(Version numbers are of the form YYMMDD. An optional serial number may be added “.1″, “.2″, “.3″ to differentiate multiple updates occurring on the same day.)
Changelog (in reverse chronological order; the topmost item is the most recent):
-
081031:
- Update for Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid Ibex.
- Removed all instructions about installing on Gutsy. Please use Hardy or Intrepid.
- Removed the “Long term considerations” section since it became obsolete from Hardy on.
- Removed the instructions for upgrading to BIOS 1.13
- Removed several broken links appearing in the old Changelog.
- Reinstated the usage of ricoh-r5c832-fix.
- Older changes can be found here.
TODO:
- Investigate faulken’s comment about how the modem can be made to work in Fedora.
I’m going to record here the caveats of installing Linux on a Compal IFL90 and on a Compal JFL92. My focus will be Ubuntu 8.10 aka Intrepid Ibex. I’ll try to provide useful information for those who want to use other distributions.
The machine I own is actually a Sager NP2090 which is a Compal IFL90 configured and sold by Sager. The Compal IFL90 is actually available under a variety of different names depending on where it is bought. I bought my machine from PowerNotebooks, a reseller with great customer service.
My wife owns a Sager NP2092 which is a Compal JFL92 configured and sold by Sager. It was also bought from PowerNotebooks. The JFL92 has the same set of peripheral controllers as the IFL90. The main difference between the two machines is the CPU they accept. For most purposes, the JFL92 can be considered to be a newer revision of the IFL90.
Unless I state otherwise, you can assume that everything I say here applies just as well to the JFL92 as to the IFL90. But keep the following in mind:
- The only version of Ubuntu I have installed on my wife’s JFL92 is Kubuntu 8.04. However, I eventually switched her from KDE to Gnome so in effect she is running Ubuntu 8.04. I have not yet upgraded her JFL92 to 8.10.
- The only BIOS I have experience with on the JFL92 is version 1.16.
Acknowledgments: many thanks to the guys in the forums at notebookreview.com for testing, helping, googling and so forth. Special thanks to El Profe for translating and to anyusr for seeking information on the web. Special thanks too to walkerk at the Ubuntu Forums for providing the method by which to install kernel 2.6.22 in Feisty and 2.6.24 in Gutsy.
I divide hardware functionality into four categories:
- hardware which works right out of the box.
- hardware which works after manual configuration: configuration files might need to be edited manually, or software might need to be compiled, etc.
- hardware which currently does not work.
- unknown.
Again, keep in mind that Intrepid is my guide to divide the hardware among those categories. Distributions which upgrade their packages more aggressively than Ubuntu could have more items in the “works right out of the box” category. I will only give details about the last three categories above plus items which will work right out of the box but for which there are some caveats.
Also note that I DO NOT TAKE RESPONSIBILITY IF YOU BREAK ANYTHING ON YOUR SYSTEM. You have to evaluate how comfortable you are with installing Ubuntu packages, performing compilations and editing configuration files. (Then again, people who have never used Ubuntu might be wondering what the heck I’m talking about with “Hardy” and “Intrepid”. As usual, Google is your friend!)
At a glance
In the following table, “Y” means that it works, “N” means that it does not and “MC” means that it requires manual configuration to work. Columns marked “RB” mean that you should “Read Below” to know the full story. (Using the “find” facility of your browser is helpful to find the specific place.) For the “Linux in general” column, only “Y” “N” or “?” are possible since this is an abstract category. Items marked with (O) are optional when ordering the machine. Even for devices that show a “Y”, you should read the detailed information which follows to know about any potential issues. The Intrepid + Procedure column shows the results of applying the installation procedure described below to a stock Intrepid installation.
| Function | Linux in general | Intrepid | Intrepid + Procedure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Network Card | Y | Y | Y |
| Touchpad | Y | Y | Y |
| Wireless (O) | Y | Y | Y |
| Video Card | Y | Y | Y |
| Sound | Y | Y | Y |
| BlueTooth (O) | Y | Y | Y (should work on NP2092 but not tested) |
| Webcam | Y | Y | Y |
| Modem | Y | ? | ? |
| MMC Reader | Y | RB | Y |
| FP Reader | ? | ? | ? |
| Sleep | RB | RB | RB |
| Hibernation | RB | RB | RB |
| Firewire | Y | ? | ? |
| Express Card | Y | Y | Y |
| Infrared (O) | ? | ? | ? |
| Robson (O) | ? | ? | ? |
| TV Tuner (O) | ? | ? | ? |
| Intel VT | Y | Y | Y |
NOTE: I have all the optional devices in the table above except for Robson, the Infrared and the TV Tuner.
