Re: Is anyone completely happy with their Core2 motherboard?
- From: General Schvantzkoph <schvantzkoph@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 30 Jun 2007 11:35:00 GMT
On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 04:54:16 +0000, Mungo wrote:
General Schvantzkoph <schvantzkoph@xxxxxxxxx> wrote inthe
news:pan.2007.06.29.21.50.35@xxxxxxxxx:
Is anyone completely happy with their Core2 motherboard? I'm lookingRH-Server-5 and Centos-5 run nicely on the Asus P5B Deluxe. I reported
for a board where there are no install issues, LM sensors works,
usermode and ondemand speed governors work, and the Ethernet is fully
supported.
the following a couple of months ago and it remains valid:
Red Hat 5 Server seems to have fixed all the other problems we saw withthe
old RHES 4.4 kernel. However, to get all the information out oflm_sensors
ON THE 64 BIT ARCHITECTURE you need to:rpm
1. Install lm_sensors 2.10.2 or 2.10.3. Build from source
available from the Fedora 7 (devel) repositories or from tarball fromhave
the lm_sensors site. The default 2.10.1 shipped with RH and almost all
other distros won't work with the w83627dhg chip on the board. Make
sure you
sysfs working first.it as
2. Grab a current updated copy of w83627ehf.c and build
a kernel module. There are a couple of copies floating around, one at:
http://fxr.watson.org/fxr/source/drivers/hwmon/w83627ehf.c?v=linux-2.6
(Comment out the "include lm75.h" line in the code before compiling.)
Install it, depmod, the modprobe it. Be sure the lm78 module is
rmmod'ed before installing the new driver.
3. Sensors.conf data for the w83627dhg is wrong for
P5B
Deluxe. The correct offsets and descriptions are in:December/018555.html
http://lists.lm-sensors.org/pipermail/lm-sensors/2006-
running
The above applies to any board using the w83627dhg chip. If you are
the 2.6.21 kernel then the correct driver module is already be in theneed
kernel package and installing the latest lm_sensors should be all you
to do.I use "low end" Nvidia graphics cards and have installed VMware with
Microsoft guest OS'es. Both have to be reconfigured whenever the kernel
is updated ( there are ways around the NVidia recompile, but I feel
better safe than sorry) . Other that that, the performance has been
effortless.
Note that the RHEL-4 distro never had a jmicron PATA driver and I do not
think that there is one in RH-Server-5. We use SATA DVD's and SATA Hard
Drives which work swimmingly with the board and with Linux so we never
had to deal with the Jmicron issue. An IDE PCI card should address the
need if for any reason a PATA drive is required. YMMV.
Performance has also been near flawless. The P5B-Deluxe is one of the
few boards which allow fairly easy overclocking of the Core 2 chips.
Cheap overclocked E-6400's ( I can hear the Intel guys shuddering right
now ) haven't burned up or even gotten too warm on the boards. That
despite running rewritten analytic programs which would decide to take
off with 100% of both CPU's and stay there for embarrassingly long
periods of time until rescued by human intervention. We are yet to see
what they do during the inevitable Annual Air Condtioning Failure
sometime this summer.
regards,
mungo
----------------
The backhoe is the natural predator of the fiber optic cable.
Thanks
.
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- From: General Schvantzkoph
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