* [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
@ 2011-05-26 23:28 Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-27 1:57 ` Mark Shields
` (6 more replies)
0 siblings, 7 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Kevin O'Gorman @ 2011-05-26 23:28 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2652 bytes --]
It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
A few months ago, an update made the machine headless -- well, it could no
longer bring up X but I could use the console-mode for admin, and log in via
SSH from my laptop and run GUI programs. I was busy at the time, first
deciding and then implementing my retirement, so I let it go.
Now, a couple of months into my retirement, I'm trying to fix things up, and
the latest Gentoo live disk cannot talk to my monitor at all. Whatever it's
trying is unacceptable to the HD monitor I've had on there for a year, and I
can't even run the consoles. The video card is an ATI Rage XL on the
motherboard. Like the rest of the machine, it's vintage 2000, so maybe
support got dropped. But I'm not inclined to drop the machine -- it was the
ballyhooed thing in Linux Journal in 2002 when I finished my PHD, so I put
together these pieces:
* Two XEON chips. I didn't know it right away but that means 4 cores. They
are old Pentium IV-based 32-bit chips. I got the slowest still being made,
so the clock speed is 1.6 GHz. On 4 cores, it's not bad at all.
* 2GB of DDR ECC memory
* about a dozen hard drives (some old, but mostly 500GB - 2TB Sata drives),
I feel it's still worthy of respect. Some of these are in EZ-Dock docking
stations and are used for rotating backups (including off-site). The main
directories are on hardware RAID 1 so I have ongoing redundancy.
* a Smart UPS 1500 for everything except the laser printer.
So, since I am familiar with Ubuntu from work, and have it on a couple of
laptops, I'm installing from the Ubuntu 11.04 live disk (video is just
fine).
The real headache is all the stuff I'm going to have to port.
1) Apache and dynamic (Python CGI) web site.
2) Postfix
3) About a dozen accounts that just do wget(1) data gathering triggered by
the cron daemon.
4) DNS (I run my own domain on a commercial DSL account)
5) NTP client and server
6) Whatever else I forgot I set up over the years.
My original reason for using Gentoo is that this machine was pretty exotic
when I bought it, and I wanted to be able to tweak the compiler to get the
most out of it. I can still do that for specific applications I'm working
on, but otherwise it's really a non-issue now. I have gotten pretty tired
of updates that take over 48 hours to compile, and the occasional mess-up
that once or twice led me to rebuild with empty-tree and took a week or so.
So I guess I shouldn't complain (and I'm not). I'm just not in the target
market for Gentoo any more. It was fun, though.
--
Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-26 23:28 [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
@ 2011-05-27 1:57 ` Mark Shields
2011-05-27 4:13 ` Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-27 7:41 ` BRM
2011-05-27 5:01 ` Paul Hartman
` (5 subsequent siblings)
6 siblings, 2 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Mark Shields @ 2011-05-27 1:57 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 6:28 PM, Kevin O'Gorman <kogorman@gmail.com> wrote:
> It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
> little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
>
> A few months ago, an update made the machine headless -- well, it could no
> longer bring up X but I could use the console-mode for admin, and log in via
> SSH from my laptop and run GUI programs. I was busy at the time, first
> deciding and then implementing my retirement, so I let it go.
>
> Now, a couple of months into my retirement, I'm trying to fix things up,
> and the latest Gentoo live disk cannot talk to my monitor at all. Whatever
> it's trying is unacceptable to the HD monitor I've had on there for a year,
> and I can't even run the consoles. The video card is an ATI Rage XL on the
> motherboard. Like the rest of the machine, it's vintage 2000, so maybe
> support got dropped. But I'm not inclined to drop the machine -- it was the
> ballyhooed thing in Linux Journal in 2002 when I finished my PHD, so I put
> together these pieces:
> * Two XEON chips. I didn't know it right away but that means 4 cores.
> They are old Pentium IV-based 32-bit chips. I got the slowest still being
> made, so the clock speed is 1.6 GHz. On 4 cores, it's not bad at all.
> * 2GB of DDR ECC memory
> * about a dozen hard drives (some old, but mostly 500GB - 2TB Sata drives),
> I feel it's still worthy of respect. Some of these are in EZ-Dock docking
> stations and are used for rotating backups (including off-site). The main
> directories are on hardware RAID 1 so I have ongoing redundancy.
> * a Smart UPS 1500 for everything except the laser printer.
>
> So, since I am familiar with Ubuntu from work, and have it on a couple of
> laptops, I'm installing from the Ubuntu 11.04 live disk (video is just
> fine).
>
> The real headache is all the stuff I'm going to have to port.
>
> 1) Apache and dynamic (Python CGI) web site.
