Bool wrote:
On an ASUS A8N-VM (NVidia NForce 410 with GForce 6100),
I have to use 2.6.14 kernel to have network working.
Jo Shields a écrit :
Soenke von Stamm wrote:
They all use exactly the same core, give or take some L2 cache, only
that X2 and Opteron >= 165 sport two cores, so an SMP-kernel makes a
lot of sense there. Same for Turion64, Athlon64, Sempron64, Opteron.
Use an AMD64 kernel, with or without smp depending on core count.
Depending on the chipset I suggest 2.6.8 for sarge and AMD8000
chipset, for all newer chipsets 2.6.12+ from unstable, for dual core
the spanking newest kernel you can get (see older thread below), eg.
there's a 2.6.15 kernel in unstable.
Am Mittwoch, 25. Januar 2006 00:42 schrieb Patrick Carlson:
Hello all. I'm looking to build a new system for Debian Linux.
I'm going
with an AMD64 chip. However, does the Linux AMD 64 kernel support
"AMD64",
"AMD64 X2 Dual Core", and "AMD64 FX"? Do they all work with the
same AMD64
build? Thanks for the help! :)
Via K8T890. Cheap, cheerful, supports all current s939 chips, and
plays fine with a 2.6.8 kernel.
That's common to most nForce4 variants - though 2.6.12 can usually be
persuaded to work, with some tweaking. nForce4 isn't a good bet for
linux systems - none of the "extra features" it has over K8T890 work
(the 'hardware firewall' and so on are windows driver-based jobs), so
all it ends up being is more expensive.
Unless you really *need* the low-end onboard graphics, I suppose.
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