Save yourself some grief, choose path of least resistance. Don't create
a software nightmare that can be easily solved via hardware
compaibility. Network cards are cheap ;) Also, Switching sends message
to vendor to publish & support linux drivers.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have asked supermicro if the incompatibility is just a network card
problem. As I say, the distribution seems to install OK, and the machines
appear to be fine once installed in all aspects, apart from the networking.
I have also asked them if their motherboards support Fedora Core 2 or 3, but
as their site doesn't mention these, so I am guessing they do not.
PS. I have changed the subject, in case anyone else has this problem with
this motherboard.
Thanks again for your help.
Quoting Bernard Li <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Hi Martin:
Unfortunately, OSCAR currently only supports one distribution at a time -
so either you use Red Hat Linux 9 on all the nodes, or Red Hat Enterprise
Linux 3.
I guess you have 2 choices:
1) Use network cards which are compatible with RHEL3
2) Use Red Hat Linux 9
If you are going to go back to Red Hat Linux 9, you may be better off
using a newer distribution like Fedora Core 2 or 3, since we will no
longer be supporting Red Hat Linux 9 for our next release.
Thanks,
Bernard
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