> 2) Postfix
> 3) About a dozen accounts that just do wget(1) data gathering triggered by
> the cron daemon.
> 4) DNS (I run my own domain on a commercial DSL account)
> 5) NTP client and server
> 6) Whatever else I forgot I set up over the years.
>
> My original reason for using Gentoo is that this machine was pretty exotic
> when I bought it, and I wanted to be able to tweak the compiler to get the
> most out of it. I can still do that for specific applications I'm working
> on, but otherwise it's really a non-issue now. I have gotten pretty tired
> of updates that take over 48 hours to compile, and the occasional mess-up
> that once or twice led me to rebuild with empty-tree and took a week or so.
>
>
> So I guess I shouldn't complain (and I'm not). I'm just not in the target
> market for Gentoo any more. It was fun, though.
> --
> Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
>
>
You let a small problem like the latest live cd not booting your system
scare you away?
Have you tried using an older live cd? If it's a video issue, maybe
detecting your monitor wrong, how about turning on the framebuffer (there's
an option for that)?
It's doable man, don't give up.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-27 1:57 ` Mark Shields
@ 2011-05-27 4:13 ` Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-27 4:31 ` Dale
2011-05-27 7:41 ` BRM
1 sibling, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Kevin O'Gorman @ 2011-05-27 4:13 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 6:57 PM, Mark Shields <laebshade@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 6:28 PM, Kevin O'Gorman <kogorman@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
>> little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
>>
>> A few months ago, an update made the machine headless -- well, it could no
>> longer bring up X but I could use the console-mode for admin, and log in via
>> SSH from my laptop and run GUI programs. I was busy at the time, first
>> deciding and then implementing my retirement, so I let it go.
>>
>> Now, a couple of months into my retirement, I'm trying to fix things up,
>> and the latest Gentoo live disk cannot talk to my monitor at all. Whatever
>> it's trying is unacceptable to the HD monitor I've had on there for a year,
>> and I can't even run the consoles. The video card is an ATI Rage XL on the
>> motherboard. Like the rest of the machine, it's vintage 2000, so maybe
>> support got dropped. But I'm not inclined to drop the machine -- it was the
>> ballyhooed thing in Linux Journal in 2002 when I finished my PHD, so I put
>> together these pieces:
>> * Two XEON chips. I didn't know it right away but that means 4 cores.
>> They are old Pentium IV-based 32-bit chips. I got the slowest still being
>> made, so the clock speed is 1.6 GHz. On 4 cores, it's not bad at all.
>> * 2GB of DDR ECC memory
>> * about a dozen hard drives (some old, but mostly 500GB - 2TB Sata
>> drives), I feel it's still worthy of respect. Some of these are in EZ-Dock
>> docking stations and are used for rotating backups (including off-site).
>> The main directories are on hardware RAID 1 so I have ongoing redundancy.
>> * a Smart UPS 1500 for everything except the laser printer.
>>
>> So, since I am familiar with Ubuntu from work, and have it on a couple of
>> laptops, I'm installing from the Ubuntu 11.04 live disk (video is just
>> fine).
>>
>> The real headache is all the stuff I'm going to have to port.
>>
>> 1) Apache and dynamic (Python CGI) web site.
>> 2) Postfix
>> 3) About a dozen accounts that just do wget(1) data gathering triggered by
>> the cron daemon.
>> 4) DNS (I run my own domain on a commercial DSL account)
>> 5) NTP client and server
>> 6) Whatever else I forgot I set up over the years.
>>
>> My original reason for using Gentoo is that this machine was pretty exotic
>> when I bought it, and I wanted to be able to tweak the compiler to get the
>> most out of it. I can still do that for specific applications I'm working
>> on, but otherwise it's really a non-issue now. I have gotten pretty tired
>> of updates that take over 48 hours to compile, and the occasional mess-up
>> that once or twice led me to rebuild with empty-tree and took a week or so.
>>
>>
>> So I guess I shouldn't complain (and I'm not). I'm just not in the target
>> market for Gentoo any more. It was fun, though.
>> --
>> Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
>>
>>
>
> You let a small problem like the latest live cd not booting your system
> scare you away?
>
> Have you tried using an older live cd? If it's a video issue, maybe
> detecting your monitor wrong, how about turning on the framebuffer (there's
> an option for that)?
>
> It's doable man, don't give up.
>
Of course it's doable. It's just the last straw. This left my web site
down for a week; I obviously can't always keep up with Gentoo's
requirements, so I'm going to an easier distro that I'm equally familiar
with.