Peripherals
I maintain separate pages for the peripherals I use with my IFL90:
Hardware which will run right out of the box
-
Network card: Broadcom BCM5787M
-
Wireless (OPTIONAL): Intel 4965agn
-
BlueTooth (OPTIONAL): Broadcom BCM2045 (Broadcom BCM92045MD)/Foxconn T60H928.06. It seems that Foxconn is manufacturing OEM hardware for Broadcom. [Bizcom] mentions the Foxconn device. However the device is properly a Broadcom BCM2045 (BCM92045MD). I don’t know why they use so many different model numbers.
-
Video Camera: Chicony CNF6212.
-
Sound: Realtek ALC268
-
Memory card reader, according to [Bizcom] is a Ricoh R5C833. However, here is what lspci shows me:
0e:06.1 Generic system peripheral [0805]: Ricoh Co Ltd R5C822 SD/SDIO/MMC/MS/MSPro Host Adapter (rev 22) 0e:06.3 System peripheral: Ricoh Co Ltd R5C592 Memory Stick Bus Host Adapter (rev 12)Does this mean that the R5C833 is a combination of R5C822 and R5C592??? At any rate, it seems that the card reader is properly a R5C822.
The MMC is supported in Linux but it will not resume properly from suspend unless registry values are tweaked.
- Hardware virtualization (Intel VT): yes! I can use kvm which depends on VT to run.
Hardware which will run right out of the box (but with caveats)
- Touchpad: Elantech 810511-0911
-
Linux in general: should work as of kernel 2.6.22.6.
-
Intrepid: the touchpad will work but some of the more advanced configuration capabilities will not work right out of the box because it seems the kernel misidentifies the device. See:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-source-2.6.22/+bug/123775
-
-
Video Card: nVidia 8600GT
- Linux in general: supported both in open and closed source drivers. To take full advantage of the card, you need to use the closed source drivers. Notably you cannot play DVDs with the open-source drivers because they don’t support XVideo. I’ve tried it and wept.
-
Intrepid: use the restricted drivers manager to install the closed source drivers.
Hardware which will require manual configuration
- Both Sleep and Hibernation are not working in Hardy as of April 26th 2008. This is a regression bug because both were working in Gutsy!
- Sleep (Suspend-to-Ram): Definitely needs BIOS 1.13 or higher to work properly.
- Hibernation (Suspend-to-disk): See the note above about BIOS versions. I have had problem with fans after hibernation. It has happened twice that I resumed from hibernation and my fans were not working. It has been a long time since I had the fan problem so I consider it fixed. Also note that hibernation is likely to abort if you plug or unplug devices while the system is going into hibernation.
Hardware which does not work yet
-
Fingerprint reader: Upek TCS4BA.
-
Linux in general: the fprint project is probably where support is going to come from. Specifically see this bug report. There is discussion in that bug report of support being limited to the 32-bit version of Linux.
-
Intrepid: see the above but also see:
-
- Robson (OPTIONAL): Intel chipset. Does not seem supported.
Unknown
-
Modem: Motorola UbiSurf(tm) SM56 Software Modem ([Bizcom] lists a Foxconn chipset but it looks like Foxconn makes OEM hardware for Motorola. So for now I’m expecting an SM56 made by Foxconn.)
-
Linux in general: the drivers exist and are packaged by Motorola as RPMs:
http://www.motorola.com/softmodem/sm56_download.htm#linux
It is most likely however that most people will want to have fresher RPMs than those listed there which were released in 2002 or earlier! In fact, it seems that the drivers provided by Smart Link have taken over. These are often known as sl-modem in various distributions.
-
Intrepid: preliminary searches suggest that sl-modem-daemon is all that is required. If compilation is required, see the following:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/DialupModemHowto/Smartlink
The original sources are kept in this site:
http://linmodems.technion.ac.il/packages/smartlink/
See also the note on how to recompile the sources:
http://www.arcetri.astro.it/~lfini/LinuxLaptops/Fujitsu.Amilo.Pi1505/
-
- Infrared (OPTIONAL): ENE chipset… exact model unknown for now. I do not have this device.
- TV Tuner (OPTIONAL): Lifeview LR535NTA. I don’t have a clue about this device because I have not ordered it.
