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Mon Apr 25 13:37:00 UTC 2011 Slackware 13.37 x86_64 stable is released! Thanks to everyone who pitched in on this release: the Slackware team, the folks producing upstream code, and linuxquestions.org for providing a great forum for collaboration and testing. The ISOs are off to be replicated, a 6 CD-ROM 32-bit set and a dual-sided 32-bit/64-bit x86/x86_64 DVD. Please consider supporting the Slackware project by picking up a copy from store.slackware.com. We're taking pre-orders now, and offer a discount if you sign up for a subscription. As always, thanks to the Slackware community for testing, suggestions, and feedback. :-) Have fun!
294 lines
14 KiB
Text
294 lines
14 KiB
Text
This file documents the instructions for upgrading to Slackware 13.37, the
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packages added, removed, renamed, and/or split during the development cycle
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from Slackware 13.1 through 13.37, and some potential "gotchas" that users
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can avoid by arming themselves with a little knowledge.
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*** INSTRUCTIONS FOR UPGRADING FROM 13.1 ***
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Follow the instructions detailed in the UPGRADE.TXT located in this
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directory.
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Note that upgrading from a Slackware version earlier than 13.1 is NOT
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supported at all and will most likely not work.
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*** PACKAGE ADDITIONS SINCE 13.1 ***
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a/btrfs-progs
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a/gdisk
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a/libcgroup
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a/lrzip
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a/mcelog
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a/util-linux (renamed from util-linux-ng)
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ap/ddrescue
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ap/lxc
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ap/moc
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d/slacktrack (moved from /extra)
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d/yasm (moved from /extra)
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kde/libktorrent
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l/gdk-pixbuf2
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l/libdbusmenu-qt
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l/libelf
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l/libmpc
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l/liboggz
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l/libpcap (split from tcpdump package)
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l/libplist
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l/libsndfile
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l/phonon-mplayer
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n/ca-certificates
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n/idnkit
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n/iptraf-ng (replaced iptraf)
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n/iwlwifi-100-ucode
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n/iwlwifi-6xxx-ucode
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n/rfkill
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x/radeon_ucode
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x/xdg-user-dirs
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x/xf86-video-nouveau
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xap/xaos
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extra/google-chrome/*
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/testing/ includes the following:
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2.6.38.4 kernel
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mesa-7.10.2
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libdrm-2.4.25
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xf86-video-nouveau-git_20110417_8378443
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*** PACKAGE REMOVALS SINCE 13.1 ***
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a/util-linux-ng (renamed to util-linux)
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kde/guidance-power-manager
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l/eggdbus
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n/iptraf (replaced by iptraf-ng)
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x/libXTrap
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x/libXprintAppUtil
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x/libXprintUtil
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x/libxkbui
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x/rstart
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x/trapproto
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x/xf86rushproto
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x/xfindproxy
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x/xfwp
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x/xplsprinters
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x/xprehashprinterlist
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x/xproxymanagementprotocol
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x/xsetmode
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x/xsetpointer
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x/xtrap
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extra/kde3-compat/
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*** OTHER NOTABLE CHANGES AND HINTS ***
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The Slackware installer uses udev to initialize your hardware, including the
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network interface card(s). This has positive consequences for network
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installations (using NFS, FTP, HTTP or SMB). You no longer have to run the
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'pcmcia' and 'network' scripts prior to running 'setup' - the network
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interface will be created and intialized by udev. If a DHCP server is
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found on your local network, the setup program will let you choose between
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automatic configuration of your network interface using DHCP or specifying
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a static IP address. Using udev, the commandline for fully unattended
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configuration and startup of the dropbear SSH server has changed slightly.
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Suppose you want to boot the 'hugesmp' kernel, use DHCP for interface eth0,
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and you have a us-english keyboard layout: the commandline to auto-start
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the SSH daemon in the installer would become:
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hugesmp.s kbd=us nic=auto:eth0:dhcp
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Note: if you do not want to use udev, the "auto" keyword in that example
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commandline must be replaced with the actual name of the network module for
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your card. If you do not want to use udev, you must add the parameter
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"noudev" to the command line that boots the Slackware installer, and the
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original ("old") Slackware hardware configuration scripts will be used.
