On Sunday 12 October 2008 01:48, someone identifying as *Markus R. Ke?ler*
wrote in /alt.os.linux.mandrake:/
Quote:
Hi Dave,
On Fri, 10 Oct 2008 14:16:44 -0400, "David W. Hodgins"
dwhodgins@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
On Thu, 09 Oct 2008 19:21:33 -0400, Markus R. Keßler
wrote:
On Wed, 08 Oct 2008 17:34:34 -0400, "David W. Hodgins"
dwhodgins@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
Mandrake/Mandriva installer doesn't. Try passing the kernel option
"acpi=off", to see if that fixes the problem.
You mean to append this option to the lilo.conf?
append="devfs=nomount acpi=ht resume=/dev/hda5"
Yes, or you can also pass it at boot time. On a processor that doesn't
support hyper-threading, acpi=ht should be the same as acpi=off, so
that doesn't seem to be a workaround that's going to work.
Try append="devfs=nomount acpi=off apic=off lapic=off".
I tried it but without success.
The last two options were incorrect - see my reply to Dave.
Quote:
So, finally, I booted from the installation cd and made a "system upgrade"
- just to see what the installation procedure will change.
Obviously there are different kernel versions - the kernel for Cyrix
differs from the one for intel. - As soon as I'll have the time I'd
like to see if the one for Intel also supports AMD.
You have to be careful here as some Cyrix processors that were sold as i586
were actually i486 processors internally but were intended to fit in i586
motherboard sockets, and so the i586 code won't work on them.
Unfortunately I don't remember any details, though. Perhaps you can find
more information about this subject on Tom's Hardware Page.
Quote:
Well, during system update the installation procedure created a new
kernel and wrote a new entry to /etc/lilo.conf.
It didn't create kernel, it installed it.

Quote:
I adapted it to get a working conf file with 2 entries, one for
default booting and one for "failsafe":
# # File generated by DrakX/drakboot
# # WARNING: do not forget to run lilo after modifying this file
#
# default="linux-i586-up-1GB"
# boot=/dev/hda
# map=/boot/map
# keytable=/boot/de-latin1.klt
# prompt
# nowarn
# timeout=20
# message=/boot/message
# menu-scheme=wb:bw:wb:bw
# image=/boot/vmlinuz-i586-up-1GB
# label="linux-i586-up-1GB"
# root=/dev/hda1
# initrd=/boot/initrd-i586-up-1GB.img
# append="devfs=nomount acpi=ht resume=/dev/hda5"
# read-only
# image=/boot/vmlinuz-i586-up-1GB
# label="failsafe"
# root=/dev/hda1
# initrd=/boot/initrd-i586-up-1GB.img
# append="failsafe acpi=ht resume=/dev/hda5 devfs=nomount"
# password="nemoscit"
# read-only
It is still not clear to me, why the new kernel is called "up-1GB" [...
Uniprocessor kernel with support for 1 GB of RAM. In other words, it
doesn't have symmetric multiprocessing/multithreading/multicore support and
it's a 32-bit kernel that doesn't support the full 4 GB addressable by
32-bit.
Quote:
...] - I testes the new mainboard carrying the Intel processor together
with exactly the same amount of ram as I had together with the Cyrix
processor, but it also refused to work.
"Refused to work" is too vague a description, I'm afraid. More detailed
help requires more detailed information from the person requesting the
help.

--
*Aragorn*
(registered GNU/Linux user #223157)