Hey Craig,

Thanks for you reply. Yes I am using potato. Would you really recommend
using Woody for a novice? What kind of problems could I run into. Also
do I need to rebuild the system for istalling Woody or it can be
installed over potato.

Once again thanks for your help
Rahul

-----Original Message-----
From: Craig Dickson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, February 18, 2002 12:15 AM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Problem installing Intel 810 video under debian


begin  Rahul Agarwal  quotation:

> I spent this weekend trying to setup my new linux box using debian. 
> Well I ran into a lot of problems biggest of which I haven't been able

> to solve until now - i810 motherboard which has integrated video and 
> sound. Apparently, there is no built in support for the motherboard 
> from either debian or Xfree86. However, doing a couple of searches I 
> found that it is possible to use the video from the card working. I 
> downloaded the driver from the intel's website which were available in

> both rpms and the tars. I tried using the tar as per the instructions 
> from the 
> ftp://aiedownload.intel.com/df-support/1641/ENG/Release%20Notes.htm
> however it gave me errors saying it was not a valid file. I tried
> downloading it again but with no success. Then I tried using the rpms
> using the alien package. But it gave me errors saying that glibc 2.0
> which is required is not installed. I did a dselect and found that all
> the libc5 and libc6 libraries were installed and there was no other C
> library that might have helped. I read some other articles which
talked
> about building the kernel instead of taking 3rd party support. I tried
> to follow those but with no success. 

You don't mention which Debian branch you're using -- I suspect it must
be stable (Potato), because you shouldn't be having this problem with
the testing or unstable branches.

I went through all this about a year ago when trying to get an
i810-based machine to work with Debian. At the same time, though, I
noticed that the stable branch is very out of date, and didn't have
recent versions of many software packages that I wanted to use. After
failing to get the Intel i810 xserver for XFree86 3.3 to work, I ended
up solving both problems by migrating to the testing branch (Woody),
which has XFree86 4, which supports the i810 out of the box. (Actually,
I have since migrated to the unstable branch, Sid, which I find to be
quite functional 99% of the time -- every so often someone uploads a bad
package, but it's pretty rare.)

This isn't quite the answer you were hoping for, of course, but I think
it's the best option.

Craig

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