--
Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-27 4:13 ` Kevin O'Gorman
@ 2011-05-27 4:31 ` Dale
2011-05-27 10:55 ` Mick
0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-05-27 4:31 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
>
>
> On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 6:57 PM, Mark Shields <laebshade@gmail.com
> <mailto:laebshade@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>
>
> You let a small problem like the latest live cd not booting your
> system scare you away?
>
> Have you tried using an older live cd? If it's a video issue,
> maybe detecting your monitor wrong, how about turning on the
> framebuffer (there's an option for that)?
>
> It's doable man, don't give up.
>
>
> Of course it's doable. It's just the last straw. This left my web
> site down for a week; I obviously can't always keep up with Gentoo's
> requirements, so I'm going to an easier distro that I'm equally
> familiar with.
>
>
> --
> Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
>
But you will be back. ;-)
Dale
:-) :-)
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-26 23:28 [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-27 1:57 ` Mark Shields
@ 2011-05-27 5:01 ` Paul Hartman
2011-05-27 6:00 ` Stroller
` (4 subsequent siblings)
6 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Paul Hartman @ 2011-05-27 5:01 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 6:28 PM, Kevin O'Gorman <kogorman@gmail.com> wrote:
> It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
> little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
>
> A few months ago, an update made the machine headless -- well, it could no
> longer bring up X but I could use the console-mode for admin, and log in via
> SSH from my laptop and run GUI programs. I was busy at the time, first
> deciding and then implementing my retirement, so I let it go.
Sorry to see you go!
> The real headache is all the stuff I'm going to have to port.
>
> 1) Apache and dynamic (Python CGI) web site.
> 2) Postfix
> 3) About a dozen accounts that just do wget(1) data gathering triggered by
> the cron daemon.
> 4) DNS (I run my own domain on a commercial DSL account)
> 5) NTP client and server
> 6) Whatever else I forgot I set up over the years.
Maybe you can run them from your previous gentoo installation inside a
chroot until you can reproduce them in Ubuntu proper.
> My original reason for using Gentoo is that this machine was pretty exotic
> when I bought it, and I wanted to be able to tweak the compiler to get the
> most out of it. I can still do that for specific applications I'm working
> on, but otherwise it's really a non-issue now. I have gotten pretty tired
> of updates that take over 48 hours to compile, and the occasional mess-up
> that once or twice led me to rebuild with empty-tree and took a week or so.
I have a laptop from 2004 and am increasingly irritated by the slow
build times. Keeping Gentoo up-to-date with it takes a very long time,
especially since I use it so infrequently. Having several days worth
of compiling just to bring it up to date is tiring, when it causes the
fan to blow at full speed (and full decibels) and heat which
approaches that of the Sun. If I ever get around to it, I'm going to
give Sabayon a try. Hopefully then I'll have the familiar Gentoo setup
but without the building from source.
> So I guess I shouldn't complain (and I'm not). I'm just not in the target
> market for Gentoo any more. It was fun, though.
After using Gentoo for so many years, I find the maintenance in Ubuntu
to be rather anti-climactic. "256 packages to update? Oh no! Oh, look,
it's done already." :)
Good luck and congratulations on your retirement.
Paul
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-26 23:28 [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-27 1:57 ` Mark Shields
2011-05-27 5:01 ` Paul Hartman
@ 2011-05-27 6:00 ` Stroller
2011-05-27 16:18 ` Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-27 12:56 ` Marc Joliet
` (3 subsequent siblings)
6 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Stroller @ 2011-05-27 6:00 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 27/5/2011, at 12:28am, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
> ...
> * Two XEON chips. I didn't know it right away but that means 4 cores. They are old Pentium IV-based 32-bit chips. I got the slowest still being made, so the clock speed is 1.6 GHz. On 4 cores, it's not bad at all.
I *think* at that age those may be single-core hyperthreading chips, which would nevertheless show in (for instance) `top` as 4 cores. I won't swear to this, though.
Stroller.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-27 1:57 ` Mark Shields
2011-05-27 4:13 ` Kevin O'Gorman
@ 2011-05-27 7:41 ` BRM
1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: BRM @ 2011-05-27 7:41 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
From: Mark Shields <laebshade@gmail.com>
>
>To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
>Sent: Thu, May 26, 2011 9:57:26 PM
>Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
>
>
>On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 6:28 PM, Kevin O'Gorman <kogorman@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a little
>sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
>>
>>A few months ago, an update made the machine headless -- well, it could no
>>longer bring up X but I could use the console-mode for admin, and log in via SSH
>>
>>from my laptop and run GUI programs. I was busy at the time, first deciding and
>>
>>then implementing my retirement, so I let it go.
