Acer Veriton N2620G PC flashing like it's on an acid trip!
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Thanks that worked like a champ! Now onto trying to compile a kernel.
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[quote=āchad-bisd, post: 10562, member: 18ā]There is a relatively easy-to-follow article on the wiki for compiling your own kernel. The hardest part is knowing what drivers to include or remove. I got lucky and based on my experience and the documentation in the xconfig, I was able to get my kernel setup and working after a few tries. I had some compile errors, but a quick look on the internet showed that the failing modules were things Iād never use, so it was a no brainer to remove them.[/quote]
On that topic, could I just add the video drivers for this thing?? Iām guessing FOG can access the LAN as I see the splash page. It doesnāt start going all LSD till after I make a selection.
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For me, it was removing the agpgart drivers and adding in the radeon drivers. I used the core.config rather than the kitchensink.config, and I had to remove the ndiswrapper stuff that gave errors during the compile.
Make note of your changes as you compile, so you can revert or try new combinations without wasting time.
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[quote=āchad-bisd, post: 10590, member: 18ā]For me, it was removing the agpgart drivers and adding in the radeon drivers.[/quote]
But what if I needed both for different machines? Granted itās a āwhat ifā question. The majority of machines I use FOG on ([B]Acer Veriton N281G[/B]) seem to use the [B]Intel NM10 Express Chipset[/B] with the [B]Intel D425 integrated GFX core graphics solution[/B].
Currently trying to find the specs of the [B]Acer Veriton N2620G[/B] ā machine in question.
Also, in reading through the walkthrough you mentioned: [url]http://www.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Building_a_Custom_Kernel[/url] When itās referring to the linux kernel, does it mean THE Linux kernel, or the 3.3.3 kernel in FOG.
For the drivers, Iām guessing Iād have to find the Linux drivers, no? -
Unless you have older machines that still use an AGP based video system, you donāt need the AGPGart drivers. Iām talking like 2005 or before most video cards moved to PCI Express (even the built in ones)
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So about that kernel, do I follow the wiki walk through verbatim? Where does the 3.3.3 come in?
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I just followed the wiki for Ubuntu Desktop 11.10, with the following changes:
[LIST=1]
[]downloaded linux-3.7.7.tar.gz from kernel.org
[]had to add g++ compiler to the system in addition to the libqt3 components mentioned in the wiki.
[*]I ran the make commands from inside /usr/src/linux-3.7.7
[/LIST]
I ran āmake xconfigā and added in the .config and /proc/config.gz options and ran the āmake bzImageā
Iām going to play around with it a bit today and see if it works with my FOG setup. -
Thanks for the help, man. I appriciate it, as this is the first time Iāve done anything like this.
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I just tested the 3.7.7 kernel I compiled using Ubuntu Desktop 11.10. The only changes I made to the kitchensink.config was to add the config and /proc/config.gz options. It works for most of my machines except my problem child acer tablets that use a ASIX88772B usb network adapter and SSD drive. It finds neither the drive nor the network adapter. Iām going to recompile tonight adding in more drivers I need.
The 3.7.7 kernel boots significantly faster than my old kernel that was based on 2.6.38 I believe, but doesnāt support all my workstation and laptop configurations yet.
The whole point of this is to let you know that following the basic steps in the wiki with the few modifications in the posts above, I was able to compile a āmostlyā working kernel.
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So Iāve done some hunting. The integrated driver for the Acer Veriton 2620G is, according to my research, an Intel GMA 3150. Of course Acer doesnāt state this on their data sheet of the product. I had to go hunt down, comparing the Windows 7 driver file to a snippet I found on the internet. And of course, Acer doesnāt acknowledge that this particular specimen, came with Linux Linpus (not a good flavor of Linux, IMHO), only showing me the Windows 7/8 drivers.
Yet, hold on. The Veriton N281G, which DOES work on my FOG setup also, according to the Acer Datasheet ā which is filled out more completely ā also uses the Intel GMA 3150. The only differences as far as that goes, is one machine, the N2620G uses an HM70 Express model chipset, while the N281G uses an NM10 model chipset.
Veriton N2620G datasheet: [url]http://us.acer.com/ac/en/US/content/model-datasheet/DT.VFGAA.001[/url]
Veriton N281G datasheet: [url]http://support.acer.com/acerpanam/desktop/2011/acer/veriton/VeritonN281G/VeritonN281Gsp2.shtml[/url] -
Still trying to figure this out. With no help from Acer. If both working and non-working models use the same graphics controller (still donāt know for sure due to Acerās lousy documentation.) could the weird display problem be due to the general chipset on the motherboard?
