This isn't exactly related to non-PAE CPU, but related.

My equipment is mostly old and therefore became available to me at no cost.. :) However, as much of it 8 years or older, some of the CPU capabilities required by newer kernels are not available to my cadre..

How would one go about finding out which CPU capabilities one has and which is the most up to date kernel to use for that CPU?

Last night I attempted to load Linux 12.04 LTS onto my 800 MHz Celeron and it was flagged and inappropriate due to lack of CMOV support.

Thus far, my incompatibility problems have centered around lack of PAE or CMOV capability. Thanks for any insights on how to best match my old machine to the best Ubuntu Kernel.

David J.

On 12/28/2013 7:42 PM, Nio Wiklund wrote:
2013-12-29 00:52, Nio Wiklund skrev:
2013-12-29 00:27, Nio Wiklund skrev:
Phill Whiteside wrote 6:57pm Dec 27:

Hi Folks, well you know me I've been working quietly to get a non-pae
kernel build for lubuntu 13.10 to happen. Lubuntu has done community
respins in the past. This was a little more difficult as it needed an
MOTU who is not a kernel person to actually build the kernel and then
another good guy to make a respin. Please do give a try of

http://phillw.net/isos/non-pae/

if this works, we may be able to > expand.,,

Back from Christmas celebration, I have run Joern's non-pae build of
Lubuntu 13.10 live in an IBM Thinkpad T42 without a pae flag. The CPU is
a Pentium M, so it is relevant for that catergory of CPUs (without a pae
flag, but with pae capability).


1. It runs as it should (with zram etc, except that there is only the
guest user, so I cannot run sudo). Anyway it is good as a test, that the
kernel works without a pae flag :-)

(I checked with md5sum that both of you Joern and Phill have uploaded
the same version, the one I tested.)


2. Can *you* try to run it in a computer with a pre Pentium II CPU?
(without PAE capability, so that fake-PAE won't help)


3. Is there some particular feature or program or task, that should be
tested?


Best regards
Nio

I could not install it into my IBM Thinkpad T42. It crashed at a rather
late stage (after downloading files, during installation of the system)

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubiquity/+bug/1264762

Best regards
Nio

Now I have installed the kernel via hyperair's ppa into an already
installed system Lubuntu 13.10 system (in a USB 3 pendrive).

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:hyperair/staging

It runs, but the wired network won't connect in my new Toshiba with an
i5 processor:

linux-image-3.11.0.12-generic works like it should
linux-image-3.11.0.15-generic-nonpae works but has no wired network

I can check in another computer, for example the Thinkpad with Pentium M
... It works, including the network :-)

I wonder why the wired network won't work with this non-pae kernel in
the modern computer (the Toshiba was bought in April 2013).

It is the same problem in a Toshiba from 2010 with a Realtek ethernet
card (that has 'always' worked with various linux versions). But the
kernel works in a computer with an ASUS M2N-VM DVI mobo and a built-in
nvidia ethernet chip from 2008. Maybe there is a problem with the driver
for some Realtek chips/cards.

Best regards
Nio


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