PowerBook 3400 Network & Sound

Architecture specific questions.

PowerBook 3400 Network & Sound

Postby Guest » 14 Dec 2004, 17:38

I just installed YD 3.0.1 on a PB 3400. Everything seems to be working sans sound and networking. I can live without sound, but not networking. I configured eth0 during the install, but it doesn't seem to want to play nice.

Does anyone have an idea? I've used "System Settings -> Network" which always says that the device status is inactive, and when I click the activate button, a window pops up, and goes away too quickly to read.

Thanks for any help.
Guest
 

More Information

Postby Guest » 14 Dec 2004, 19:32

I managed to find out some more information. Don't know if it will help though.

redhat-config-network:

Either your Ethernet driver is not compiled as a module or the Ethernet card could not be initialized.
If the later, please verify your settings and try again.

Output:
modprobe: Can't open dependencies file /lib/modules/2.4.22-2fBOOT/modules.dep (No such file or directory)

I don't know what that means. If I do need to compile a module, how do I do that?

Thanks again for any help.

I was surprised that 3.0 didn't work on the 3400, since it used to be mentioned on the YD site. Hopefully someone else knows what's up.
Guest
 

Talking to yourself...

Postby Guest » 14 Dec 2004, 19:43

Well, I figure I'll just keep posting regarding my experiences on the remote chance that somewhere someone might find it useful. So, I started investigating:

/lib/modules/

Which contains:
2.4.22-2f and 2.4.22-2fsmp

I assume the SMP one is for multi-processor machines.

Anyway...of course it's having trouble finding the .dep file, because it's looking for a 2.4.22-2fBOOT directory. Should I just make a symbolic link? The other option is to figure out why it's appending BOOT rather than just using 2.4.22-2f, which is what I would expect.
Guest
 

Links not an Option...

Postby Guest » 14 Dec 2004, 19:45

Even as root:

# link 2.4.22-2f 2.4.22-2fBOOT
link: cannot create link '2.4.22-2fBOOT' to '2.4.22-2f': Operation not permitted
Guest
 

Tried this stuff...

Postby Guest » 14 Dec 2004, 19:52

I wish there was a post saying what the resolution was...

http://lists.terrasoftsolutions.com/pip ... 04598.html
Guest
 

Found This...

Postby Guest » 14 Dec 2004, 20:21

From:
http://www.yellowdoglinux.com/support/s ... nels.shtml

"Anyone using BootX still has one more thing to to copy: copy the new kernel to the partition on which BootX is installed, and put it where BootX can find it, in System Folder -> Linux kernels. This can be done by copying it directly there (if you've mounted that partition such that you can write files to it); or it can be done indirectly, by copying it to something like a Zip disk (useing xhfs, for example) or another machine (using ftp/sftp/scp), then rebooting to the MacOS and putting it in place. However you do it, you probably want to save a copy of your old kernel on the Mac side, too, and hit the 'save prefs' button in BootX when you've chosen the new kernel from the BootX pop-up menu of kernels, so that the new kernel becomes your default. "

Well...that's cool if I could access the network...but I can't. Trying something else.
Guest
 

Trial By Fire...

Postby Guest » 14 Dec 2004, 20:37

Whoot...

First I mounted my MacOS partition:

# mount -t hfs /dev/hda8 /mnt/macos

(I created the dir first and made sure 8 was my partition number)

Then I copied my kernel to the "Linux Kernels" folder on my MacOS partition. I pointed BootX at that new kernel on reboot...

And I hear sound...and I see dependencies being checked/found.

Lookin good.
Guest
 


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