I am also affected by this bug. I have installed Ubuntu 8.10 through the
alternate CD, and afterwards installed Xubuntu-desktop. The keyboard repeat
delay was too short, and I could not change it with the Xfce GUI, the Gnome GUI
or with the xset command. Interestingly, typing xset q does reflect
I have installed Kubuntu 8.10 yesterday (2008-11-20) in a friend's computer
through the final release alternate CD, and updated it shortly afterwards. The
problem persists.
I am using the workaround pci=nomsi and it appears to work.
I am very disappointed. Still no mention in the release notes (w
>I thought I would give a xset a try but I don't understand the syntax.
I think it is clear enough in the man page. The xset manpage has two
paragraphs for the "r" option. The second paragraph says
If the server supports the XFree86-Misc extension, or the XKB
extension, then a parameter of ’rat
(In reply to the immediately previous comment,
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-input-evdev/+bug/264196/comments/27)
You are welcome. I welcome everyone else to test this workaround, and, if you
all like it better than the one involving editing xorg.conf, someone could add
(In response to immediately previous post,
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/190492/comments/33)
>Using the pci=nomsi switch is completely safe and harmless.
Where did you get that information?
And more importantly
>However, this bug seems to be fixed in the 2.6.27 kernel.
No.
Well, let me make two corrections to my post:
1) "tried removing the pci=nomsi workaround from menu.lst. Didn't work". To be
precise, I didn't actually edited menu.lst, I used the handy Grub editing
capacity to remove pci=nomsi from the kernel command line.
2) "I have no idea whether this but aff
This bug is still present in 8.04.1 and 8.10, which is depressing.
In both cases I installed through the alternate installer. Right in the boot
prompt I chose English language and Brazilian keymap. Later, when asked, I told
I live in Brazil.
But the locale was all set to en_US.UTF-8.
I had to man
I also confirm that the problem persists with 8.10 beta - I don't know
if there has been more than one beta, so be informed that I used the iso
CD image named ubuntu-8.10-beta-alternate-i386.iso, with md5sum
108696aafe01d4e90ee145c31ad05b82. I burned it to a new blank CD-R at low
speed (8x), checke
This problem has reached Intrepid final. Why wasn't it at least mentioned in
the release notes?
Anyway, I have tested the problematic computer with Mandriva one 2009 (gnome
CD), and the problem does *not* seem to appear. I have attached some
information about the computer when booted trough the
Note: the description of the attachment above says lspci -, but the
actual command I used was lspci -vvnn. Sorry.
--
Kernel hangs on boot (SATA, AMD64/i386)
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/190492
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I have retested Ubuntu 7.10 and it seems to be able to detect the disk.
I don't remember what went wrong the last time I tried 7.10 and prompted
me to install Debian Etch, but It seems that Ubuntu 7.10 is able to at
least detect the disk.
Also, my previous attachment had the output from lspci -vv.
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