About Hardy and the BIOS
Ok, this is a bit preliminary but I need to warn people. After my upgrade to Hardy, X started crashing almost 100% of the time after a resume from suspend-to-ram (aka: sleep). My machine was still at BIOS 1.13. After upgrading to BIOS 1.16, the crashes are still present. I am using BIOS 1.18 now which seems more stable and any previous BIOSes.
How to add my repository to your sources
-
The repository is signed with my private OpenPGP key. Execute:
$ sudo nano /etc/apt/sources.listAdd the two following lines at the end of the file:
deb http://lddubeau.com/downloads/ubuntu intrepid main deb-src http://lddubeau.com/downloads/ubuntu intrepid mainSave and exit. Execute:
$ sudo apt-get updateapt-get should execute normally except that it will complain that it does not have the GPG key for my repository. Execute the following commands to get my key:
# The next 3 commands import my public key to your # apt keyring. # (Note: if you don't have gpg installed already you should execute # "apt-get install gnupg" and continue after that is done.) $ gpg --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys F70DFA47 $ gpg --export --armor F70DFA47 > /tmp/key.asc $ sudo apt-key add /tmp/key.asc # apt-get should not complain about a missing GPG key now. $ sudo apt-get update # This installs the required package $ sudo apt-get install alsa-source
Upgrade procedure from Hardy to Intrepid
NOTE: Please note that I’ve encountered some significant issues when I upgraded. You might want to take a look. None of those issues appear to be specific to the IFL90 or JFL92. You might want to hold off upgrading for now.
NOTE: USE THIS PROCEDURE AT YOUR OWN PERIL.
NOTE: You must have used the procedure to install Hardy on a IFL90 described on this page. If you used any other procedure all bets are off.
- If you use EnvyNG, I recommend that you remove it and return to the restricted drivers provided by Ubuntu before you upgrade. EnvyNG is neat but if you file bugs which may be related to the nVidia driver installed by EnvyNG, the Ubuntu developers won’t be happy.
- Follow the normal upgrade instructions.
- Install the nVidia drivers as described below for Hardy..
-
If ricoh-r5c832-fix is already installed you do not need to do anything.
If you do not do this, the MMC will not resume working after resuming your laptop from suspend. If you’ve added my repository like suggested above in the section on adding sound support, then you just need to perform the following command:
$ sudo apt-get install ricoh-r5c832-fixOtherwise, you need to grab ricoh-r5c832-fix_1_i386.deb and install it with the following command:
$ sudo dpkg -i ricoh-r5c832-fix_1_i386.deb
Installation procedure for Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron)
NOTE: USE THIS PROCEDURE AT YOUR OWN PERIL.
NOTE: It is a good idea to read the steps ahead a little bit to make sure you won’t miss a step.
NOTE: lines that begin with $ are to be typed at the command line prompt. Lines that begin with # are comments.
NOTE: You should be connected to a network to perform the installation of Ubuntu. You’ll have to use a wired network for the initial steps.
NOTE: This is the procedure to use for installing from scratch. I have used this procedure to go from Gutsy to Hardy. I have also upgraded from Gutsy to Hardy as described below but later decided to install from scratch to make sure I did not mess things up.
Note about the JFL92: As of May 5th, 2008 the Kubutu alternate installation CD for amd64 displays a strange behavior during installation. See this bug report. It does not prevent installation nor does it cause any insurmountable problem later. After the system is fully installed and updated, the problem still manifests itself at boot: after entering the passphrase to open the encrypted filesystem, the boot process sometimes stops until a key (any key) is pressed. For most users this is an annoyance. It would be a problem for someone who wants unattended boots.
Update 080605: faulken reported a solution to this problem: disable AHCI in the BIOS.
This bug does not happen on my IFL90 but that may be because I have AHCI disabled anyway (because of XP).
Ok, here is the installation process:
-
It is a good idea to install Windows before installing Ubuntu. If you are new to Linux or if Windows is your primary OS you should certainly install Windows before Linux. It is possible to install Ubuntu first but the problem is that installing Windows later messes with the boot process and then you have to fix it yourself.
-
Do an installation of Hardy using either the Desktop or Alternate CD. (I think the Desktop CD should work but I have not tested it.) The following links contain useful information:
- the community documentation on installation may also be useful.
- this illustrated dual boot site also contains suggestions as to how to partition the hard disk for Ubuntu and Windows.
- The first time you log in, the system might tell you that there are updates to be performed. Do perform those updates before going further.
-
Install the nVidia drivers.
Log in and go into System->Administration->Hardware Drivers. There you will see a driver for your nVidia card. Turn it on and follow the instructions.
