FC6 or Ubuntu?
Posted Feb 14, 2007 21:45 UTC (Wed) by
drag (subscriber, #31333)
In reply to:
FC6 or Ubuntu? by pflugstad
Parent article:
Ubuntu says no to non-free video drivers for Feisty (Linux.com)
I am using Debian unstable.
However I installed using the Debian Etch media, if I remember correctly.
I have a Asus motherboard with the Intel 945g chipset.. On it it has the 4 port SATA controller and then one PATA controller that comes with the chipset.. Then there is one add-on PATA controller from Asus and I am not sure about the manufacture of that.
(As far as these things go Asus is actually pretty Linux freindly. They are now my favorite name-brand)
00:1f.1 IDE interface: Intel Corporation 82801G (ICH7 Family) IDE Controller (rev 01)
00:1f.2 IDE interface: Intel Corporation 82801GB/GR/GH (ICH7 Family) Serial ATA Storage Controller IDE (rev 01)
00:1f.3 SMBus: Intel Corporation 82801G (ICH7 Family) SMBus Controller (rev 01)
01:04.0 Mass storage controller: Integrated Technology Express, Inc. ITE 8211F Single Channel UDMA 133 (ASUS 8211 (ITE IT8212 ATA RAID Controller)) (rev 11)
On mine in order to get the cdrom drive be recognized in Debian Etch I had to disable some bios setting just for that controller, but I don't remember off the top of my head what that was. Doesn't affect the speed of the drive any.
As for a PATA PCIe card? I don't know. Just get the cheapest, I suppose, that advertises Linux support.
Doing a quick look over what Newegg has I think it may be easier to just get a SATA dvdrom drive. I have a feeling that PCIe IDE controllers are going to be difficult to come by.
It would probably have a higher reliability also when it comes to burning dvds and such. There was a lite-on that was about 40 dollars or so. I don't know how well installing from one will go, but I don't expect it to be that hard.
I know that you already bought your motherboard and such.. But one thing to keep in mind for these 945g's and such is this (especially if you want to turn it into a server once you retire your desktop):
Most newer ones should support the Intel VT extensions. This will allow you to run unmodified guests at decent speeds using KVM or Xen. In order to use these extensions you need to have both a motherboard and a cpu that supports it. The cheapest CPUs that supports it is the Pentium-D 9xx series (the 8xx series doesn't support VT)
Then on the SATA controller you can get ones with AHCI support. Very recent linux versions have very good ACHI support for things like hotplugging, PM, and such. Most desktop boards aren't going to support it. (mine doesn't) You'd have to go with the 'execuative' line or the media boards. Anything advertising Intel's 'Matrix storage' probably supports it.
http://www.intel.com/support/chipsets/imst/sb/CS-012304.htm
http://linux-ata.org/driver-status.html#ahci
That stuff would be very nice if your running software RAID. A fast dual core cpu with 4 500gig drives in RAID 10 would be _very_ nice for a multimedia machine.
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