RE: A7V133 motherboard with debian 2.2r3
I am running V2.2r3 on an A7V133 with no problem. I am currently running my
disks on the regular IDE controller, but did play with them on the Promise
controller for a bit before I decided to move them back (for non-technical
reasons). The disk drives were an IBM 30GB and a nondescript 1GB that I use
for swap.
If your experience is like mine the installation will go smoothly. I have
been told, but have not investigated it myself, that you have to muck with a
kernel compile to turn on ATA-100 capability. I am not up on all that stuff
so will let someone else respond on that subject.
-rick
-----Original Message-----
From: David Grant [mailto:dgrant3@attglobal.net]
Sent: Sunday, July 22, 2001 10:57 PM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org; debian-users@lists.debian.org
Subject: A7V133 motherboard with debian 2.2r3
Hello,
I have an ASUS A7V133 motherboard. I've been using Redhat 7.1 for a few
months and now I am already pissed off with RPM. (First I was pissed off
with the RPM system, and now I am pissed off, because the rpm program itself
is causing segmentation faults. And now if I try to re-install rpm, I get
some depency problems.) Anyways, it's a mess and to keep the long story
short, I'm switching to Debian.
I had some trouble with my ASUS A7V133 motherboard. The VIA on-board
controller (vt82c686b) never worked, even with the most recent kernel
(2.4.6). I got the on-board promise controller to work though (PDC20265).
It works with kernel 2.4.2-2 and up. But what about the older kernels? I
just ordered Debian potato 2.2r3 in the mail, and I just realized that it
only has 2.2.19? or something like that, which came out on March 26th, and
the 2.4.2 came out on February 21st, and I guess the redhat 2.4.2-2 version
came out a little after?
Anyways, I'm getting Debian in the mail in a few days, and I'm a little
impatient. I want to know from experience if people have been able to get
Debian potato 2.2r3 to work "out-of-the-box" with their on-board Promise
chip
on the A7V133. I want to read up about any tricks I might have to do in
order to get my Debian to work.
Oh by the way, I popped in an old Corel Linux CD as well as an old Stormix
2000 CD, which are debian-based and use a slightly older 2.4.2 kernel. I
couldn't get them to even see the hard drive during install. It said I had
to valid devices to install to. There must be a specific point in the
kernel
lifetime where this was fixed. Either that, or the bug is still around.
cc: to dgrant3@attglobal.net
Thanks,
D. Grant
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-request@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact
listmaster@lists.debian.org
Reply to: