This is what TCLUG is all about.

Return what you have learned without any thought of self.

Sam.



Jeff Nelson wrote:

> About a month ago I asked for help getting Linux to install on a HP 
> laptop, model "compaq nc6000". I'm happy to report that I've finally 
> got it working--more or less. Thanks to all the replies that came in 
> and offers for help.
>
> The key thing that I was stuck on was the configuration of the 
> wireless adaptor. It turns out there's a separate on/off button for 
> the built-in wireless adaptor! Once I had that figured out, the rest 
> went pretty smoothly.
>
> What follows is an email response I sent to someone who happened to be 
> looking for help setting up Linux on a nc6000. It has more details. 
> I'm offering it back in case it helps anyone else.
>
> -Jeff
>
> -------------------------------------------------------
>
> Yes, I should report back on what I finally got running. I tried two 
> distributions that worked.
>
> The first distribution is SuSE 9.0 Pro. It worked out-of-the-box: 
> sound works fine, 10/100/1000 adapter works, and SuSE distribution 
> comes with madwifi pre-compiled and installed with the distribution, 
> so the wireless adapter works too. The downside is that the graphics 
> support isn't that great -- there's no 3D support, and some 
> applications won't run without it (some of the games I tried; can't 
> remember which ones off the top of my head).
>
> The second distribution--and the one I picked--is Fedora Core 1. 3D 
> graphics works (vesa device driver). Madwifi is not included, but I 
> fetched the sources from CVS and built it myself. I guess the reason 
> why I picked Fedora is because my company has a lot of enterprise 
> RedHat experience and I wanted something similar.
>
> With both distributions, the key thing to remember to get the wireless 
> adapter to work is to push the wireless button (located above the 
> number keys, in the middle of a group of 3 buttons, with an icon that 
> looks like a radio antenna). This is my first laptop and I didn't 
> realize it had a separate button to enable/disable the radio 
> transmitter. When the transmitter is on, a blue light will appear at 
> the lower left edge of the case. It stays enabled through reboots and 
> power cycles.
>
> After you install the madwifi driver, add the line
>
> alias ath0 ath_pci
>
> to /etc/modules.conf and then reboot. When the system comes up, 
> automatic hardware discovery will find the adaptor and try to 
> configure it as eth1. Let it do what it wants, then fix it after the 
> system is up: remove eth1 from /etc/modules.conf, and move ifcfg-eth1 
> to ifcfg-ath0. (More about that last part in the next paragraph.)
>
> The wireless adapter device is called ath0. You can set up wireless 
> keys, essid, and other parameters in the file 
> /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ath0. See the ifup-wireless 
> script in the same directory for the list of variables you can set. 
> The commands /sbin/ifup and /sbin/ifdown are used to turn the device 
> on and off. My parameters in ifcfg-ath0 are:
>
> DEVICE=ath0
> ONBOOT=no
> USERCTL=yes
> ESSID=myessid
> KEY=mykey
>
> With USERCTL=yes, I can bring up the wireless up when I want without 
> being root. I made the eth0 wired adaptor user-controllable as well.
>
> I have an Advanced Port Replicator, and it just works (external 
> network, keyboard, mouse, monitor). The external video runs at 60Hz, 
> however, which is annoying.
>
> Other notes:
>
> 1. Do not specify acpi=on as a boot parameter. It doesn't work in the 
> 2.4 kernels and I"m not sure it's that much better in the 2.6 kernels 
> either. The downside is that power management isn't perfect: when you 
> unplug the power cord and switch to battery, the system thinks the 
> battery level is at -1; in addition, the fan runs all the time. If you 
> ignore the initial battery notification, eventually you will get a 
> real notice that the battery is going to run out. I get about 3 or 4 
> hours of life out of mine before the notice appears for real. You have 
> about 5 minutes to wrap up and shut down before you lose power.
>
> 2. Visit the fedora websites, especially fedoranews.org. They've got a 
> great set of updates and articles on how to do stuff specifically for 
> Fedora. The best one by far is the one that explains how to make 
> up2date run faster. If you pick Fedora Core 1, be sure to read and 
> apply this as soon as you have finished the install, before you do 
> anything else.
>
> 3. Things I haven't figured out:
>
> -- how to turn off external speakers but let the headphones in the 
> headphone jack still work.
> -- external buttons for volume and mute controls don't work
> -- where the real sound control application is hiding. I've run aumix
> -- haven't tried using the modem
> -- haven't tried using the SD media reader
> -- CD playing works fine. Haven't tried burning a CD yet.
> -- Can't get xine to work yet for playing DVDs
> -- How to get external video to run at a higher refresh rate than 60Hz
> -- Haven't tried any pcmcia cards
>
> I will probably try Fedora Core 2 (beta was just announced a few days 
> ago) but I want to repartition first so I don't lose my working copy 
> of Fedora Core 1.
>
> My final recommendation is this: focus on one thing at a time. At 
> first there's so much that needs to get done, so make a check list and 
> don't move on to the next thing until the first is finished. I made 
> the mistake of bouncing around trying to fix one thing, then another, 
> then going back to the first. I also made the mistake of spending too 
> long to get Mandrake to work. I tried 9.2, Cooker 2003-12-31 and 10.0 
> Beta 1. The most recent (Beta 1) was actually the worst of the 3. My 
> advice is to give up on Mandrake and try Fedora or SuSE.
>
> ----------------------------------------
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
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>

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