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Upgrading Your Current System To Kernel 2.6

An anonymous reader writes "This white paper provides an overview of the process of moving an existing desktop system to the 2.6 kernel. It will highlight other software requirements imposed by the new kernel and administrative changes that you must make when migrating an existing system to the 2.6 kernel. It supplements previous whitepapers in the same series about Customizing the 2.6 kernel [Slashdot discussion here(1)] and porting drivers to the 2.6 kernel [Slashdot discussion here(2)] to the 2.6 kernel."

23 of 442 comments (clear)

  1. I wish I had this two months ago by $calar · · Score: 5, Informative

    I had all kinds of trouble upgrading to 2.6. Sound and networking didn't work, as well as some of my filesystems. Luckily, I'm smart enough to setup lilo to run multiple kernels, so going back to 2.4 was no trouble to tweak my config file and recompile and try again. I never got everything totally working right. I was going to just wait until the next series of distro releases solved these problems for me, but maybe I should give it another shot.

    1. Re:I wish I had this two months ago by Bender+Unit+22 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ditto, I guess if you only run it on the most common hardware, it might be easier.
      I played around with it also and found it to cause many problems.
      If you run Red Hat, check out this webcast 2.6 Linux Kernel in Red Hat Enterprise Linux v.3: A Technology Overview about them backporting features to 2.4.
      I run a great deal of IBM servers and I can see their ties with IBM. I hope this webcast will enlighten me to how they make sure that Red Hat gets the most of the IBM servers, since we have a company decision to run Red Hat.

    2. Re:I wish I had this two months ago by El+Cubano · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you need a newer kernel, install a newer distribution.

      Really? apt-get install kernel-image-2.6.3-1-686, followed by a reboot didn't seem too overly difficult for my little brother (very much a non-techie).

  2. Still conveniently igoring by Enry · · Score: 4, Informative

    The painful process of upgrading LVM1 to LVM2. Little documentation on the process, and installing Fedora Core 2 test 1 over an existing Fedora Core 1 gives all sorts of fun. Much hand-holding of your system and other hand-waving is required.

  3. It's worth it by MC68040 · · Score: 4, Informative

    With the preemptive kernel option enabled and the kernel module autoloader in 2.6 it does all you would ever need:
    Loads any modules you need
    Lets you do tasks preemtpively
    Boots in a much shorter time (from 2.4.23's 35 sec to ~14 sec in my case)

    It's also rock solid in my experience now, a good sound kernel choice that will fit virtually all workstations =)

  4. If you've got a... by cs02rm0 · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...laptop touchpad don't bother going near 2.6 if you don't know exactly what you're doing. I still haven't got the mouse working. I can't even find anyone who can tell me how to confirm if the touchpad is a synaptic.

    I'm not the only one suffering this.

    Works great on my slackware desktop.

    1. Re:If you've got a... by BenjyD · · Score: 3, Informative

      The touchpad on the laptop in front of me works fine - Linux 2.6.3(Gentoo) and a Synaptics Touchpad on a Compaq Armada M300. I didn't have to fiddle around with anything - I just put my mouse device as /dev/psaux in XF86config and it works fine. I can post my .config if you need it.

    2. Re:If you've got a... by levell · · Score: 4, Informative

      Have you been bitten by the /dev/psaux change? (Excuse me if you know about this and you have a different problem). Unless your kernel is compiled to specifically support the old /dev/psaux device, you'll need to change all references to it your X11 config file (stored in/etc/X11/) to its replacement: /dev/input/mice

      Hope this helps.
      --
      Struggling to find a day everyone can make? WhenShallWe.com
    3. Re:If you've got a... by Moloch666 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Try the Gentoo forums. Even if you don't use Gentoo, I almost always find an answer when I search on it. I'm sure you'll be able to ignore the gentoo specific stuff and pull out the non distribution specific answers. Just don't post any questions of course.