-
-
Execute the following:
$ sudo nano /etc/modprobe.d/alsa-baseGo to the end of the file and add the following lines. The first line is just a reminder to yourself as to what the next line is about. Such reminders are useful when packages are upgraded. You might want to change “LDD” to your own initials.
# LDD: I added this line for supporting the ALC268 audio chipset. options snd-hda-intel model=toshibaPress Control-X to exit and save.
-
Now you should reboot. The advantage of rebooting instead of just trying to fiddle with modules is that by rebooting you can make sure that everything is going to work right after a reboot. If you just fiddle with the modules, you may be setting up something which will be undone next time you reboot. So rebooting is better to make sure to trap possible problems early.
-
Question: But I still have no sound! What is going on?!?
Answer: This is a Linux problem, not a IFL90 problem. Sound support in Linux is still a bit on the arcane side. Open the “Volume Control” application. (A right click on the volume applet will do it.) Go into “Edit -> Preferences” and make sure that all channels (called tracks by the application) are selected. That’s because multiple channels affect the volume. For instance, the sound that comes out of the headphones is controlled by the PCM and the Headphone channels. If either of them is muted, you get no sound. To summarize briefly:
- PCM: all sound output goes through that channel so changing the volume on this channel will affect all sound output.
- Front: this controls the volume of the internal speakers.
- Headphone: this controls the volume of the headphones.
I have not played enough with the other channels to give a good description. See this comment for an initial stab at explaining microphones.
-
-
Execute the following:
$ sudo nano /etc/default/acpi-supportAnd change SAVE_VBE_STATE and POST_VIDEO from true to false.
-
TODO: Install modem support.
Upgrade procedure from Gutsy to Hardy
NOTE: USE THIS PROCEDURE AT YOUR OWN PERIL.
NOTE: You must have used the procedure to install Gutsy on a IFL90 described on this page. If you used any other procedure all bets are off.
- Follow the normal upgrade instructions.
-
Your machine will reboot. When I rebooted my X resolution was screwed. I fixed it by doing the following. This assumes you are using the NVIDIA PROPRIETARY DRIVERS. If not, skip the second command. Run:
$ sudo dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg $ sudo nvidia-xconfig $ sudo /etc/init.d/gdm restartUpon my first try, I ran the dpkg-reconfigure command above with -phigh but that created a xorg.conf file which did not enable emulation of the middle button on the touchpad.
- Now, X should start. Log into your account. After logging in, Hardy reported to me numerous crashes of applications but they were spurious because I was not running those applications at that time.
- Install the nVidia drivers as described above.
- Install sound support as described above.
-
If ricoh-r5c832-fix is already installed you do not need to do anything.
If you do not do this, the MMC will not resume working after resuming your laptop from suspend. If you’ve added my repository like suggested above in the section on adding sound support, then you just need to perform the following command:
$ sudo apt-get install ricoh-r5c832-fixOtherwise, you need to grab ricoh-r5c832-fix_1_i386.deb and install it with the following command:
$ sudo dpkg -i ricoh-r5c832-fix_1_i386.deb
Quirks and Solutions
I am listing here some quirks and their solutions:
- Using the video camera:
- I never got ekiga-gtkonly to work.
- I was able to use ekiga. However, it needs to have the package libpt-1.11.2-plugins-v4l2 installed! This package may be missing from your installation so make sure it is installed before reporting problems with the video camera.
- For future reference, my preferences under the “Video Devices” tab are set to “Video plugin: V4L2″, “Input Device: USB 2.0 Camera”, “Format: Auto”, “Channel: 0″, “Image: None”.
- Incorrect panel position and size in Gnome: although the X Window resolution can be set to 1680×1050 (the native resolution of my laptop), it seems that upon subsequent logins Gnome forgets the resolution and returns to 1024×768. This is a problem that will happen for people who used to run Gnome at a different resolution previously, like I did. Fix: Start gnome-display-properties from a terminal, switch to 1024×768, click “Apply” and then click “Return to previous resolution”. At this point, the panel should be the right size and position. If it is, then run gnome-session-save from the terminal. A different and faster method is to execute “killall gnome-panel”. This will kill the panel and it will automatically be restarted by Gnome. Then you save the session with gnome-session-save. The trick is to start a terminal if you panel does not show the “Applications” menu. Right clicking on the background should show a menu that has an item named “Open Terminal”. Use that if needed.
Upgrading to a newer BIOS
NOTE: The instructions here are for BIOS version 1.16 but I’ve also used them for version 1.18 without any problem. Adapt as needed.
