Try lowering the resolution - some projectors (mostly older ones) don't support higher than 640x480. Something like knoppix xserver=fbdev screen="640x480" might do.
-Krishna
Originally Posted by gill1109
![]()
Re !
no matter about speaking french because there is no response for it at this time...
PS: I'm very sorry but i have not seen that your topics was about Knoppix on mac...![]()
Try lowering the resolution - some projectors (mostly older ones) don't support higher than 640x480. Something like knoppix xserver=fbdev screen="640x480" might do.
-Krishna
Originally Posted by gill1109
![]()
Hello,
is it possible to burn the .iso with toast? I try it but my cd don't seem to be bootable. And how can I start from the cd (press C at startup like the mac way?). Please help a newbie.
Thank you.
fmurray
You will only be able to boot the cd ("c") on a NewWorld machine. If your machine is OldWorld then you would need to set up BootX to boot from your MacOS partition into the Knoppix CD env.Originally Posted by fmurray
Install the BootX extention, control panel, and create a folder titled "Linux Kernels" in the System Folder.
Copy the kernel from the CD into /System Folder/Linux Kernels/ (on the MiB CD the kenel is named "linux.bin"). Open the BootX control pannel, select "options", select "use initrd image", navigate to the CD/boot and select "root.bin.gz" (again, i'm using the naming convention from Knoppix-MiB alpha, it may be different on the Linuxtag ppc CD).
In the "initrd size" dialog add "10240" (this is the MiB initrd size, a size of 11000 should cover most initrd).
In the kernel args dialog add, "init=/etc/init rw lang=YOUR_PREFERD_LANG BOOT_IMAGE=knoppix" plus other cheatcodes as required. You can look at the yaboot.conf in CD/boot, the "append" section is what gets passed to the kernel as args.
You may need to add "video=ofonly" or "video=fbdev" or select the "No Video" button (in BootX) dependent on yor video card.
Now hit tab, the highlighted window should be "MacOS", now save the configuration to your preferences (the initd size is never saved btw, and so you will need to re-enter the size on reboot).
Selecting the "Linux" button should boot you into the knoppix CD env.
I have had some quite some success booting other LiveCD's on OldWorld machines (8500, 4400, Powerbook Wallstreet II) with this method, but have yet to try with either of the knoppix (ppc) CD's (all the OldWorld machines I have access to are at work and I am presently on summer break).
OldWorld machines will not be able to boot directly from the CD's, at least by the usual methods. See my post above in this regard.Originally Posted by rickenbacherus
Huh? There are numerious non-rpm based PowerPC distributions .. Debian, Gentoo, Rock Linux, Slackintosh, amoungst others.Originally Posted by rickenbacherus
By adding "xserver=fbdev" you are telling XFree86 to use the fbdev driver, which will use the kernels framebuffer (atyfb, aty128fb or radeonfb) device for graphics acceleration. It's not optimal for graphics acceleration as there are specific drivers for these cards (ati, r128 and radeon) that come with XFree86.Originally Posted by gill1109
Ideally you should be passing xserver={ati,r128,radeon} (dependent on the specific card) but the hwdata on both the MiB and Linuxtag ppc CD's lacks the ability to set up the XF86Config-4 correctly. It's a fairly simple fix to hwdata-${version}/Cards
I have patches against hwdata-0.8 that I will send to the respective developers.Code:NAME ATI Radeon Mobility 9000 CHIPSET R250 DRIVER radeon +LINE Option "UseFBDev" "true"
The MiB ppc CD's (didn't check on the Linuxtag CD) is also missing dri kernel modules for these cards. These are available as debs I believe, at least they were developed by Debian dev Michel Daenzer so one would expect so.
Having XFree86 use the driver specifc to the card would improve the overall responsiveness of the GUI.
Do you actually have a iBook with a ATI Rage 128 card? AFAIK only the clamshells (aka. toilet seat) had this card, later models have ATI Radeon cards. If your machine has a Rage128 then (and I'm assuming this does not work with fbdev ) there is a m3mirror utility that will enable Rage128 based powerbooks to drive the external VGA connector for mirroring.Originally Posted by gill1109
`lspci -v | grep ATI` should show you which card you have.
Forgot to mention that if you have a Radeon card then mirroring is not possible, I believe it did work with 2.4.19-x but there have been major changes in radeonfb since that point and mirroring is nolonger possible. This capability may return in future, my guess is it was removed due to re-write.Originally Posted by cselkirk
Rock Linux and Slackintosh I have not heard of-thanks for those. Ever built Gentoo or Debian on a 233MHz ppc before? No thanks.Originally Posted by cselkirk
No need to build Debian, it is a binary based distribution, or did you mean install? I have in the pased installed it on 33mhz 68k macs with little problem.Originally Posted by rickenbacherus
In the case of Gentoo, I have build on 120mhz 4400 and 100mhz 6500 PowerPC machines. There was in total 16 machines, I built on one host (using distcc on 3 other G{3.4}'s) and then dd'ed the install to the other 15 machines (this was for a wireless network, each machine doing IPSec, QoS, DHCP, etc).
I've also installed it on an Xserve and a number of TiBooks, Powerbook Wallstreet & Pismo's, iBooks, RS6000 43P-140, ANS, Yosimites, Dual 1G G4, and probably others .. :P
Hopefully that answers your question ;)
semanticsOriginally Posted by cselkirk
I'm not disputing the possibility but rather pointing out the unnecessary headaches and extra efforts needed for a ppc installation. The bottom line cselkirk is that it just isn't worth the trouble- notI have in the pased installed it on 33mhz 68k macs with little problem.In the case of Gentoo, I have build on 120mhz 4400 and 100mhz 6500 PowerPC machines. There was in total 16 machines, I built on one host (using distcc on 3 other G{3.4}'s) and then dd'ed the install to the other 15 machines (this was for a wireless network, each machine doing IPSec, QoS, DHCP, etc).
I've also installed it on an Xserve and a number of TiBooks, Powerbook Wallstreet & Pismo's, iBooks, RS6000 43P-140, ANS, Yosimites, Dual 1G G4, and probably others .. :P
Hopefully that answers your question![]()
on a piece of ppc. Not when you can buy twice the machince in an x86 flavor for half the money.And that's a fact jack.
Juniper EX2300-C-12P, 12 Port FANLESS POE Ethernet Switch EX2300-C
$375.00
Juniper Networks EX2300-C-12T Compact 12-Port EX2300-C Series Ethernet Switch
$300.00
Juniper Networks EX2200-C Gigabit Ethernet Managed Switch | EX2200-C-12P-2G
$49.99
Juniper Networks EX3300 EX3300-48P 48-Port Gigabit PoE+ Switch
$59.95
Juniper EX3400-48P 48 Port Switch PoE+ 4x SFP+ 2x QSFP 1xAC *Tested/Warranty*
$139.95
Juniper Networks EX3300-24P | 24 Port Gigabit Network Switch w/ Power cord
$53.99
Juniper QFX5100-48T 48-Port 10G SFP 6-Port 40G QSFP Ethernet Switch Tested
$312.69
Juniper Networks SRX320-POE 6-Port Service Gateway Security Appliance Tested
$149.99
Juniper Networks EX4400-48MP 48 port 5GbE + 12 port 10 Gigabit PoE++ Switch -NEW
$1200.00
Juniper Networks EX2300-48P 48-Port PoE+ Network Cloud-Ready Ethernet Switch
$104.99