      --
      Understanding is a three-edged sword. -- Kosh Naranek
  5. Fast mouse? Check your XF86Config by Alan · · Score: 5, Informative

    One thing that was a blocker for me to move to 2.6 was my mouse would go a lot faster while in X. I finally found that it was the new input system. Under 2.4 the default XF86Config file would have two mouse input settings, one for ps/2 and one for USB. Under 2.6 both of these were picked up regardless of the mouse being ps/2 or usb so all mouse events, clicks, etc were picked up twice. Removing one of the mouse entries made everything work as normal.

    Probably everyone but me knew this, but thought I'd throw it out in case anyone else is in the same boat.

  6. My experiences with 2.6 by Cytlid · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's my experience with 2.6 kernel (been running it since 2.6.0 was released).

    DVDs look awesome. I had to tweak the hdparms for DMA, but they work great.

    Ever since NVidia came out with the latest drivers, things like the UT2k4 Demo fun fantastic.

    I was a little hung up on modules... seeing as I rarely use them, it wasn't a show-stopper. The conversion from modutils to module-init-tools was mostly painless.

    Recently, I've been playing with MTD, and trying to get a test machine to use 12 out of the 16 megs of an AGP Voodoo3 3000 card's memory as a device I can format or use as swap. I have been unsuccessful. (2.6.3). This is also on a testing machine, not my "main" machine.

    On a slightly OT note, planning on building a Mini ITX system with a Via Epia board (one of the 800 mhz ones). Should have the case this week, jury's still out on the mb.

    Other than that, no complaints, it's been fantastic. I'm running 2.6.3 on 3 different machines (with different responsibilies) and it feels like there's no going back now!

    --
    FLR
  7. easier than 2.4 by rudog · · Score: 5, Informative

    I run gentoo on a dual pIII-600 with an ATI radeon7000 / SBlive / intelpro100. Kernels 2.4.18 through 2.4.22 took several hours of tweaking before I could even get the thing to boot correctly. ( 2.2 never had this problem )

    Last week I took about 30 minutes and grabbed 2.6.3 did a clean/config/make, which took about the majority of that time, and booted into the fastest Linux box I have ever had.

    2.6 booted with OpenGL without any tweaks pushing glgears to 1600fps and ALSA kicked in without errors on the emu10k1. Device drivers posed no issues for either the USB keyboard/mouse or hardrive or nework card.

    No 'migration' was necessary for either windowmaker / enlightenment / blender / JACK or any of my other 100 some odd apps.

  8. Fedora Core 1 by SimplexO · · Score: 4, Informative

    Fedora Core 1 forum posting with people who have already done it. It seems pretty easy from the looks of it. I'm going to do it just as soon as I get some free time...

    And for the love of god, please read the whole thread. Don't ever install a kernel with rpm -Uvh. Leave yourself a backup (rpm -ivh).

    1. Re:Fedora Core 1 by mauryisland · · Score: 3, Informative

      Try reading the instructions here: HOWTO: Fedora Core 1 with kernel 2.6 Worked like a charm for me!

  9. Re:Debina and 2.6 Kernel module loading at boot by Dionysus · · Score: 3, Informative

    Did you install modules-init-tool? My /etc/modules get read at bootup (running 2.6.3).

    --
    Je ne parle pas francais.
  10. Re:I can't find it anywhere.... by stevesliva · · Score: 4, Informative
    Seriously, though, I found it amusing that neither the submittor or the editor found it necessary to mention that they were talking about Linux. Just "2.6 Kernel" as if there can be only one.

    Yeah, I know what they're talking about, yeah, there's the penguin and the topic, but still.

    Speaking of, can anyone help me upgrade from "Operating System 2000" to "Operating System XP?"

