[install-guide/F21-rewrite] Removing a reference to RHEL & adding a note about 32-bit systems to Troubleshooting

pbokoc pbokoc at fedoraproject.org
Sun Sep 7 19:21:19 UTC 2014


commit 4fff2c6a6d3c901e5dc7f37aafa9c5d2c51e71d0
Author: Petr Bokoc <pbokoc at redhat.com>
Date:   Sun Sep 7 21:11:53 2014 +0200

    Removing a reference to RHEL & adding a note about 32-bit systems to Troubleshooting

 en-US/Troubleshooting.xml |    9 ++++++---
 1 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/en-US/Troubleshooting.xml b/en-US/Troubleshooting.xml
index a2f2a7a..98e4417 100644
--- a/en-US/Troubleshooting.xml
+++ b/en-US/Troubleshooting.xml
@@ -444,7 +444,7 @@
     <section id="sect-troubleshooting-problems-after-installation">
         <title>Problems After Installation</title>
 
-        <section>
+        <section id="sect-trouble-after-raid">
             <title>Are You Unable to Boot With Your RAID Card?</title>
             <para>
                 If you have performed an installation and cannot boot your system properly, you may need to reinstall and partition your system's storage differently.
@@ -529,7 +529,7 @@ GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="rd.lvm.lv=rhel/root rd.md=0 rd.dm=0 vconsole.keymap=us $([ -
                 </step>
             </procedure>
             <para>
-                After you finish this procedure, you can reboot your computer. Red&nbsp;Hat Enterprise&nbsp;Linux will not use the graphical boot sequence any more. If you wish to enable graphical boot, follow the same procedure, add the <literal>rhgb</literal> option to the <literal>GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX</literal> line in the <filename>/etc/default/grub</filename> file and refresh the boot loader configuration again using the <command>grub2-mkconfig</command> command.
+                After you finish this procedure, you can reboot your computer. &PRODUCT; will not use the graphical boot sequence any more. If you wish to enable graphical boot, follow the same procedure, add the <literal>rhgb</literal> option to the <literal>GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX</literal> line in the <filename>/etc/default/grub</filename> file and refresh the boot loader configuration again using the <command>grub2-mkconfig</command> command.
             </para>
             <para>
                 See the <citetitle>&PRODUCT; System Administrator's Guide</citetitle>, available at the <ulink url="http://docs.fedoraproject.org">Fedora Documentation website</ulink>, for more information about working with the <application>GRUB2</application> boot loader.
@@ -618,7 +618,10 @@ tmpfs                                       1.8G  2.6M  1.8G   1% /tmp
             </para>
             <note>
                 <para>
-                    Some hardware configurations have a part of the system's RAM reserved and unavailable to the main system. Notably, laptop computers with integrated graphics cards will reserve some memory for the GPU. For example, a laptop with 4&nbsp;GB of RAM and an integrated Intel graphics card will show only roughly 3.7&nbsp;GB of available memory.
+                    If you have 4GB or more memory installed, but &PRODUCT; only shows around 3.5GB or 3.7GB, you have probably installed a 32-bit version of &PRODUCT; on a 64bit kernel. For modern systems, the 64-bit (x86_64) version.
+                </para>
+                <para>
+                    Some hardware configurations have a part of the system's RAM reserved and unavailable to the main system. Notably, laptop computers with integrated graphics cards will reserve some memory for the GPU. For example, a laptop with 4&nbsp;GB of RAM and an integrated Intel graphics card will show only roughly 3.7&nbsp;GB of available memory, even with a 64-bit system.
                 </para>
                 <para>
                     Additionally, the <application>kdump</application> crash kernel dumping mechanism reserves some memory for the secondary kernel used in case of the primary kernel crashing. This reserved memory will also not be displayed as available when using the <command>free</command> command. For details about <application>kdump</application> and its memory requirements, see the <citetitle>&PRODUCT; System Administrator's Guide</citetitle>, available at the <ulink url="http://docs.fedoraproject.org">Fedora Documentation website</ulink>.


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