NOTE: You are following this procedure at your own risk. If things break, I’m not responsible.
NOTE: BIOS upgrades should always be performed with a full battery or preferably while on AC. If the process is interrupted before it is complete, you are likely to turn your laptop into an expensive and fancy brick.
This guide is based on this page about how to boot from a USB drive. I’ve boiled down the instructions to what worked for me. You may want to look at that guide if your situation is different than mine.
Here is the procedure:
-
Install the necessary tools:
$ sudo apt-get install dosemu mbr dosfstools -
Get the BIOS from the official channels and unzip it somewhere.
- Now you need to format your USB drive as a hard-disk. There are basically two ways your USB drive can be treated: superfloppy or hard-disk. I know the hard-disk method works. I have not tried superfloppy. To do the following steps you need to know which device your USB drive appears as. With the hardware I have in my machine, it appeared as /dev/sdb.
- Your drive needs to have one partition on it. Mine was already set up that way because when I insert it, the filesystem is mounted from /dev/sdb1. If yours is not set up with one partition, you need to use cfdisk, fdisk, gparted or whatever you want to create one single partition on the device.
-
Next, you want to set the MBR properly so that the device can boot:
$ sudo install-mbr -p1 [your device]The -p1 argument tells install-mbr that you want to automatically boot from the first partition. Replace “[your device]” with the actual name of the block device, not the partition! It would be /dev/sdb for me. (NOT /dev/sdb1).
-
Then you want to create a file system. I did not have to do that because I already had a filesystem on my disk. You may also skip this if you already have a file system, otherwise:
$ sudo mkdosfs -I [your partition]Replace “[your partition]” with the partition on your device, not the block device itself! It would be /dev/sdb1 for me.
-
Edit your ~/.dosemurc so that you can access your USB drive. Mine reads:
$_hdimage = "drives/* /tmp /dev/sdb1"This means that the drives under ~/.dosemu/drives/ are going to be mapped to C and D. The directory /tmp is mapped to E. This is a placeholder really because E should normally be a CD-ROM drive. And /dev/sdb1 is mapped to F.
- If your USB drive was mounted, please unmount it.
- There is a bug currently in dosemu or Linux or something. To work around it, execute:
echo 0 | sudo tee /proc/sys/vm/mmap_min_addr -
Start dosemu in a terminal. It will start and display the usual messages. Now the default dosemu installation does some drive remapping in autoexec.bat so by the time you get the dos prompt the drive mappings are:
- C: what you booted from.
- D: this maps to your home directory in Linux.
- E: this maps to /tmp.
- F: this maps to your USB drive.
- Z: this is where FreeDOS is actually installed.
- Now you need to install FreeDOS on the drive so run the following:
$ z: $ sys f: - Then you need to copy the files from the BIOS archive you downloaded. Go onto d: and cd to where the files are. Then copy them to f:.
- Exit dosemu by running exitemu.
- You are done in Linux so you can close everything you need to close and reboot.
- Press F12 to get the boot device list, select the USB drive.
- It should boot automatically but if you get a prompt of the form “MBR FA:”, hit A. Then you will get a prompt of the form “MBR 1234F:” hit 1.
- FreeDOS will ask for the time and date. Just hit enter.
- When you get to the DOS prompt, execute the batch file JFT02116.BAT by typing “JFT02116″ at the prompt and hitting return. (This is the file for BIOS 1.16. If you are upgrading to another BIOS find the appropriate batch file and execute that.)
- The flashing process will start. It takes a bit to go through the whole process.
REFERENCES
- [Bizcom]http://www.bizcom-us.com/support/IFL9091/Drivers/Intel/Vista32_64/FL9xVista3264DriversonJun28th.pdf
Old Changelog
Entries are in reverse chronological order. (The topmost item is the most recent.)
-
080605:
- Added a solution to the momentary freeze problem during install or bootup.
080526:
- Update regarding an Ubuntu bug on the JFL92.
- According to Revan (search comments), the Express Card works.
- Spell checking… eek!
-
080521:
- Added information regarding the JFL92.
- Added information about making ekiga work properly.
-
080512:
- Updated the information regarding the fingerprint reader
- Cosmetic fixes.
-
080430:
- Proper support for sound needs modifications to alsa-base otherwise the sound does not recover from sleep or hibernate. I’ve updated the installation procedure accordingly.
-
080426:
- General cleanup of the procedures and what is supported and not.
