Hi,
I keep posting these messages in LKML because I get no answer from
someone to not do it, or cause I dunno what to do with them.
This is from Linus git tree - Current as per 6PM PDT.
CC fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_lrw.o
CC fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_super.o
CC fs/xfs/linux-2.6
> AFAIK hotplug looks for firmware in /lib/firmware and not
> /etc/firmware.
>
> On 9/8/05, Pavel Machek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi!
> >
> > > I checked the IPW2100 in the current git from
> linux-2.6 and the menuconfig
> > > help (Kconfig) says you need to put the firmware in
> /etc/
> IPW2200 requires a different ieee80211 stack, this can be had at
> ieee80211.sourceforge.net
Joe,
The stack is already in mainline in Linus Git. I should not need to
download the ieee80211 from any place but compile with the one in the
kernel.
.Alejandro
>
>
> Al
On Wed, 2005-09-07 at 22:18 -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
> Alejandro Bonilla Beeche wrote:
>
> Wanna post a URL to your .config?
Jeff,
Sorry, I did not paste it in the ML because this has always worked for
me, but hell, maybe I got something wrong! :|
Attached...
.Alejandro
>
Hi,
Where does one report this? I was building Linus Git tree as per I
updated it at 09/07/2005 7:00PM PDT and got this while compiling.
Where do I report this?
Debian unstable updated at same time.
it looks like ipw2200 is thinking that ieee80211 is not compiled in, but
I did select it
already in the Documentation/networking/.
I'm still spamming everyone cause I have not been told where to send
this directly. :-)
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Bonilla <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Pasted and attached.
debian:~/linux-2.6# diff -usr Documentation/networking/README.ipw2200~
Documentation
> > Who should I send the "patch" to? Or can someone simply change that?
Jesper,
Thanks. I also had a question. To whom is this patch sent to? Netdev or
LK?
How does one determine?
.Alejandro
>
> Firmware should go into /lib/firmware, not /etc/firmware.
>
>
Hi,
I checked the IPW2100 in the current git from linux-2.6 and the
menuconfig
help (Kconfig) says you need to put the firmware in /etc/firmware, it should
be /lib/firmware.
Who should I send the "patch" to? Or can someone simply change that?
Thanks,
.Alejandro
-
To unsubscribe from t
On Sat, 2005-09-03 at 18:58 -0400, Chuck Ebbert wrote:
> I just bought a new notebook. Here is the output from lspci using the latest
> pci.ids file from sourceforge:
>
> 00:00.0 Host bridge: ATI Technologies Inc RS480 Host Bridge (rev 01)
> 00:01.0 PCI bridge: ATI Technologies Inc: Unknown devic
On Sat, 2005-08-20 at 11:06 +0400, Alexey Dobriyan wrote:
> On Sat, Aug 20, 2005 at 12:45:46AM -0600, Alejandro Bonilla Beeche wrote:
> > OK, now I would like to see a more official statement about this. Does
> > the linuxjournal.com pay $5000?
>
> Counting someone else mon
On Fri, 2005-08-19 at 22:13 -0700, alan wrote:
> On Sat, 20 Aug 2005, Kernel Hacker wrote:
>
> > Friend,
> > What fact is behind this article
> > http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=25529.
>
> The article is also wrong.
>
> Try this one instead...
>
> http://os.newsforge.com/os/05/08/19/1842249
> On Fri, Aug 19 2005, Jon Escombe wrote:
> > For hard disk protection, I prefer the idea of the userspace code
> > thawing the drive based on current accelerometer data, rather than
> > simply waking up after x seconds (maybe you're running for
> a bus rather
> > than falling off a table)...
> >
On Tue, 2005-08-16 at 23:44 -0400, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> On Wed, 2005-08-17 at 13:29 +1000, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote:
> > On Wed, 2005-08-17 at 11:41 +1000, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote:
> >
> > > (I'm blind and I use a braille display. I use those functions to blank
> > > my laptop's scree
On Tue, 2005-08-16 at 22:07 +0200, Jens Axboe wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 16 2005, Alejandro Bonilla Beeche wrote:
> If I were in your position, I would just implement this for ide (pata,
> not sata) right now, since that is what you need to support (or do some
> of these notebooks come wit
On Tue, 2005-08-16 at 11:34 -0400, Lee Revell wrote:
> On Tue, 2005-08-16 at 09:25 -0600, Alejandro Bonilla Beeche wrote:
> > We are currently almost there with hdaps. We are thinking how we should
> > make things and have made most of the decesions. We still need help from
y.
Please try 2.6.8, I'm almost sure that it should work.
And anyway, this ML is not really a user support list, try asking in a
debian mailing list, if they think that it's something wrong with the
kernel, then come back and let us know.
.Alejandro
>
> Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
> Hi,
>
>I am in need of some help!
> I have installed Debian which has 2.6.8-2 kernel on it. After a fresh
> install I downloaded the 2.6.12.4 kernel and went to upgrade. After
> making the necessary changes in menuconfig I rebuilt the kernel and
> install it. It boots up until I get:
> Mo
On Tue, 2005-08-09 at 01:29 +0200, Adrian Bunk wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 08, 2005 at 03:06:58PM -0400, Lee Revell wrote:
> > On Mon, 2005-08-08 at 12:56 -0600, Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
> With NdisWrapper, the hardware manufacturer can say:
> "Our hardware is supported thr
> > > Any idea how much hardware is out there that needs
> ndiswrapper to work?