>>
>>Now, a couple of months into my retirement, I'm trying to fix things up, and the
>>
>>latest Gentoo live disk cannot talk to my monitor at all. Whatever it's trying
>
>>is unacceptable to the HD monitor I've had on there for a year, and I can't even
>>
>>run the consoles. The video card is an ATI Rage XL on the motherboard. Like
>>the rest of the machine, it's vintage 2000, so maybe support got dropped. But
>>I'm not inclined to drop the machine -- it was the ballyhooed thing in Linux
>>Journal in 2002 when I finished my PHD, so I put together these pieces:
>>
>>* Two XEON chips. I didn't know it right away but that means 4 cores. They are
>>
>>old Pentium IV-based 32-bit chips. I got the slowest still being made, so the
>>clock speed is 1.6 GHz. On 4 cores, it's not bad at all.
>>
>>* 2GB of DDR ECC memory
>>* about a dozen hard drives (some old, but mostly 500GB - 2TB Sata drives), I
>>feel it's still worthy of respect. Some of these are in EZ-Dock docking
>>stations and are used for rotating backups (including off-site). The main
>>directories are on hardware RAID 1 so I have ongoing redundancy.
>>* a Smart UPS 1500 for everything except the laser printer.
>>
>>So, since I am familiar with Ubuntu from work, and have it on a couple of
>>laptops, I'm installing from the Ubuntu 11.04 live disk (video is just fine).
>>
>>The real headache is all the stuff I'm going to have to port.
>>
>>1) Apache and dynamic (Python CGI) web site.
>>2) Postfix
>>3) About a dozen accounts that just do wget(1) data gathering triggered by the
>>cron daemon.
>>4) DNS (I run my own domain on a commercial DSL account)
>>5) NTP client and server
>>6) Whatever else I forgot I set up over the years.
>>
>>My original reason for using Gentoo is that this machine was pretty exotic when
>
>>I bought it, and I wanted to be able to tweak the compiler to get the most out
>>of it. I can still do that for specific applications I'm working on, but
>>otherwise it's really a non-issue now. I have gotten pretty tired of updates
>>that take over 48 hours to compile, and the occasional mess-up that once or
>>twice led me to rebuild with empty-tree and took a week or so.
>>
>>
>>So I guess I shouldn't complain (and I'm not). I'm just not in the target
>>market for Gentoo any more. It was fun, though.
>>--
>>Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
>>
>>
>
>
>
>You let a small problem like the latest live cd not booting your system scare
>you away?
>
>Have you tried using an older live cd? If it's a video issue, maybe detecting
>your monitor wrong, how about turning on the framebuffer (there's an option for
>that)?
>It's doable man, don't give up.
Probably needs to switch to the open source radeon driver instead of the ATI
binary driver if he hasn't already too.
My 2004 laptop had that issue a couple years back. I initially installed the ATI
driver (which I haven't seemed to be able get rid of now), and then they (ATI)
dropped support for the R250 line-up.
I switched over the open source radeon driver and all works just fine and dandy.
Ben
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-27 4:31 ` Dale
@ 2011-05-27 10:55 ` Mick
2011-05-27 13:23 ` Peter Humphrey
0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Mick @ 2011-05-27 10:55 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: Text/Plain, Size: 2179 bytes --]
On Friday 27 May 2011 05:31:15 Dale wrote:
> Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
> > On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 6:57 PM, Mark Shields <laebshade@gmail.com
> >
> > <mailto:laebshade@gmail.com>> wrote:
> > You let a small problem like the latest live cd not booting your
> > system scare you away?
> >
> > Have you tried using an older live cd? If it's a video issue,
> > maybe detecting your monitor wrong, how about turning on the
> > framebuffer (there's an option for that)?
> >
> > It's doable man, don't give up.
> >
> > Of course it's doable. It's just the last straw. This left my web
> > site down for a week; I obviously can't always keep up with Gentoo's
> > requirements, so I'm going to an easier distro that I'm equally
> > familiar with.
>
> But you will be back. ;-)
Ha, ha, ha! :-))
Ubuntu has come in leaps and bounds over the years and its maintenance is now
easy-peasy. The problems start when you depart from the vanilla Ubuntu distro
and end up with a modified system - I have been looking after a laptop with
Ubuntu for a couple of years now and as long as you keep to the distro way of
doing things it pretty much runs without problems and upgrades are almost
seamless.
That said for someone who's been using Gentoo for some time now it should not
be a big deal to look after a machine like Kevin's, even if the monitor won't
play initially. I'm still running Gentoo on a 13 year old Pentium III 1GHz
laptop which is refusing to die and compiling anything serious on it is at
least an overnight affair.
The monitor problem is probably a KMS configuration issue. Add nomodeset at
the boot line and you should probably get your monitor again.