-
080423:
-
080418:
- ricoh-r5c832-fix is no longer needed in Hardy.
- Removed -phigh from the xserver reconfiguration command.
-
080416:
- Instructions for upgrading to Hardy Beta.
- Instructions for installing Hardy.
- Removed instructions for installing a Hardy kernel in Gutsy.
-
080104.2:
- Fan problem after hibernating occurs in 2.6.24-2.
- I’ve downgraded sleep and hibernate status from “Y” to “RB” (i.e. “Read Below”) because I think there are still issues.
-
080104.1:
- Updated instructions on how to use a Hardy kernel in Gutsy.
-
080103:
- Added instructions on how to use a Hardy kernel in Gutsy.
- Began forecasting support in Hardy.
- Added a warning about possible fan problems after hibernating.
-
080101:
- Removed the instruction to install debconf-support when installing audio since it does not seem to exist anymore.
- Added a bit of information about sound channels.
-
071217:
- Added links to new pages I created about how to configure in Unbutu peripherals I use with my IFL90.
-
071216:
- Help to upgrade to BIOS 1.13
- Suspend and hibernate work fine.
- Posted a warning about kvm.
- Spellchecked the page again. Yuck! Corrected many typos.
-
071019:
- Removed all instructions for Feisty. I do not support Feisty anymore and will not answer any questions about Feisty on an IFL90. Use Gutsy.
-
071005:
- Moved to Ubuntu 7.10 beta, aka Gutsy Gibbon Beta. The entire installation procedure is much easier than it was with Feisty Fawn in August. Kudos to the Ubuntu developers.
- There are two procedures: one for installation from scratch and one for upgrading from Feisty to Gutsy.
- Moved to alsa 1.0.15rc3 for sound support. This fixes the muting problem and adds support for microphones. I found that the recording obtained from the mikes is very noisy but have not investigated.
- The new procedures for Gutsy can be used but I’m not finished testing everything. For instance, it is possible that suspend/resume now works fine. I’ll have to check when I have time.
-
070920:
- Added instructions to upgrade the nVidia drivers from 100.14.11 to 100.14.19.
- Updated my observations about sleeping and hibernating. Upgrading the nVidia driver and the kernel upgrades have improved the stability of the system but we’re not quite out of the woods yet.
- Split the changelog in two. Old entries are now at the end of the page.
- Reinstated the TODO list…
- I’ve got feedback that Linux does not recognize Robson at all. Absent evidence to the contrary, I consider Robson to be unsupported in all versions of Linux.
- Added a “Gutsy + Procedure” column to my table even though I don’t have a procedure for Gutsy yet. I’m forecasting what we can expect.
- Cosmetic changes.
-
070916:
- There is now a solution for making the MMC chipset work. People who have already used the installation procedure I propose here should jump to the section about Installing MMC support and follow the instructions there.
-
070910:
- Added the procedure to upgrade from 2.6.22-10 to 2.6.22-11. This kernel has support for the video camera “out of the box”. This means that Gutsy will have “out of the box” support for the video camera!
- Updated the initial installation procedure to work with 2.6.22-11.
- Fixed the chmod commands to have the “+x” argument! (Argh!)
- Deprecated some old procedures.
-
070822.2:
- The repositories are now fine. You may use the new installation procedure which installs a 2.6.22-10 kernel and the upgrade procedure to go from 2.6.22-9 to 2.6.22-10.
- Added a note that my actual machine is a Sager NP2090.
-
070822.1:
- A word of caution: Ubuntu is in the process of refreshing its repositories but at the moment the repositories are inconsistent. Do not try to perform the processes indicated here until further notice. Nothing tremendously bad will happen if you do but it will make things a bit more complicated. Things will probably stabilize tomorrow.
- I have deprecated the procedure that upgrades to 2.6.22-9.
-
070821:
- Spellchecked the whole page. Found many typos!
- Started creating an initial installation procedure based on Ubuntu kernel release 2.6.22-10.
- Started creating an upgrade procedure to go from 2.6.22-9 to 2.6.22-10.
- Please do not use these two new procedures yet. You can still use the one based on 2.6.22-9.
070816:
- I’ve created a real repository for the packages I created for the installation procedure and added instructions to add those repositories. I urge people to use the repository rather than install my packages using dpkg.
- Reworded 2 passages that were way too obscure.
-
070814:
- Changed vi to nano in one of the commands I ask people to perform in the installation procedure. Both vi and nano are text editors but nano is more user friendly, in my opinion. I use vi personally, hence the mistake.
