Thanks Nigel. Unfortunately, I did all those things. Unfortunately, not much luck. I double checked and I have the right sources for the kernel, and I have the correct yum.conf that allows older kernels. I have also double-checked that I don't have extra kernel sources.
<br><br>I'm at a bit of a loss, really. Am now wondering if it would not be worth installing the default FC5 kernel and recompile from source with the low latency patches.<br><br>- martin<br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">
On 12/08/06,
<b class="gmail_sendername">Nigel Henry</b> <<a href="mailto:cave.dnb@tiscali.fr" target="_blank" onclick="return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)">cave.dnb@tiscali.fr</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
On Saturday 12 August 2006 14:53, Martin Dupras wrote:<br>> Hi,<br>><br>> I'm having trouble with a brand new installation of planetccrma FC5 on a<br>> brand new HP Pavilion dv8263ea, core duo t2400, 1Gb of ram,nvidia geforce
<br>> go 7400.<br>><br>> Any help with any of the following problems would be greatly appreciated!<br>><br>> I've got kernel 2.6.16-1.2080.16.rrt.rhfc5.ccrmasmp.<br>><br>> 1) i can only boot with acpi=off in the command line. I installed the acpi
<br>> packages but that doesn't seem to solve the problem.<br>><br>> 2) i've got an internal intel 3945abg wireless card built in. To get it to<br>> work, I apparently need ndiswrapper. I compiled ndiswrapper from the
<br>> sources (works) but modprobe ndiswrapper gives:<br>><br>> "FATAL: Error inserting ndiswrapper (/lib/modules/2.6.16-<br>> 1.2080.16.rrt.rhfc5.ccrmasmp/misc/ndiswrapper.ko): Invalid module format."
<br>><br>> 3) Can't install the NVIDIA driver because it appears to not find the<br>> kernel sources<br><br>Hi Martin. You should just need the kernel-devel package which will provide<br>the kernel headers. Make sure it matches the ccrma kernel you're using.
<br><br>Someone I saw had problems getting the kernel-devel package for the ccrma<br>kernel, as, a "yum install kernel-devel" was trying to get a kernel-devel<br>package for the Fedora kernel. I don't have that problem as I use both Yum,
<br>and Apt on FC5. Apt for Fedora core, updates, and extras repos, and Yum just<br>for the planetccrma ones. If you have problems, a workaround would be to<br>temporarily set, Fedora core, updates, and extras repos to "Enabled=0" (not
<br>sure which one is responsible for the kernel-devel package), then you should<br>only get the option of the kernel-devel package from planetccrma.<br><br>Another thing you may have missed from Fernando's posts. A yum update should
<br>have got you a new version of Yum from planetccrma. This is patched to allow<br>Yum to install older kernels, but you need to add a line to /etc/yum.conf, as<br>below.<br><br>oldpackage=1<br>><br>> I've been banging my head for a week trying to solve these problems, but I
<br>> seem to be getting nowhere.<br>><br>> Any help much, much appreciated!<br>><br>> - martin<br><br>Sorry I can't help with the other problems, nor with the Nvidia driver itself,<br>as my graphics are Cyberbladei1, and Rage128 on my 2 machines.
<br><br>All the best.<br><br>Nigel.<br><br>_______________________________________________<br>PlanetCCRMA mailing list<br><a href="mailto:PlanetCCRMA@ccrma.stanford.edu" target="_blank" onclick="return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)">
PlanetCCRMA@ccrma.stanford.edu</a><br><a href="http://ccrma-mail.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/planetccrma" target="_blank" onclick="return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)">
http://ccrma-mail.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/planetccrma</a><br></blockquote></div><br>