error, but still cannot remove LibreOffice without it trying to remove Gnome šŸ˜¢

I hate LibreOffice and the gigs of language files. I donā€™t need a heavy app taking 5 whole minutes to load up to edit a simple text file with no extension. (Iā€™ve since been setting every file for of text to open with a svelte text editor)

I should let yā€™all know, I switched to Linux on this machine because Windows 10 would start doing something and then ignore all input for random amounts of time. I got sick of it and threw Debian on it instead and never looked back.

The machine was immediately refreshed and booted in less than 2 minutes.

That was back on Buster. Then I did the Bullseye update and had major sound issues. I did a ton of stuff I donā€™t remember anymore and Iā€™m still using Pulse. I fixed it is the point. Now the Bookworm update. šŸ¤Æ

I would love it if I knew a wipe and install would fix the speed issuesā€¦ Thatā€™s really my only complaint at this timeā€¦

I eventually managed to remove most of XFCE, and most of the languages of LibreOfficeā€¦ but Iā€™m thinking I should do a netinst and that should allow me to avoid LibreOfficeā€¦

I literally only watch media and browse the Internet with this machine. I figure if I needed word processing, Google Docs or another computerā€¦

  • thayer@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Honestly mate, it sounds like youā€™ve done a number of customizations, tweaks, and package changes, some of which you didnā€™t document and now cannot recall.

    The easiest and cleanest solution is to drop-in your much faster SSD and perform a fresh installation. If you run into any post-install issues, youā€™ll at least have a clean system to troubleshoot. And the performance difference will be night and day.

    Try not to get hung up on having LibreOffice around. Itā€™s just an application. The reality is there are likely hundreds of binary files on your system that youā€™ll never use. And you might even find it handy some day if youā€™re without internet and need to work on a document or spreadsheet.

    As for the old 1TB drive, you could purchase a USB drive enclosure and use it as an external drive for storage or backups if you donā€™t already have a solution for that.

    Edit: As of Bookwormā€™s release, firmware is now provided by the non-free-firmware repo, enabled by default and included on the official installation media. It might not be included on the netinst media though, so if you need wifi during setup I would stick to the standard ISOs.

    • Benjamin@lemmings.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Yeahā€¦ Iā€™m thinking the SSD is the routeā€¦ fresh installā€¦

      Your comment about Wi-Fi and net installā€¦ yeahā€¦ I was assuming my phone set to USB share would work OOTBā€¦ probably wonā€™t though, eh?

      I think Iā€™ll snag the Gnome install media and just stick with that.

      Currently, this system is running very decent. At least as well as it did brand new with original softwareā€¦ except the boot timesā€¦

      If I go the SSD route, the drive can be left as is in case I totally screw up. I can use the same enclosure from the SSD on the HDD.

      • thayer@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        USB tethering should work fine as well if the firmware isnā€™t on the netinst media.

        For the boot times, simply pressing the Esc key should drop you into text mode. From there, it should be pretty obvious where itā€™s hanging in the boot cycle.