> >
> > No real idea but an educated guess: too much...
> >
>
> I like the idea of blacklisting anything with a native driver (even a
> partially working one), but leaving alone the stuff that is completely
> unsupporte
On Sun, 2005-08-07 at 21:20 -0400, Lee Revell wrote:
> On Sun, 2005-08-07 at 18:39 -0600, Alejandro Bonilla Beeche wrote:
> > On Sun, 2005-08-07 at 15:22 -0400, Lee Revell wrote:
> > > Is the Linksys WUSB 54GS wireless adapter (FCCID Q87-WUSB54GS)
> > >
On Sun, 2005-08-07 at 15:22 -0400, Lee Revell wrote:
> Is the Linksys WUSB 54GS wireless adapter (FCCID Q87-WUSB54GS)
> supported?
>
> TIA,
>
> Lee
Normally, linksys doesn't care much about Linux and they won't even
release info for a driver. Yeah, they have some open info for the WRT's
but the
On Fri, 2005-08-05 at 22:18 +0200, Alejandro Cabrera wrote:
> Hi
> I'm new in the list and I'm interested in lkm, I have the Linux Device
> Drivers 2ed. And I use the 2.6.8-2 kernel, and the modules that I create
> I don't test in my workstation. Exist any way to run the examples
> exposed in th
> >>Thanks to development of the driver from some nice guys, we
> are able to
> >>get data from the accelerometer. There is one problem. How do we
> >>calibrate the values that are outputed from the userspace?
> All PC's get
> >>a different value, and we can't really find the best
> solution. What
Second Try... ;-)
Anyone?
.Alejandro
On Sun, 2005-07-31 at 19:53 -0600, Alejandro Bonilla Beeche wrote:
> Hi Guys,
>
> I hope you all aren't sick about the topic. I have a quick question...
>
> Thanks to development of the driver from some nice guys, we are able to
Hi Guys,
I hope you all aren't sick about the topic. I have a quick question...
Thanks to development of the driver from some nice guys, we are able to
get data from the accelerometer. There is one problem. How do we
calibrate the values that are outputed from the userspace? All PC's get
a differ
Puneet Vyas wrote:
Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
Puneet Vyas wrote:
PS : I am not even sure if I am "allowed" to pull out the writer
like this. Am I supposed to "stop" the device first or something?
You are supoused to unmount the volume. Try it. umount /dev/cdrom ?
Make
Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
Puneet Vyas wrote:
Hi,
My Dell 600m has a CD writer attached as a USB device. I need to use
the same slot to connect my floppy drive. After pulling out the CD
writer , the machine completely hangs and only hard boot works. I am
new to reporting bugs so I attached
Puneet Vyas wrote:
Hi,
My Dell 600m has a CD writer attached as a USB device. I need to use
the same slot to connect my floppy drive. After pulling out the CD
writer , the machine completely hangs and only hard boot works. I am
new to reporting bugs so I attached all info as according to
RE
Sven Köhler wrote:
Hi,
currently, i'm using the ondemand governor. My CPU supports the
frequencies 800, 1800 and 2000 MHz (AMD Athlon64 Desktop with
Cool&Quiet). The simple bash commands
In my case, I have a Pentium M 1.8ghz 400 FSB. In powersave, it goes to
1.19ghz, in conservative, it go
Linus Torvalds wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jul 2005, Lee Revell wrote:
Con's interactivity benchmark looks quite promising for finding
scheduler related interactivity regressions.
I doubt that _any_ of the regressions that are user-visible are
scheduler-related. They all tend to be disk IO issu
Lee Revell wrote:
On Fri, 2005-07-22 at 21:15 -0500, Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
OK, I will, but I first of all need to learn how to tell if benchmarks
are better or worse.
Con's interactivity benchmark looks quite promising for finding
scheduler related interactivity regressions
Lee Revell wrote:
On Fri, 2005-07-22 at 20:07 -0500, Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
I will get flames for this, but my laptop boots faster and sometimes
responds faster in 2.4.27 than in 2.6.12. Sorry, but this is the fact
for me. IBM T42.
Sorry dude, but there's just no way tha
Blaisorblade wrote:
Adrian Bunk stusta.de> writes:
On Thu, Jul 21, 2005 at 09:40:43PM -0500, Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
How do we know that something is OK or wrong? just by the fact that
it works or not, it doesn't mean like is OK.
There has to be a process for any user to
Martin MOKREJŠ wrote:
Hi,
Mark Nipper wrote:
I have a different idea along these lines but not using
bugzilla. A nice system for tracking usage of certain components
might be made by having people register using a certain e-mail
address and then submitting their .config as they try out n
> Hi
>
> I want to join the Kernel community and help in developing Linux
> kernel, I'm good in C,Perl and not that good in C++
>
> is there any How-To page in how to help or how to join ? since I want
> to start in basic things
I can tell you one thing for sure. And that is that you will need t
> Are there other open source firewall implementations
> other than snort?