    --
    Who do you get to be an expert to tell you something's not obvious? The least insightful person you can find? -J Roberts
  11. How to upgrade 2.4 to 2.6 in Gentoo: by Lord+Ender · · Score: 3, Informative

    emerge development-sources
    rm /usr/src/linux
    ln -s /usr/src/linux-2.6.3 /usr/src/linux
    mount /boot
    genkernel all
    vi /boot/grub/grub.conf
    reboot

    That is ALL there is to it. It is pretty much the same as upgrading to any other kernel. The only trick I saw was that the kernel needs more parameters than 2.4. It needs "root=/dev/ram0 init=/linuxrc real_root=/dev/hda?" appended, which kernel 2.4 did not need. All the other tools (module autoloaders, etc.) are already 2.6 ready on a Gentoo system

    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
  12. My weird problem with 2.6 by Sark666 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've tried all versions of 2.6 (2.6.1,2,3) but still get this problem. Everything seems smoother/more responsive except for a problem I have with a game (enemy territory). In 2.4 this game usually loads a map in 20-30 seconds. In 2.6 it takes about the same time but every map thereafter gets longer and longer, until they start taking several minutes. I did a test by launching my own server and just kept reloading the same map. 1st try 32 seconds, 5th try over 4 minutes. If anything it should be slightly quicker as some would be in memory/swap. The only other game I have in linux similar to enemy territory is quake3. It has the same normal load times in both 2.4 and 2.6, but it's maps are much smaller than enemy territory's so it doesn't stress the system as much. This leads me to believe that it's more a swap/memory issue than a graphics driver issue. I did hdparm tests and dma is enabled and I'm getting about the same speed in 2.4 as in 2.6. My system is a p4 1.6 with 128 megs ram gf4ti 4200. Now, I realize 128 megs is low these days, and would probably help aleviate this problem but it seems when a system is stressed in this way 2.4 performs better than 2.6. In 2.4 I can play on a server for as much as I want but with 2.6 I usually get kicked within a couple of new maps due to it timing out. Reconnecting to the server doesnt help, but quiting ET and restarting helps for that initial map, but then the cycle repeats. I don't see a way on this forum of attaching my config, I compiled the kernel myself and have gone over it several times to see if some option could be the cause of this. The first thing I tried was turning off the preemptive kernel option, but didn't help. My system is debian based (morphix distro) and as I mentioned I compile the kernel myself, not a precompiled kernel. I also made sure X doesn't have a negative nice value. You might suggest to throw more ram at the problem and even though it might help, I shouldn't have to as 2.4 seems to get by.

  13. Upgrading to RedHat 7.1's kernel to 2.6 by phasm42 · · Score: 3, Informative
    I upgraded the kernel on a Redhat 7.1 machine to 2.6 with SMP support recently, and ran into some trouble compiling fs/proc/array.c because of RedHat's gcc 2.96. I Googled around, and found a reference to a the problem at http://www.ussg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0311 .0/0886.html
    This is gcc 2.96 ?? This problem has been reported multiple times. Yes, you need a different gcc version, or there are a couple of patches around that split up the code around line 398 into smaller pieces that gcc 2.96 can handle.
    Basically, there is a really large sprintf there that gcc chokes on, and splitting it up into a few smaller chunks fixes the compilation problem. I've included a diff of the files:
    346,348c346
    < res = sprintf(buffer,"%d (%s) %c %d %d %d %d %d %lu %lu \
    < %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %ld %ld %ld %ld %d %ld %llu %lu %ld %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu \
    < %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %d %d %lu %lu\n",
    ---
    > res = sprintf(buffer,"%d (%s) %c %d %d %d %d %d %lu %lu ",
    358c356,357
    < task->min_flt,
    ---
    > task->min_flt);
    > res += sprintf(buffer + res, "%lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %ld %ld %ld %ld %d %ld %llu %lu %ld %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu ",
    378c377,378
    < esp,
    ---
    > esp);
    > res += sprintf(buffer + res, "%lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %d %d %lu %lu\n",
    416a417
    >
    Oh, and another problem I had was "Error: Unknown pseudo-op: `.incbin'" -- this was fixed by upgrading binutils to the latest version. Aside from these two problems, the upgrade went smoothly.
    --
    "No one likes working in a hamster wheel, and your shop smells of cedar shavings from here." - TaleSpinner
  14. [OT] Reinstall tip by rgmoore · · Score: 4, Informative
    all of my installs have been on a freshly formatted drive.

