Anyone have a 3.4 kernel to hand?
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See if you get this. I’ve never used filedropper, but it didn’t require an account.
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yes that worked fine, thanks i will try it tomorrow
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falko:
Any luck with that kernel?
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yes, works great
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Excellent. I just wanted to get some feedback since I had offered it up to a few others. Cheers.
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yeah, it works with all my kit (9 diff machines)
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That is good news. I’m going to build a Kitchen-Sink 34 kernel as well. Hopefully I’ll get a chance this week.
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[quote=“astrouga, post: 3793, member: 907”]That is good news. I’m going to build a Kitchen-Sink 34 kernel as well. Hopefully I’ll get a chance this week.[/quote]
does it not work on all you equipment? what does the KS have extra, just more drivers?
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I haven’t had a chance to try it on everything inventory yet – my FOG system is in limbo as I have mainly been playing with .33 beta. Though I suspect it will work on everything.
The KS is supposed to have more drivers, though I haven’t looked at the .config file to see what sort of things are included. Perhaps it will be unnecessary. I read sometime back that the KS kernel might increase device support at the cost of performance though. I’ll have to try some comparisons on different hardware between the core.config and kitchensink.config, just to see if that is true these days.
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please post what you come up with.
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[URL=‘http://www.filedropper.com/bzimage’]core kernel 3.4.1 [/URL]
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[quote=“falko, post: 3895, member: 48”][URL=‘http://www.filedropper.com/bzimage’]core kernel 3.4.1 [/URL][/quote]
what are the changes?
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tbh i’m not quite sure lol, I know it has vmware ISCSI support and is just a maintenance release of astrouga’s 3.4 really
Linux kernel 3.4.1 includes mostly updated drivers, a few ARM, PowerPC, x86, and SPARC fixes, and other small improvements related to wireless networking and SELinux.
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[quote=“falko, post: 3898, member: 48”]tbh i’m not quite sure lol, I know it has vmware ISCSI support and is just a maintenance release of astrouga’s 3.4 really
Linux kernel 3.4.1 includes mostly updated drivers, a few ARM, PowerPC, x86, and SPARC fixes, and other small improvements related to wireless networking and SELinux.[/quote]
well, its probably not the right place to ask, but is there a reason when I deploy to a bunch of computers, it seems to have a memory leak and then seems to just loose network connectivity?
I hope you can help.
again, sorry if its the wrong thread for this stuff. -
Are you refering to 3.4, 3.4.1?
What’s your set up? What PCs
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[quote=“falko, post: 3902, member: 48”]Are you refering to 3.4, 3.4.1?
What’s your set up? What PCs[/quote]
well, we have a ubuntu 10.04 server. and we have a ubuntu 10.04 storage server with tftp and pxe abilities thanks to the guide on the fog wiki and I included dhcp in that so that we could get it to work on a different network.
we are using currently some optiplex 760 and 740 computers and are going to be upgrading to optiplex 790s here soon.
thanks -
[quote=“jmwalton, post: 3904, member: 697”]well, we have a ubuntu 10.04 server. and we have a ubuntu 10.04 storage server with tftp and pxe abilities thanks to the guide on the fog wiki and I included dhcp in that so that we could get it to work on a different network.
we are using currently some optiplex 760 and 740 computers and are going to be upgrading to optiplex 790s here soon.
thanks[/quote]
What kernel? And are your Ubuntu machines fully updated? -
[quote=“falko, post: 3905, member: 48”]What kernel? And are your Ubuntu machines fully updated?[/quote]
yes and 3.4.0 the one that was posted earlier on this thread. is that bad? -
If your having issues , try the 3.4.1 or roll back to a kernel that works with them machines.