Niels Horn's Blog
Random thoughts, tips & tricks about Slackware-Linux, Lego and Star WarsArchive for the 'kernel' Category
rt3090 wireless adapter with Slackware 13.37
August 1st, 2011 by Niels Horn in Slackware, configuration, kernel, networking
Another simple update… Or not?
This weekend I finally updated my LG X130 netbook to Slackware 13.37. This is one of my "stable" machines that I use all the time for day-to-day tasks, so I do not run -current on it, as I depend on it too much. Slackware-current is very interesting for research and testing [...]
VHBA and RocketRaid 2320 (rr232x) modules with Kernel 2.6.37.x
March 20th, 2011 by Niels Horn in Linux, Slackware, kernel
Only a few days ago I was informed by a user that the VHBA kernel module - for which I maintain the SlackBuild script - stopped working with the new 2.6.37.3 and 2.6.37.4 kernels in Slackware 13.37 (actually, it's still officially -current).
When I say "stopped working", I'm actually being nice… It caused a fatal crash [...]
Stuttering sound with Via HDA Intel sound chip
October 19th, 2010 by Niels Horn in Slackware, configuration, kernel | No Comments »
Fixing problems with Linux systems is something I like. I've been in the support business for most of my professional life, and solving a difficult problem still gives me that satisfaction
The system
Recently I upgraded a system that was still running Slackware 13.0. It's a not-so-new system, but should be good enough to serve [...]
NVIDIA "Failed to allocate primary buffer" error
October 12th, 2010 by Niels Horn in Slackware, configuration, kernel | No Comments »
Yesterday I installed Slackware on a computer that came with a Debian-derivative installed. Nothing against Debian, but I'm more used to Slackware, and the hard drive had enough space left…
This box is an all "no-brand / low-price" system, but has very reasonable specs: Quad-core AMD GHz processor, 4GB memory, 400GB hard drive, NVIDIA 6150SE nForce [...]
Tux and… Tuz?
April 18th, 2009 by Niels Horn in Linux, Tux, kernel | 1 Comment »
In a previous post I wrote something about our little friend Tux, the symbol of Linux.
On most computers running Linux he'll show up while the kernel is starting up the main services, once for every processor in your system. This little picture in compiled into the kernel and, if you have the sources on your [...]