Linux-Hardware Digest #289
Linux-Hardware Digest #289, Volume #13 Mon, 24 Jul 00 15:13:06 EDT Contents: Re: Intel 810EAL MBoards (Frank Ch. Eigler) Re: M$ IntelliMouse ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Re: VT82C686A south bridge (epox EP-7KXA built on sound card) (Rod Smith) Re: ESS Maestro, Modem drivers (Edward Lee) Re: ADR Onstream and Linux? (Rod Smith) APM SMP ;^( (Nicola Pedrozzi) Re: Anyone running Linux on an IBM laptop? ("Mark Langsdorf") Re: A good IDE (Nix) Running Linux on an ARM9 ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Re: 1GMHz+ PC with Linux to run EDA SW? (Duane) Re: M$ IntelliMouse (David C.) Re: [Help:] Shadows on NEC FP950 and S3 Savage4 ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Re: [Help:] Shadows on NEC FP950 and S3 Savage4 ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Any CD-ROM jukebox driver avalible for Linux? (Jack Zyphur) Dell Perc 2/si ("Brian Boyd") Re: I740 (Andrey Vlasov) Detect a working hardware? (Panny) sndconfig problems (Victor Davion) Re: Kudzu Segmentation Fault (Andrey Vlasov) Re: A good IDE ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) sndconfig problems (Victor Davion) Re: linux driver for Saitek X86 joystick and throttle? (Andrey Vlasov) From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Frank Ch. Eigler) Subject: Re: Intel 810EAL MBoards Date: 24 Jul 2000 11:50:53 -0400 Peter Nunn wrote: has anyone had any success or otherwise getting Linux to run on one of these MB's (with the on board video, sound and lan?). [...] I had several problems with mine. Running Red Hat Linux 6.2 using the on-board ethernet and video periodically froze the machine during heavy graphics, and during ethernet interface initialization. Disappointed, I have purchased separate PCI ethernet and PCI video cards, and the machine has become very solid. - FChE -- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: M$ IntelliMouse Date: 24 Jul 2000 12:39:53 -0400 David C. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: That's one thing that bugs me about Linux. So many programmes set up their own ways of doing things (as in old DOS programmes where every programme might have had its own set of commands for doing things and there was no real standard). You don't like being able to configure your programs to run the way you like them? I would love it if I could change how to copy/paste in Netscape. And gnome_pad. And could manage to copy/paste from the xwhois output window. -- Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rod Smith) Subject: Re: VT82C686A south bridge (epox EP-7KXA built on sound card) Date: Mon, 24 Jul 2000 16:52:17 GMT [Posted and mailed] In article 8lgugu$dpv$[EMAIL PROTECTED], "Marco Bertotto" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Hi! I've a Epox 7KXA motherboard with Via 82C686 built on sound card. My problem is simple: I can't heard the sound at all, but the system reports: everything ok (sound card detetect, correct loading modules). The standard kernel drivers for the VIA 82cxxx sound features don't work very well. I recommend you ditch them and use the ALSA drivers instead (http://www.alsa-project.org). The ALSA drivers are a nuisance to install, but they do work. -- Rod Smith, [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.rodsbooks.com Author of books on Linux networking multi-OS configuration -- From: Edward Lee [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: ESS Maestro, Modem drivers Date: Mon, 24 Jul 2000 09:53:18 -0700 Get the ESS1978 for Maestro 2E, ESS1968 for Maestro 2 and Lucent (most likely for ESS codec) at http://linnix.com. Armand Rose wrote: Where can i get drivers for ESS sound cards and modem drivers -- Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rod Smith) Subject: Re: ADR Onstream and Linux? Date: Mon, 24 Jul 2000 16:55:59 GMT In article [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David C.) writes: If you aren't running the 2.3 beta kernel, you have no USB support. Therefore, you have no support for a USB tape drive. When the 2.4 kernel is released, there will be USB support. I presume that it will include support for standards-conforming USB tape drives. I don't know if the OnStream drive conforms to the standard or not. You can also acquire patches for the 2.2.x kernels to add USB support. I'm running such patched kernels on two systems, and they work fine. Check http://www.linux-usb.org for details. My understanding is that the USB support maps data storage devices onto the SCSI drivers, so in theory, USB tape drives should look like SCSI tape drives, once the appropriate support is installed. I don't know if this actually works with any actual tape drives, though. The USB web site does include a hardware compatibility listing, so you may luck out and find some information there. If not, you could try buying a drive from a place with a good return policy, and then return it if you can't get it t