Before you throw in the towel on Gentoo completely, may I recommend
SystemRescueCD. It is updated more often, has the latest drivers and pretty
much works better that the Gentoo LiveCD (most of the time). The only thing
it does not have is star, which is a package I prefer to do fs backups, but
that's irrelevant anyway.
Of course Kevin only knows what is best for Kevin. Enjoy your retirement!
--
Regards,
Mick
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-26 23:28 [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
` (2 preceding siblings ...)
2011-05-27 6:00 ` Stroller
@ 2011-05-27 12:56 ` Marc Joliet
2011-05-27 13:33 ` [gentoo-user] No KMS for ATI Rage* (was: Goodbye, Gentoo) Felix Miata
2011-05-27 16:26 ` [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-28 0:59 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
` (2 subsequent siblings)
6 siblings, 2 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Marc Joliet @ 2011-05-27 12:56 UTC (permalink / raw
To: Gentoo-User ML
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2243 bytes --]
Am Thu, 26 May 2011 16:28:46 -0700
schrieb "Kevin O'Gorman" <kogorman@gmail.com>:
> It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
> little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
>
> A few months ago, an update made the machine headless -- well, it could no
> longer bring up X but I could use the console-mode for admin, and log in via
> SSH from my laptop and run GUI programs. I was busy at the time, first
> deciding and then implementing my retirement, so I let it go.
>
> Now, a couple of months into my retirement, I'm trying to fix things up, and
> the latest Gentoo live disk cannot talk to my monitor at all. Whatever it's
> trying is unacceptable to the HD monitor I've had on there for a year, and I
> can't even run the consoles. The video card is an ATI Rage XL on the
> motherboard. Like the rest of the machine, it's vintage 2000, so maybe
> support got dropped.
[...]
(I realise your decision is made, but if this is the bug I think it is, this
has nothing to do with Gentoo in particular.)
I wonder which kernel version you use, because in 2.6.36/37 I was hit by a nasty
EDID parsing bug. Actually, IIRC the code for parsing EDIDs was updated to
understand more features or something, and that triggered errors that didn't
come up before because those parts of the response from the monitor were simply
ignored until then (or something like that). This lead to my own monitor not
responding for over a minute at a time (sometimes going blank in between) and
other people complained that it left theirs permanently blank.
I think this is the original bug:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31943
which contains a workaround (with patch):
"The drm EDID checker is pretty strict about what EDIDs it will accept. Try
this patch and add drm.edid_strict=0 to your kernel command line."
For me, upgrading to 2.6.38 helped, I don't see the problem anymore (though
other people report otherwise).
*If* this is the bug, it makes me wonder why you don't see it under Ubuntu.
Good luck with Ubuntu!
--
Marc Joliet
--
"People who think they know everything really annoy those of us who know we
don't" - Bjarne Stroustrup
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-27 10:55 ` Mick
@ 2011-05-27 13:23 ` Peter Humphrey
0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2011-05-27 13:23 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Friday 27 May 2011 11:55:48 Mick wrote:
> ... may I recommend SystemRescueCD. It is updated more often, has the
> latest drivers and pretty much works better that the Gentoo LiveCD (most
> of the time).
Another point in its favour is that it starts RAID and LVM itself, which
saves a fair bit of messing about if you use either of those.
--
Rgds
Peter
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] No KMS for ATI Rage* (was: Goodbye, Gentoo)
2011-05-27 12:56 ` Marc Joliet
@ 2011-05-27 13:33 ` Felix Miata
2011-05-27 16:26 ` [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Felix Miata @ 2011-05-27 13:33 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 2011/05/27 14:56 (GMT+0200) Marc Joliet composed:
> Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
>> ...The video card is an ATI Rage XL...
> I wonder which kernel version you use, because in 2.6.36/37 I was hit by a nasty
> EDID parsing bug. Actually, IIRC the code for parsing EDIDs was updated to
> understand more features or something, and that triggered errors that didn't
> come up before because those parts of the response from the monitor were simply
> ignored until then (or something like that). This lead to my own monitor not
> responding for over a minute at a time (sometimes going blank in between) and
> other people complained that it left theirs permanently blank.
> I think this is the original bug:
> https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31943
> which contains a workaround (with patch):
> "The drm EDID checker is pretty strict about what EDIDs it will accept. Try
> this patch and add drm.edid_strict=0 to your kernel command line."
> For me, upgrading to 2.6.38 helped, I don't see the problem anymore (though
> other people report otherwise).
> *If* this is the bug, it makes me wonder why you don't see it under Ubuntu.