>
> I would apprecitate it if you could let me know.
> Thanks,
> Vinay
>
I might be wrong and this might be a stupid answer but... How about
iptables?
iptables blocks everything incomind, allows, deny and forwards, so I th
> On Sun, 3 Jul 2005, Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
> > PLEASE read the following article, it has the data of a guy
> that made a
> > driver in IBM for Linux and he described the driver he made.
> > http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/marksmith/tpaps.html
>
> Yesterda
Bodo Eggert wrote:
Clemens Koller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Well, sure, it's not a notebook HDD, but maybe it's possible
to give headpark a more generic way to get the heads parked?
I remember my old MFM HDD, which had a Landing Zone stored in the BIOS to
which the park command woul
Jon Escombe wrote:
Jens Axboe wrote:
Note on that - if the util says it parked, you can be very sure that it
actually did as the drive actually returns that status outside of just
completing the command.
It's worth noting that you'll need the libata passthrough patch to
make this work on a
> Hello,
>
> Just for the records
> -
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ./headpark /dev/hda
> head not parked 4c
> -
>
> HDD is a desktop Maxtor Diamond MaxPlus 9 120GB
> on a Promise Ultra133 TX2 IDE Controller.
>
> Well, sure, it's not a notebook HDD, but maybe it's possible
> to give headpark
> --- Pekka Enberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > On 7/7/05, Martin Knoblauch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > Interesting. Same Notebook, same drive. The program say "not
> > parked"
> > > :-( This is on FC2 with a pretty much vanilla 2.6.9 kernel.
> > >
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] tmp]# hdparm -i
Jens,
Thanks for this util. :-) It will make things easier for us and do part
of
the Job we are looking for. I will post this script in the hdaps.sf.net for
people if it's ok with you.
Thanks again,
.Alejandro
> > #include
> > #include
> > #include
> > #include
> > #include
> > #
> Alejandro Bonilla wrote (ao):
> > If you check the IBM software in Windows, it shows 2 things.
> > First, when it pauses the HD and when it stops the HD. It all
> > depends on how hard you hit the PC. In one we suspend the drive
> > and in the other we
>
> As Lenz already suggested, you both pretty much seem to be describing
> laptop mode. See the documentation.
>
> --
> Jens Axboe
>
Jens,
Yes, I know about laptop_mode, I always use it, but HD APS does not
automatically starts laptop_mode currently. That's why I was spitting out
that it
Pavel Machek wrote:
Actually, "spin disk down and keep it down" would be nice for other
reasons. Taking computer for a jog playing mp3s from ramdisk is
something I'd like to do...
Pavel
This is exactly what I wanted to do. hdparm suspend which would send
thin
Jens Axboe wrote:
That's madness, we can't add a kernel thread for every single little
silly thing. You don't need to stop any io, you just want to make sure
that your park request gets issued right after the current io has
finished.
HI,
For me, the heads have to park so fast. That I wo
Patrick McFarland wrote:
On Wednesday 20 April 2005 09:09 pm, Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
Why is kb not used anymore? What happened?
Linus decided that keyboards are out, and voice activation is in. Remember to
use a high quality microphone!
Ohh _G_ Is that Why!? I thought it was cause
Linus Torvalds wrote:
Ok,
you know what the subject line means by now, but this release is a bit
different from the usual ones, for obvious reasons. It's the first in a
_long_ time that I've done without using BK, and it's the first one ever
that has been built up completely with "git".
It's av
I usually never complain, or give negative motivation, but this is a
reality.
Now, what's wrong with that ?
Well, the fact is that new hardware is only supported by latest kernel,
so at the end, you have to upgrade, and so you get more and more complexity
whether you like it or not.
As an example
05-04-14 at 16:58 -0400, Shawn Starr wrote:
We just need to figure
out to get the specs from IBM
Best bet is probably reverse engineering it...
Lee,
I know this is far from easy... but, What do we need to do this? I haven't
seen such a cooler feature in a Thinkpad like the HDAPS.
This is located in my home PC, Won't be the fastest downloads...
http://wifitux.com/finger/
Under what terms did you obtain these documents and from where? Are
they completely freely distributable or are there strings attached?
I emailed the guys and they told me, "Hey, here y
>
> Has anyone started on such a project or would like to? We
> just need to figure
> out to get the specs from IBM I think such support would be good.
>
> Shawn.
> -
I believe I have emailed IBM about 20 times about this, and have sent emails
to the people from IBM Research and the same guys tha
gt; > Sent: Thursday, April 14, 2005 03:07 PM
> > To: Alejandro Bonilla
> > Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
> > Subject: Re: IBM Thinkpad T42 - Looking for a Developer.
> >
> >
> > On Thu, 14 Apr 2005, Alejandro Bonilla wrote:
> >
> > > Hi
Hi All,
Sorry if this thread has been already discussed or if this is not the
right
place. I'm looking for a driver developer to make the driver for the IBM
Thinkpads Fingerprint reader.
I have all the documentation required from the Makers of the hardware,
the
so called Program
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