On Tue, Jan 06, 2004 at 11:48:17AM +0000, Joseph Jones wrote: > I am very much a newbie, I'm at about the level where I'm starting to > mess with backports and can compile my own kernel as per the > instructions in the newbiedoc (just). > > I've had an nForce 2 mobo for a couple of months new and simply haven't > gotten around to installing it, since it seemed like such a hassle. I'm > re-installing Woody soon as well (I broke something in the current > install) and figured I'd do both tasks at the same time. > > How can I do a network install of Woody on an nForce 2 motherboard? I'm > guessing I would need to compile a kernel with the forcedeth patch. How > do I do this, if possible, with the 2.4.20 kernel (which is what I > generally use)? If not possible with the 2.4.20, could I have > instructions for whichever kernel version it is possible with?
I've only seen a forcedeth patch for the 2.6 kernel. Assuming it works with 2.4 kernel: Install kernel-source. Patch with patch utility ("patch -p1 < forcedet~v19.txt" or current version). Configure kernel Compile kernel with make-kpkg Install Make sure you have aliases you need in /etc/modutils update-modules, if needed. Reboot For 2.6 kernel, it is /etc/modprobe.d instead of /etc/modutils (see module-init-tools package). > > Also, once I've got Debian installed, what functionality can I achieve > without installing the god-forsaken drivers from nVidia? Obviously, with > forcedeth in the kernel I can get network access, but what about sound > and USB? I've read in the list about some guy using snd_intel8x0 (alsa > driver), can this be used with esound and OSS? Alsa drivers work great. With 2.4.23 kernel I'm still using nvnet module from nVidia, but forcedeth worked fine with 2.6.0 kernel when I tried it. With kernel versions 2.4.20 and 2.4.22 I've had stability problems (ramdom crashes/lockups) and I found USB partially broken. The 2.4.20 kernel patched with nVidia's agpgart patch was more stable than 2.4.22 kernel. My ramdom crashes come from nVidia drivers used for integrated nVidia GeForce4 MX GPU so you may not have this stability problem. Stability is greatly improved by compiling kernel without IOAPIC and local APIC support. I also have less lockups when exiting an X session when using kde rather than gdm. This is based on experience with ASUS A7N8S-VM motherboard in HP pavilion a23n PC. I installed a second harddrive where linux partitions reside; the original harddisc still has XP. Here follows the brute-force installation I used: Minimum woody installation was done with LordSutch.com ISOLINUX mini-ISO image (see http://www.debian.org/CD/netinst/). That gets you a base install with 2.2 kernel. To get nForce chipset drivers you need a 2.4 kernel. That came from downloading Adrian Bunk's 2.4 backport from http://www.fs.tum.de/~bunk/packages/woody/bunk-1.html. (I actually did this using XP to download the packages, putting them in partition I share between the two OSs and installed the packages with dpkg.) After rebooting with 2.4 kernel, I compiled and installed nVidia nvnet module; slight modifications to nVidia's instructions are needed. You need to create a symbolic link /urs/src/linux-2.4.xx that points to your kernel source, and, assuming 2.4.22 kernel, cd to /usr/src/nforce/nvnet before doing make/make install. modprobe nvnet /etc/init.d/networking restart At this point you would have internet access, and you can complete your woody net install. What I actually did was a dist-upgrade to sarge and net install of sarge. -- Jerome
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