Linux-Hardware Digest #289
Linux-Hardware Digest #289, Volume #10 Fri, 21 May 99 08:13:26 EDT Contents: fasttrak raid controler (Ted) Re: KDE or Gnome (John Hong) ISDN (Once more) ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Re: $500US Linux Box ("William B. Cattell") Re: Cloning a Linux box (Dirk Traenapp) Re: accurate timer - HELP! (Robert Kaiser) Re: Cloning a Linux box (Swietanowski Artur) ISP MODEM SPEED Q. ("Matt") Re: All the current OSes are idiotic (was Re: Is Windows for idiots?) (Guest) Re: how's this for a cheap webserver? (bryan) From: (Ted) Subject: fasttrak raid controler Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 22:01:38 GMT Reply-To: *paree*@usa.net Does anybody know if Linux supports this EIDE raid controler? regards -- You need to remove * * to reply! -- -- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hong) Subject: Re: KDE or Gnome Date: 21 May 1999 10:08:01 GMT Dharmesh Patel ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: : I'm already using KDE but have heard Gnome has some better : additional features.Can some onr guide me as how I should go about the : installation . Gnome is an extension of a (any) window manager for Linux, think Object Desktop for Windows OS/2. KDE on the otherhand is basically like its own enviornment. That's really the only difference. Both are really good, eitherway. -- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: ISDN (Once more) Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 20:24:14 GMT Hi people, Dows anyone knows how to configure an ISDN PCBIT-D card? If so, I would appreciate some help to install mine. Thanks Luis -- From: "William B. Cattell" [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: $500US Linux Box Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 23:06:49 GMT [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I'm a poor college student and a linux newbie interested in building a machine (w/o monitor) for *less than $500*. I am interested in any suggestions anyone would make regarding main boards, processors, sound/video/network cards, etc that they have had postive experiences with, running linux and XFree86. I am still undecided between a slot 1, socket 370, or socket 7 system, and I want to know how safe it is to overclock chips like the celeron 300a and the AMD K6-2 266, 300 or 350. Thanks, Omar --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- ---Share what you know. Learn what you don't.--- I just built a killer (IMHO) Linux box. The motherboard is an FIC 2013, AMD K6-2/350Mhx CPU, 128Mg RAM and a tower case. I had a svga card, 15" monitor and a couple 2Gb hard drives on hand but all in all this system cost about $600 all said. The monitor and video card are capable of 1024x768x16bpp color. Take a look at CNET or BUYCOMP.COM - you can search out some pretty good pricing through those sites. Good luck, Bill -- == http://members.home.com/wcattell == Park not thy Harley in the darkness of thine garage, that it may collect dust for want of being oft ridden. Ride thy Harley with thy brethren, and rejoice in the spirit of the road. == -- From: Dirk Traenapp [EMAIL PROTECTED] Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup Subject: Re: Cloning a Linux box Date: Fri, 21 May 1999 12:35:00 +0200 "Shawn K. Quinn - NO SOLICITING" wrote: In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], HAC [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: | If you happen to have a bad block, dd will bite you bigtime. Much safer | to put the new drive in the system you are cloning, run "badblocks -w | /dev/hdx", then partition and create your swap and filesystems. The | passthrough mode of cpio works well for duplicating filesystems. [...] | I did run into a cpio that was really pax - it mangled permissions on | symbolic links. Check first. I've done something like this by booting from a rescue disk type setup (actually a scaled down Slackware install onto a Zip disk), mounting both partitions, then running 'cp -a /mnt/old /mnt/new' (or similar depending on mount point). What's the big advantage to using cpio? cp -a doesn't copy SUID and SGID flags! So it's better to use cpio or tar for cloning! cu Dirk Traenapp -- N N W W OO Dirk Traenapp, (Sysadmin / Postmaster) NN N W W O O NWO, Zum Oelhafen 207, 26384 Wilhelmshaven, Germany N NN W W W O O E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] N N W W OO Phone: +49(0)4421 62-364 Fax:+49(0)4421 62-381 -- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Robert Kaiser) Crossposted-To: comp.realtime,comp.os.linux.development.system,comp.hardware Subject: Re: accurate timer - HELP! Date: 20 May 1999 22:42:51 GMT In article 7i1s39$h6p$[EMAIL PROTECTED], killbill [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes
Linux-Hardware Digest #289