I suspect the *buntu installer checks to see if the video chip is supported
for KMS, and applies nomodeset to Grub's cmdline when not. No ATI Rage* chip
is supported by KMS. With such an old laptop, could be he needs both
nomodeset and drm.edid_strict=0. I have a 1400x1050 Dell laptop that uses the
r128 driver, and its EDID is definitely broken. Whether I had the black
screen problem I don't remember, but it's very possible it's what caused me
to discover the existence of drm.edid_strict=0 in order to escape from either
an 800x600 X or black screens.
--
"The wise are known for their understanding, and pleasant
words are persuasive." Proverbs 16:21 (New Living Translation)
Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks!
Felix Miata *** http://fm.no-ip.com/
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-27 6:00 ` Stroller
@ 2011-05-27 16:18 ` Kevin O'Gorman
0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Kevin O'Gorman @ 2011-05-27 16:18 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1024 bytes --]
On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 11:00 PM, Stroller
<stroller@stellar.eclipse.co.uk>wrote:
>
> On 27/5/2011, at 12:28am, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
> > ...
> > * Two XEON chips. I didn't know it right away but that means 4 cores.
> They are old Pentium IV-based 32-bit chips. I got the slowest still being
> made, so the clock speed is 1.6 GHz. On 4 cores, it's not bad at all.
>
> I *think* at that age those may be single-core hyperthreading chips, which
> would nevertheless show in (for instance) `top` as 4 cores. I won't swear to
> this, though.
>
> Stroller.
>
>
> Actually, you're right. I got two chips so I could work with "real"
threads and thread control. The hyperthreading was a surprise, and might
have done quite as well by themselves. Anyway, it still works fine and the
only thing likely to make me upgrade is that the card slots are all PCI-X
low voltage (extra cutout in the connector). As time goes on I'm going to
want to add things, and I may wind up with a new mobo fairly soon.
--
Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-27 12:56 ` Marc Joliet
2011-05-27 13:33 ` [gentoo-user] No KMS for ATI Rage* (was: Goodbye, Gentoo) Felix Miata
@ 2011-05-27 16:26 ` Kevin O'Gorman
1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Kevin O'Gorman @ 2011-05-27 16:26 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 5:56 AM, Marc Joliet <marcec@gmx.de> wrote:
> Am Thu, 26 May 2011 16:28:46 -0700
> schrieb "Kevin O'Gorman" <kogorman@gmail.com>:
>
> > It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
> > little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
> >
> > A few months ago, an update made the machine headless -- well, it could
> no
> > longer bring up X but I could use the console-mode for admin, and log in
> via
> > SSH from my laptop and run GUI programs. I was busy at the time, first
> > deciding and then implementing my retirement, so I let it go.
> >
> > Now, a couple of months into my retirement, I'm trying to fix things up,
> and
> > the latest Gentoo live disk cannot talk to my monitor at all. Whatever
> it's
> > trying is unacceptable to the HD monitor I've had on there for a year,
> and I
> > can't even run the consoles. The video card is an ATI Rage XL on the
> > motherboard. Like the rest of the machine, it's vintage 2000, so maybe
> > support got dropped.
> [...]
>
> (I realise your decision is made, but if this is the bug I think it is,
> this
> has nothing to do with Gentoo in particular.)
>
> I wonder which kernel version you use, because in 2.6.36/37 I was hit by a
> nasty
> EDID parsing bug. Actually, IIRC the code for parsing EDIDs was updated to
> understand more features or something, and that triggered errors that
> didn't
> come up before because those parts of the response from the monitor were
> simply
> ignored until then (or something like that). This lead to my own monitor
> not
> responding for over a minute at a time (sometimes going blank in between)
> and
> other people complained that it left theirs permanently blank.
>
> I think this is the original bug:
>
> https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31943
>
> which contains a workaround (with patch):
>
> "The drm EDID checker is pretty strict about what EDIDs it will accept.
> Try
> this patch and add drm.edid_strict=0 to your kernel command line."
>
> For me, upgrading to 2.6.38 helped, I don't see the problem anymore (though
> other people report otherwise).
>
> *If* this is the bug, it makes me wonder why you don't see it under Ubuntu.
>
> Good luck with Ubuntu!
>
> Thanks. It's up, its 2.5.38 which may explain a little. I ported my usual
selections (think "world")
from my laptops, downloaded and installed around 1400 packages in a bit over
5 hours.
This included both libreoffice (the default) and openoffice (from the
selections), apache,
gimp, on and on, and would surely have taken a week or so under Gentoo.
Today, I port over my apache configuration and my embarrassing downtime is
ended.
--
Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-26 23:28 [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
` (3 preceding siblings ...)