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If youāve got one already running some flavor of linux, we can use that to figure out what driver we need to compile into the FOG kernel.
try:
[CODE]lspci -k[/CODE]
or
[CODE]lsmod[/CODE]and look for your graphics card info.
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Hi, I got the same problem with Acer Veriton N2620G, though what I tried to install is Ubuntu 12.10, like Hunter had mentioned above, the same symptom was encountered. Some modification were made that made the installation successful with Ubuntu but without the optimal performance. The unit is okay with Debian, no problem at all.
Acer Philippines relayed to us Acer HQās (Taiwan) advice:
[SIZE=2][FONT=sans-serif]"The below details are the best recommendation from our HQ side. Btw, have they tried to compile their linux base on kernel 3.6.6-lp.1? Because as per discussion with our HQ team, this is the initial solution.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=3][FONT=Calibri]Please rebuild kernel to disable below feature:[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=3][FONT=Calibri]-Device Driversā>[/FONT][/SIZE][SIZE=3][FONT=Calibri]
-Graphics supportā>[/FONT][/SIZE][SIZE=3][FONT=Calibri]
-Direct Rendering Manager (XFree86 4.1.0 and higher DRI support)ā> Enable modesetting on intel by default[/FONT][/SIZE][SIZE=3][FONT=Calibri][/FONT][/SIZE][SIZE=3][FONT=Calibri]Or add kernel parameter āi915.modeset=0ā in the booting.[/FONT][/SIZE][SIZE=3] "[/SIZE]As of this moment, only Debian Linux is tested to run with this Veriton model.
[SIZE=3][/SIZE]
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Finally got what appears to be a definative answer from Acer regarding drivers:
[FONT=Arial][COLOR=#000000]VN2620G System Information[/COLOR][/FONT][COLOR=#000000][FONT=Times New Roman] [/FONT][FONT=Arial]System Chipset: Intel HM70[/FONT][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000][FONT=Times New Roman] [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Video Chipset: Intel HD 4000[/FONT][/COLOR][FONT=Times New Roman][COLOR=#000000] [/COLOR][/FONT][FONT=Arial][URL=āhttp://downloadcenter.intel.com/SearchResult.aspx?lang=eng&ProductFamily=Graphics&ProductLine=Laptop+graphics+drivers&ProductProduct=3rd+Generation+Intel+Core+Processors+with+Intel+HD+Graphics+4000%2F2500&ProdId=3498&LineId=1101&FamilyId=39ā][U][COLOR=#0000ff]http://downloadcenter.intel.com/SearchResult.aspx?lang=eng&ProductFamily=Graphics&ProductLine=Laptop+graphics+drivers&ProductProduct=3rd+Generation+Intel+Core+Processors+with+Intel+HD+Graphics+4000%2F2500&ProdId=3498&LineId=1101&FamilyId=39[/COLOR][/U][/URL][/FONT][COLOR=#000000][FONT=Times New Roman] [/FONT][FONT=Arial]LAN: Intel 82579V[/FONT][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000][FONT=Times New Roman] [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Audio: Realtek ALC662-VD[/FONT][/COLOR]
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[FONT=Times New Roman][COLOR=#000000]So. Hereās what Acer said the working system has. This leads me to think, perhaps it is a graphics driver problem. [/COLOR][/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman][COLOR=#000000]VN262G System Information
System Chipset: Intel NM10
Video Chipset: Intel Atom D400/D500 series on die graphic solution
LAN: Realtek RTL8111E
Audio: Realtek ALC662-VD [/COLOR][/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman][COLOR=#000000]Unfortuntately, it does not appear that Intel has released a linux driver for either chipset or graphics card.[/COLOR][/FONT]
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Did you try the suggestion in Art Mendozaās post?
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To be honest, I donāt quite understand it. Do I mod the FOG kernel to do that?
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Yes. You need to compile a custom kernel.
Follow the wiki article and grab the latest stable kernel source, which I think is 3.7.8, or if you are already know the 3.3.3 kernel works with most of your devices, grab the 3.3.3 kernel source.
Itās pretty easy from that point on to compile the kernel, just substitute 3.3.3 for the kernel version anywhere the article says a different one.
You may have to install a few pre-reqs before you can compile: gcc, make, git, libqt3-dev, etc that are listed on the wiki or help site about compiling kernels for your distribution.
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Can I grab the kernel from the fog machine itself? Where do I get it from?