Linux-Hardware Digest #289, Volume #9Thu, 28 Jan 99 08:13:30 EST Contents: Re: fdisk partitioning 8GB drive (Andries Brouwer) Re: Problems mounting JAZ drive (Andries Brouwer) Linux on MicroStar 6120 (Yann Muller) Re: fdisk partitioning 8GB drive (Andries Brouwer) Re: Turtle Beach Montego A3D (Dell OEM) (jackle) FINALLY!! OPTi931 sound card is working!! BUT... ("Jesus M. Salvo Jr.") Re: 3COM sells crippled modems (was 3COM "support" (was: any voice capable/fax modem software for use in warp4?)) ("¨g¤H") Re: Rack Mount Cases (BL) Re: IntelliMouse problem with XFree86 (jackle) Re: LINUX PPP on a SPARC10 (Duncan Simpson) Don't post in HTML, it's bad manners (Mircea) Re: linux max RAM is 1GB? (Kristofer Coward) ESS1689 and Linux ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Re: keyboard auto-repeat rate question (Gary Momarison) videocard ("Pamateur") Re: Overclocked Celeran300A and Linux? (Norbert Goebel) Re: IRQ conflict between Video and Ethernet (M. Buchenrieder) Re: Don't post in HTML, it's bad manners (M. Buchenrieder) Re: videocard ("Randall E. Williamson") Newbie Soundblaster Help! ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Terasound A3D PCI sound in Linux? ("Martin =?iso-8859-1?Q?Wahlstr=F6m?=") From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Andries Brouwer) Subject: Re: fdisk partitioning 8GB drive Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1999 21:13:46 GMT Bryan McKinley [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: : win98 is loaded and supports my very large disk (~11GB); my bios has LBA : support. I have been reading the docs howtos and they indicate that I : should pass 'linear' to the kernel on boot to make it use logical sector-like : addressing rather than CHS. I don't see this listed among options : available to pass to the kernel at boot time. Am I barking up the wrong : tree? The docs indicate that fdisk can handle disks this large so long : as the kernel supports the linear disk addressing mode. : How do I set options at LILO-time to make this happen? : Is this already happening unbeknownst to me? Kernel logs CHS-style disk : info on boot, not linear info--at a cursory glance. You do not mention any problem. There is no reason to expect any problems - a recent kernel will handle your disk just fine - there is no need to start doing obscure things. (i) The kernel always gives a C/H/S at boot time (for IDE disks) - it just tells you what geometry it will give fdisk and LILO if hey ask for one. It does not mean that the kernel itself uses CHS addressing. (It will use LBA whenever that is supported by your disk, i.e., always, on recent hardware.) (ii) This `linear' thing is not something for the kernel, but for LILO. Edit /etc/lilo.conf adding a line linear (NOT append="linear" like some people are saying; append is for giving options to the kernel, this is an option for LILO itself. Read the LILO documentation, or lilo.conf(5)). Usually everything works fine both with and without this LILO option. (iii) The more you worry about these things the less it will work. For the great majority of people, doing absolutely nothing is the right way to get things working. Sometimes people have problems mounting a disk and start fiddling with geometries, but a mount problem is never a geometry problem. Look at the kernel boot messages. First there is a section about what disks are recognized, like hda: Maxtor 91728D8, 16479MB w/512kB Cache, CHS=1020/200/62, DMA hdb: QUANTUM Bigfoot TX12.0AT, 11497MB w/69kB Cache, CHS=23361/16/63, DMA ... SCSI device sda: hdwr sector= 512 bytes. Sectors= 12657717 [6180 MB] [6.2 GB] SCSI device sdb: hdwr sector= 512 bytes. Sectors= 17755792 [8669 MB] [8.7 GB] ... and then a section about what partitions are seen on the disk, like Partition check: sda: sda1 sda2 sda3 sda5 sda6 sda7 sda8 sdb: sdb1 sdb2 sdb3 sdb4 sdb5 sdb6 sdc: sdc1 sdc2 sdc5 sdc6 sdc7 sdc3 sdd: sdd1 sdd5 sdd6 sdd2 sdd3 sdd4 hda: hda1 hdb: hdb1 hdb2 hdb5 hdb6 hdb7 hdb3 hdb4 hdc: hdc1 hdc2 hdc3 hdc4 Once the kernel mentions a disk, you know that it has seen this disk. Once the kernel mentions the partitions, you know that it can read the disk. Geometry-related problems only occur in relation to other systems like DOS and Windows (and perhaps the BIOS), and only for LILO and fdisk, never for the Linux kernel or mount or so. [And for the gurus a question: What is peculiar in the above kernel messages? What causes it? Could the kernel have avoided it?] -- Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux.help From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Andries Brouwer) Subject: Re: Problems mounting JAZ drive Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1999 22:29:07 GMT Steven Headley [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: : I am having problems mounting my Jaz drive to RedHat Linux 5.2. This : same procedure worked on RedHat 5.0 but dosen't want to work in 5.2. : When I