2011-05-27 12:56 ` Marc Joliet
@ 2011-05-28 0:59 ` walt
2011-05-28 13:50 ` Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-28 8:06 ` [gentoo-user] " Alan McKinnon
2011-05-28 16:38 ` Daniel da Veiga
6 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: walt @ 2011-05-28 0:59 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 05/26/2011 04:28 PM, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
> Now, a couple of months into my retirement
...
> in 2002 when I finished my PHD
Retiring 9 years after finishing your education?
WTF are the rest of us doing wrong?
Drop by here occasionally to give us a progress report :)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-26 23:28 [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
` (4 preceding siblings ...)
2011-05-28 0:59 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
@ 2011-05-28 8:06 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-05-28 8:49 ` Pandu Poluan
2011-05-28 16:38 ` Daniel da Veiga
6 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Alan McKinnon @ 2011-05-28 8:06 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user; +Cc: Kevin O'Gorman
Apparently, though unproven, at 01:28 on Friday 27 May 2011, Kevin O'Gorman
did opine thusly:
> It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
> little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
I know how you feel :-)
I've tried to get away from Gentoo several times, and failed. The amount of
work we all put into keeping things working is best described as "bat shit
crazy", but we do it anyway. Maybe it's like a drug thing, we all need a daily
fix or we need to prove we can still do it.
Kevin, you were around here for ages and you certainly pulled your fair share
of the load. FLOSS thrives on people just like that. But if Gentoo doesn't
suit your needs anymore, then so be it.
Doesn't mean you won't be missed though. Best of luck for the future. [Like
Dale, I think you'll be back. See para 2 :-) ]
--
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-28 8:06 ` [gentoo-user] " Alan McKinnon
@ 2011-05-28 8:49 ` Pandu Poluan
0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Pandu Poluan @ 2011-05-28 8:49 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Sat, May 28, 2011 at 15:06, Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon@gmail.com> wrote:
> Apparently, though unproven, at 01:28 on Friday 27 May 2011, Kevin O'Gorman
> did opine thusly:
>
>> It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
>> little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
>
> I know how you feel :-)
>
> I've tried to get away from Gentoo several times, and failed. The amount of
> work we all put into keeping things working is best described as "bat shit
> crazy", but we do it anyway. Maybe it's like a drug thing, we all need a daily
> fix or we need to prove we can still do it.
>
Shhh... don't let the Narc Task Force hear that!!
That said, I agree... control-freaks like me feel... lost... when
using binary-based distros.
Rgds,
--
Pandu E Poluan
~ IT Optimizer ~
Visit my Blog: http://pepoluan.posterous.com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-28 0:59 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
@ 2011-05-28 13:50 ` Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-28 19:14 ` Alan McKinnon
0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Kevin O'Gorman @ 2011-05-28 13:50 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 5:59 PM, walt <w41ter@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 05/26/2011 04:28 PM, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
>
> > Now, a couple of months into my retirement
> ...
> > in 2002 when I finished my PHD
>
> Retiring 9 years after finishing your education?
>
Nice to know that somebody can do the math :o).
I got a late start. I was 52 (IIRR) when I started grad school and 59 when
I finished my PhD.
WTF are the rest of us doing wrong?
>
> Drop by here occasionally to give us a progress report :)
>
--
Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-26 23:28 [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
` (5 preceding siblings ...)
2011-05-28 8:06 ` [gentoo-user] " Alan McKinnon
@ 2011-05-28 16:38 ` Daniel da Veiga
2011-05-28 19:19 ` Alan McKinnon
6 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Daniel da Veiga @ 2011-05-28 16:38 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 682 bytes --]
On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 20:28, Kevin O'Gorman <kogorman@gmail.com> wrote:
> It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
> little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
>
> So, since I am familiar with Ubuntu from work, and have it on a couple of
> laptops, I'm installing from the Ubuntu 11.04 live disk (video is just
> fine).
>
Good luck.
A friend just dropped Ubuntu cause they simply decided to use Unity, and the
dashboard is just (his words) weird. He was used to the Gnome look, and they
simply changed everthing with an upgrade.
I stick with Gentoo, at least I know my next upgrade won't change my whole
interface...
--
Daniel da Veiga
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-28 13:50 ` Kevin O'Gorman
@ 2011-05-28 19:14 ` Alan McKinnon
0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Alan McKinnon @ 2011-05-28 19:14 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user; +Cc: Kevin O'Gorman
Apparently, though unproven, at 15:50 on Saturday 28 May 2011, Kevin O'Gorman
did opine thusly:
> On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 5:59 PM, walt <w41ter@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On 05/26/2011 04:28 PM, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
> > > Now, a couple of months into my retirement
> >
> > ...
> >
> > > in 2002 when I finished my PHD
> >
> > Retiring 9 years after finishing your education?
>
> Nice to know that somebody can do the math :o).
