I'm not positive how the OOo installer looks for the X11 installer package (that's what's on CD 3 of a retail Mac OS X 10.3 set), so the OOo installer might find and install X11 if you insert whichever DVD has the package on it.
Otherwise, find and manually install X11 first and then install OOo. (See this FAQ if you can't find X11 on one of the DVDs....
You should download and install that first. The next time you launch the OOo installer after installing Apple X11 all of those prompts for the CD should go away.
Posted: Thu Sep 16, 2004 2:25 am Post subject: Re: Mac OS X on DVD
OPENSTEP wrote:
I wasn't aware that 10.3 shipped on DVDs in the retail box...only the three CD set was standard back in the day.
ed
I was waiting to see what you would say on this subject.
Unfortunately you have a tendency to sometimes ignore or miss feedback that I provide you. I did describe the issue to you when we were testing the Installer :
Joined: May 25, 2003 Posts: 4752 Location: Santa Barbara, CA
Posted: Thu Sep 16, 2004 10:11 pm Post subject:
Yeah, I was probably in one
I did wind up having to hardcode the path to the CD itself in the installer, unfortunately. At the time I was only expecting the Software Restore CDs to pose issues, not retail 10.3. I did put the URLs to the download location online in all of the error boxes too. Thankfully Apple's set up redirects that will take you to the right place for them.
Perhaps next time around we can convince Apple to install X11 by default on their boxes...
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2004 12:13 pm Post subject: X11 on 'System Restore DVD'
There may be another option besides downloading the 40 MB X11 install from Apple, if you don't have the three CD set.
If your new machine came pre-installed with Mac OS X (10.3), and you have a 2 DVD set labelled 'Software Install and Restore', the X11User.pkg file is still available on those DVD's, it is just hidden
The file is in a hidden folder. One easy way to get to it is to use Finder's Go menu to find it:
1. Insert and open up the first DVD.
2. Select the "Go" menu, then "Go to folder..."
3. Enter "System/Installation/Packages"
The X11User.pkg file is right in there! Run it to install X11.
This worked on my new iBook G4. It was based on a tip given on Apple's support discussion forums, which referenced a new iMac.
(I hope that, despite my status as a mere lurker, the people in charge of documentation see this and include it in the Readme file, so that other users don't have to spent an entire afternoon trying to figure this out, as I did ).
Joined: May 25, 2003 Posts: 4752 Location: Santa Barbara, CA
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2004 10:51 pm Post subject:
In theory the installer does execute that installer on the third CD. That's the .pkg file it's searching for when it prompts you for the CD. I haven't QA'd it against newer retail 10.3 CD sets since I purchased my 10.3 set when it was first released, however.
Unless the name of the CD changed, the path should still be valid. anyone with a newer set then me care to report?
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum You cannot attach files in this forum You cannot download files in this forum