    As an aside, you can save yourself a lot of trouble in doing a fresh install with some intelligent partitioning. Most systems have an expert mode (or may offer nothing but expert mode, depending on the system) that lets you specify which partition corresponds to which mount point manually and decide which partitions should and should not be reformatted. If you set up /home on a separate partition, you can wipe everything else while leaving your user data alone. That can save you the trouble of having to restore all of your personal files when you install the new system. It's not necessarily perfect- some configuration files may change between versions of your favorite desktop environment, for instance- but it's a big improvement. You should obviously back up your data before doing the install just in case, but you should be doing periodic backups of your system already anyway.

    --

    There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

  15. For ATAPI cd burners by einer · · Score: 4, Informative

    cdrecord works with atapi burners now. (I make this blanket statement based only on the fact that I was able to burn a cd this morning).

    The trick is:

    cdrecord -scanbus dev=ATAPI
    cdrecord dev=ATAPI:1,0,0 isname.iso

    no boot time kernel options need to be passed (no more hdb=ide-scsi nonsense).

    Good luck.

  16. Re:OT: Debian by The_Dougster · · Score: 4, Informative

    I don't know... I've installed Debian on about half a dozen different laptops now, each with horribly undocumented chipsets and lcd systems. Managed to get X working in each case. If you think getting XFree86 v 4.x is rough, man you have no idea how hard it used to be with XFree86 v 3.x! xf86config used to consistently produce completely useless modelines for 99% of all monitors, it used to take days sometimes to find a mode that barely worked just enough so you could run xvidtune and fix it. It took me about a good evenings worth of messing around to convert my Debian system to a 2.6 kernel, and I use ALSA sound, nForce2 motherboard, GeForceFX graphics, lots of bleeding-edge hardware so I always have to roll my own kernels from source. My tip: install GRUB as your bootloader, it will save your butt. Debian's not a simple system but it really rewards those who take the time to learn it. It just feels like an old-time big iron system. I really can't quantify it but when I use other distros they seem really lightweight to me. Don't expect to slap Debian on your box and be an expert with it in 45 minutes. Its a heavyweight OS for people who demand a bit more.

    --
    Clickety Click ...
  17. Re:OT: Debian by cmacb · · Score: 3, Informative

    "One thing about Debian that is NOT simple is the install! I never have gotten X to work under Debian, and I DID get it to work under Slackware, and even FreeBSD."

    Been there. Debian does install automatically on a FEW machines, particularly older machines that were popular and used "standard" components. I'm using a Dell GX1 that I got for $99.

    Here s what I have done in the past when I got stuck without X-windows working...

    Install Debian and go through the X-windows set-up process. Do the best you can at guessing your card information, refresh rates and whether or not to use framebuffers.

    Locate the XF86Config(-4) file in /etc/X11 and take a look at where all of these decisions were recorded.

    Now boot a copy of Knoppix (the bootable CD version of Linux), and, assuming it did a better job of setting up X-windows than you did, check the same settings for it (same location). Differences are likely to be in the horizontal and vertical refresh rates, the use of framebuffers, or the driver being used, also the list of module options such as "glx", "dri".

    Surprisingly, X will fail to load properly even if your MOUSE settings are wrong. So you might have done everything right for video and gotten a trivial mouse parameter wrong and still have problems. (The systems DOES tell you this and tells you what log file to go read when this happens, but I remember being a bit intimidated by this process the first couple of times).

    There are also some command line utilities you can run to straighten out your X setup, but I'm lazy and would rather just SEE that the system can work (using Knoppix, and then just copy what works.

    Above process also works for diagnosing some network card and sound card problems.

    Future versions of Debian will probably have better automatic device detection and configuration. In the mean time Knoppix (which is based on Debian) is a handy thing to have around.