> I got a late start. I was 52 (IIRR) when I started grad school and 59 when
> I finished my PhD.
That's excellent news. I've wanted to go back and get a PhD in math for ...
well it feels like for ages.
Now I can put off starting for 7 more years and still stay within the bounds
of "what has already been done at least once"
:-)
--
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-28 16:38 ` Daniel da Veiga
@ 2011-05-28 19:19 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-05-29 14:32 ` Kevin O'Gorman
0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Alan McKinnon @ 2011-05-28 19:19 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user; +Cc: Daniel da Veiga
Apparently, though unproven, at 18:38 on Saturday 28 May 2011, Daniel da Veiga
did opine thusly:
> On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 20:28, Kevin O'Gorman <kogorman@gmail.com> wrote:
> > It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel a
> > little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
> >
> > So, since I am familiar with Ubuntu from work, and have it on a couple of
> > laptops, I'm installing from the Ubuntu 11.04 live disk (video is just
> > fine).
>
> Good luck.
> A friend just dropped Ubuntu cause they simply decided to use Unity, and
> the dashboard is just (his words) weird. He was used to the Gnome look,
> and they simply changed everthing with an upgrade.
>
> I stick with Gentoo, at least I know my next upgrade won't change my whole
> interface...
Ubuntu are simply doing what KDE already did - take a risk, go with something
new, try to stay ahead of the curve.
Unity works fine on my netbook with 600 vertical pixels. I'm not sure it would
work well on my 1920x1200 notebook though. That's the risk one takes with
disruptive technologies, you might annoy some of your users
--
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo
2011-05-28 19:19 ` Alan McKinnon
@ 2011-05-29 14:32 ` Kevin O'Gorman
0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Kevin O'Gorman @ 2011-05-29 14:32 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1823 bytes --]
On Sat, May 28, 2011 at 12:19 PM, Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon@gmail.com>wrote:
> Apparently, though unproven, at 18:38 on Saturday 28 May 2011, Daniel da
> Veiga
> did opine thusly:
>
> > On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 20:28, Kevin O'Gorman <kogorman@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > > It looks like it's time to take Gentoo off of my main machine. I feel
> a
> > > little sad about it, or I'd just quietly go away.
> > >
> > > So, since I am familiar with Ubuntu from work, and have it on a couple
> of
> > > laptops, I'm installing from the Ubuntu 11.04 live disk (video is just
> > > fine).
> >
> > Good luck.
> > A friend just dropped Ubuntu cause they simply decided to use Unity, and
> > the dashboard is just (his words) weird. He was used to the Gnome look,
> > and they simply changed everthing with an upgrade.
> >
> > I stick with Gentoo, at least I know my next upgrade won't change my
> whole
> > interface...
>
>
> Ubuntu are simply doing what KDE already did - take a risk, go with
> something
> new, try to stay ahead of the curve.
>
> Unity works fine on my netbook with 600 vertical pixels. I'm not sure it
> would
> work well on my 1920x1200 notebook though. That's the risk one takes with
> disruptive technologies, you might annoy some of your users
>
>
My hardware is not capable enough to run unity, so it logs into Gnome 2, the
familiar
interface. I'm eventually going to upgrade the mobo and video, and I'll get
to visit
with Unity on my own schedule. I generally stick to the LTS versions, which
remain
supported for 3 years. I don't see the point of more frequent upgrades
because
as an old-timer, I am perfectly happy with the tools I'm used to and find
myself
increasingly exhausted on the learning curves. I can do it, but I want
there to be
a really good view at the top. :o)
--
Kevin O'Gorman, PhD
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2011-05-29 14:34 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 21+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2011-05-26 23:28 [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-27 1:57 ` Mark Shields
2011-05-27 4:13 ` Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-27 4:31 ` Dale
2011-05-27 10:55 ` Mick
2011-05-27 13:23 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-05-27 7:41 ` BRM
2011-05-27 5:01 ` Paul Hartman
2011-05-27 6:00 ` Stroller
2011-05-27 16:18 ` Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-27 12:56 ` Marc Joliet
2011-05-27 13:33 ` [gentoo-user] No KMS for ATI Rage* (was: Goodbye, Gentoo) Felix Miata
2011-05-27 16:26 ` [gentoo-user] Goodbye, Gentoo Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-28 0:59 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
2011-05-28 13:50 ` Kevin O'Gorman
2011-05-28 19:14 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-05-28 8:06 ` [gentoo-user] " Alan McKinnon
2011-05-28 8:49 ` Pandu Poluan
2011-05-28 16:38 ` Daniel da Veiga
2011-05-28 19:19 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-05-29 14:32 ` Kevin O'Gorman
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