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Re: Shuttle SN41G2 og Linux

 

"E. Sjørlund" <es@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:b8krgd$486$1@xxxxxxxxxxxx...

> Til gengæld er det ikke lykkedes mig at få den til at køre Linux endnu.
Ja,
> jo jeg har området fra 128GB-160GB på harddisken lagt ud med Linux (det
W2K
> ikke kan finde ud af at håndtere alligevel), og som virtuel maskine under
> VMWare fungerer det fint nok, men som selvstændig mangler jeg at finde
både
> netkort, lyd og skærmdrivere. Det helt store problem er nu nok at få den
til
> at køre pivot skærm, altså 1280*1024 roteret 90 grader.
>
>

Hej

Tilgiv mig hvis du allerede har prøvet mine foreslag.

Jeg har forstået det sådan at man skal anvende nvidias propreitære nforce
drivers. Har du prøvet dem der findes her :

http://www.nvidia.com/view.asp?IO=linux_nforce_1.0-0256

Der står ikke noget om at der er videodriver med, men der skal du vel tage
nvidia driveren som også findes på nvidias hjemmeside?

Taget fra README:

What the Package Does
This package will build a network driver and an audio driver, then place
them in the appropriate locations for loadable kernel modules.  The network
driver is from NVIDIA, the audio driver is based on the open source i810
audio driver but has been modified to work with NVIDIA hardware.

The binary packages will also update the modules configuration file,
commenting out existing network, audio and usb entries, and add entries for
the new drivers. A backup file is created before any changes are made to the
configuration file. If the binary package is uninstalled, the package
attempts to restore the original version of the file from this backup.

The tar files don't try to modify the module configuration files. You should
make sure the following lines are in the configuration file (it will be
named /etc/modules.conf on most current distributions):


  a.. alias eth0 nvnet
  b.. alias sound-slot-0 nvaudio
  c.. alias usb-interface usb-ohci
Neither the binary nor the source packages will load the kernel drivers
during the installation. You can do this manually using insmod or modprobe.
(USAGE: 'insmod modulename' or 'modprobe modulename') Upon reboot, the
kernel modules should insert themselves automatically.



Venlig hilsen

Søren




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