- Removed the TODO, which I think was confusing some people.
-
070813:
- Added a step to enable the universe repositories (and optionally multiverse).
- Added an issue with movie playback.
-
070812:
- Removed the separate version number at the top of the page. From now on, to know the version number of the document just look at the top entry in the changelog.
- Added new unresolved issues with sensors and audio.
-
070809:
- Added entries for Firewire and Express Card in the table. I have not yet investigated the chipsets.
- Added some information about the inability to get the machine to sleep.
-
070807:
- Found a solution to the resolution problem.
- Added a temporary solution to the problem of recognizing the DVD drive.
- Added instructions to get the webcam working.
- Contrary to reports, the IFL90 does not come with a TPM module. If somebody knows something different, let me know.
399 Responses to “Linux on a Compal IFL90 and JFL92”
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Pages: « 20 … 14 13 12 11 10 [9] 8 7 6 5 4 … 1 » Show All
November 23rd, 2007 at 9:03 am
fortAlamo, what is the output of the following command on your machine:
$ lsmod | grep video
Jori and Sumant: glad to know things are working better now.
BTW, belated happy Thanksgiving to all readers who care about Thanksgiving day. (It is a US holiday which happened yesterday.)
November 22nd, 2007 at 10:13 pm
Hey Louis,
Using V4L2 on Gutsy Gibbon seemed to do the trick for me; the webcam seems to be working now. Also reloading the wireless drivers helps when the wireless manager crashes.
November 22nd, 2007 at 1:37 pm
The PCM track wasn’t selected, and changing that fixed it. Thanks much!
November 21st, 2007 at 1:41 pm
yes, i did
but all i get is V4l ( or picture)
http://img80.imageshack.us/img80/1986/schermata1oi8.png
November 21st, 2007 at 12:07 pm
fortalamo: did you hit “Detect Devices” and checked after that? I don’t have any other suggestion.
November 21st, 2007 at 11:12 am
Manuelo, I’m glad to know it helped. I was at the American Academy of Religion’s annual meeting in San Diego when I wrote my reply. I hesitated to write anything since I did not have time to investigate much but I’m glad the little I provided solved the problem.
I’ll have to try Skype 2.0 beta.
November 21st, 2007 at 8:19 am
hi
I’m trying to use ekiga (kubuntu gutsy ) but
in the “Video Devices” tab there is only V4L ( or picture)
how do i set V4L2 ?
cam is working fine with skype 2.0 beta
xawtv -hwscan
[: 12: (opcode:: unexpected operator
This is xawtv-3.95.dfsg.1, running on Linux/i686 (2.6.22-14-generic)
looking for available devices
port 280-311
type : Xvideo, image scaler
name : NV17 Video Texture
/dev/video0: OK [ -device /dev/video0 ]
type : v4l2
name : USB 2.0 Camera
flags: capture
November 19th, 2007 at 3:20 pm
LD,
Thanks a lot!!, channel 0 did the trick for Ekiga. Also working fine in Skype 2.0 beta.
November 18th, 2007 at 2:51 pm
Jori: Maybe your sound setup is controlling the wrong track. Go into System->Preferences->Sound Preferences. Look in the “Devices” tab. The last section of that tab is called “Default Mixer Tracks”. Make sure your device is “HDA Intel (Alsa mixer)” and that your controlled track is “PCM”.
FYI, “PCM” is the master volume. “Front” is the internal speakers. “Headphone” is the headphones.
The volume out of your laptop speakers is controlled by the combination of PCM and Front. The volume out of your headphones is controlled by PCM and Headphone. So you need to keep that in mind when setting your volume. By setting your sound setup as I suggest above, your keyboard will control the volume of everything.
November 18th, 2007 at 2:04 pm
Here’s a screenshot that shows Ekiga’s window on my desktop:
November 18th, 2007 at 1:57 pm
Sumant: sleep and hibernate don’t work for me but I have not tracked down the problem. I suspect the nVidia driver.
As far as wireless goes, I usually have no problem but I don’t use the kill switch. Very rarely, it seems that the driver gets in a bad state in which case I reload it with:
$ sudo rmmod iwl4965
$ sudo modprobe iwl4965
That takes care of the problem.
Manuelo: My preferences in Ekiga in the “Video Devices” tab are:
Video Plugin: V4L2
Input Devices: USB 2.0 camera
Format: Auto
Chanel: 0
Image: none
xawtv, camorama and gqcam never worked on my machine. What is the output of:
$ lsusb
on your machine?
November 18th, 2007 at 12:51 pm
Xan: Voici ce que j’obtiens sur ma machine:
C’est un peu surprenant que ton sda apparaisse sur la même ligne que sr0. M’enfin, l’essentiel est d’avoir la ligne qui dit mmc0:…
Ton IRQ est différent mais c’est peut-être dû a une négociation des interruptions qui donne un résultat différent sur ta machine. Le résultat dépend probablement des options installées (par exemple, BlueTooth, TV tuner, etc.) Mais au moins, le kernel reconnaît ton mmc. Ok, maintenant voyons si le module est chargé:
$ lsmod | grep mmc
Sur ma machine, sans carte j’obtiens:
Quand une carte est insérée, j’obtiens :
Et puis la carte est montée automatiquement.
Greg: I use the nVidia binary drivers exclusively so I don’t know how to do it with other drivers. With the nVidia driver, I use nvidia-settings after plugging in the external monitor (or HDTV in my case). I go to “X Server Display Configuration” in the tabs on the left, click the “Detect Display” button at the bottom right. When my display comes up as detected, I click the configure button for it, set it into a TwinView mode that duplicates my laptop LCD and click apply. I undo all of that after I remove the external monitor.
There might be a way to do this more efficiently. I think the Fn-F3 key does try to bring up the external monitor but I’ve never been able to get it to work properly with my HDTV. The HDTV detects that there is some input but it complains that the resolution is not right. Maybe with a monitor that precisely duplicates the resolution of the laptop LCD, it would work right off the bat.
I’ll take a look at the questions posted by other people later.
November 17th, 2007 at 8:51 pm
LD,
I tried all the posted solutions for the webcam, still nothing. Check this:
-ekiga or sudo ekiga
“Error while opening video device USB 2.0 Camera… could not open the choosen channel”
and L4V2 is selected.
-xawtv
This is xawtv-3.95.dfsg.1, running on Linux/i686 (2.6.22-14-generic)
xinerama 0: 1680×1050+0+0
X Error of failed request: XF86DGANoDirectVideoMode
Major opcode of failed request: 137 (XFree86-DGA)
Minor opcode of failed request: 1 (XF86DGAGetVideoLL)
Serial number of failed request: 69
Current serial number in output stream: 69
-camorama
Could not connect to the video device (/dev/video0). Please check the connection
-gqcam -v /dev/video0
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
And for the record this is what the module shows.
lsmod |grep video
video 18060 11
uvcvideo 48644 0
compat_ioctl32 2304 1 uvcvideo
videodev 29312 2 gspca,uvcvideo
v4l1_compat 15364 2 uvcvideo,videodev
v4l2_common 18432 2 uvcvideo,videodev
usbcore 138632 8 gspca,usb_storage,libusual,uvcvideo,hci_usb,uhci_hcd,ehci_hcd
The Device manager shows another bunch of info, everthing looks ok. What else, i dont know. I really can use some help here.
November 15th, 2007 at 6:32 am
I have some problems with the video driver. I have Ubuntu Gutsy Gibbon with Kernel 2.6.22-14-generic. It complains about /dev/video0 that is not working.. So webcam support is not working out of the box.
November 13th, 2007 at 6:26 pm
Oh and I forgot to ask
Does anyone have sleep suspend working?
Also, I’m having problem with wireless. The system will connect to a network no problem, but if I use the wireless kill switch to disable and reenable again, it won’t redetect the wireless networks. Also, sometimes when I move the laptop without killing wireless it won’t detect the networks properly.
November 13th, 2007 at 6:25 pm
Greg
AFAIK the VGA port just clones what’s being displayed to the screen. I don’t think it does a screen extension, but I’m not certain.
November 11th, 2007 at 8:23 pm
Any idea how to get the second VGA port to display an extension of the monitor? Right now, it just turns my main screen blank and tries to cram a 1680×1050 desktop on my secondary monitor.
November 8th, 2007 at 7:40 am
Re correction lol en espérant que ça marche:
[ 7.508000] sda: sda1 sda2 sda3 sr0: scsi3-mmc drive: 24x/24x writer dvd-ram cd/rw xa/form2 cdda tray
[ 15.096000] mmc0: SDHCI at 0xf8100800 irq 20 DMA
November 8th, 2007 at 7:39 am
Problème lors de la publication:
[ 7.508000] sda: sda1 sda2 sda3
November 8th, 2007 at 7:38 am
LD, voici ce que me donne dmesg | grep -i mmc:
[ 7.508000] sda: sda1 sda2 sda3