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Also note that this is not supported...
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Use one of the provided generic kernels for daily use. Do not report
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bugs until/unless you have reproduced them using one of the stock
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generic kernels. You will need to create an initrd in order to boot
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the generic kernels - see /boot/README.initrd for instructions.
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The huge kernels are primarily intended as "installer" and "emergency"
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kernels in case you forget to make an initrd. For most systems, you
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should use the generic SMP kernel if it will run, even if your system is
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not SMP-capable. Some newer hardware needs the local APIC enabled in the
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SMP kernel, and theoretically there should not be a performance penalty
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with using the SMP-capable kernel on a uniprocessor machine, as the SMP
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kernel tests for this and makes necessary adjustments. Furthermore, the
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kernel sources shipped with Slackware are configured for SMP usage, so you
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won't have to modify those to build external modules (such as NVidia or
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ATI proprietary drivers) if you use the SMP kernel.
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If you decide to use one of the non-SMP kernels, you will need to follow the
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instructions in /extra/linux-2.6.37.6-nosmp-sdk/README.TXT to modify your
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kernel sources for non-SMP usage. Note that this only applies if you are
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using the Slackware-provided non-SMP kernel - if you build a custom kernel,
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the symlinks at /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/{build,source} will point to the
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correct kernel source so long as you don't (re)move it.
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As with 13.1, the system udev rules now reside in /lib/udev/rules.d/ instead
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of /etc/udev/rules.d/ in older versions. There should never be a reason
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to edit anything in /lib/udev/rules.d/, so if you think you have a case
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where this is required, either you're wrong or it needs to be addressed in
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the upstream source. However, you can override default rules by placing
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one with an identical name inside /etc/udev/rules.d/ The rules files in
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/etc/udev/rules.d/ are still intended to (maybe) be edited as needed by
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local system administrators, and as such, the rules for optical and network
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devices will still be placed there.
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Speaking of udev, pay particular attention to 70-persistent-net.rules and
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70-persistent-cd.rules in /etc/udev/rules.d/ -- these two are automatically
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generated by the system. If you remove, add, and/or replace some hardware
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(specifically network cards and/or optical drives) in a machine, you will
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probably need to edit one or both of the rules files mentioned above.
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HP multifunction printer/scanners require that your user account be a member
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of the "lp" group for hp-toolbox to work properly, and to use the scanner
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portion of some (all?) units, you'll need to be a member of the "lp" group.
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This is because hplip's udev rules set the device with group "lp" ownership.
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HAL is not new anymore, but here are a few notes related to it:
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1. User accounts with permission to mount removable devices and manipulate
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bluetooth devices must be in at least the "plugdev" group.
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2. User accounts with permission to do power-management tasks, such as
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suspend, hibernate, reboot, and shutdown, via HAL methods should be in
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the "power" group.
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3. User accounts with permission to use network devices, such as with the
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wicd package in /extra, should be in the "netdev" group.
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4. User accounts with permission to use devices that "dial out" or connect
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over a serial port (serial console connections to plug computers, sync
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with a palm device, etcetera) will need to be in the "dialout" group.
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5. HAL will honor settings in /etc/fstab if a device is present there, so
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you could technically have removable devices defined in /etc/fstab, but
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if the fstab settings do not allow normal users to mount them (with the
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"user" or "users" option), then HAL/dbus will not allow them to be
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mounted either. In other words, for example, if your fstab line for the
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cdrom/dvd drive includes the "owner" option, you will not be able to
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mount it as a normal user.
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6. If you find a need for modified fdi files, those should be placed in the
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relevant directories in /etc/hal/fdi/ instead of /usr/share/hal/fdi/
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The version of Xorg in Slackware 13.37 will not (in most cases) require an
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/etc/X11/xorg.conf file. Input hotplugging is no longer done using hal;
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instead, it now uses udev for input device detection and keyboard mapping.
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/usr/share/X11/xorg.conf.d/ is the "packaged" configuration directory; all
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files ending with ".conf" in this directory are used by the X server
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unless there is an identically-named file in the local sysadmin directory.
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The local sysadmin config directory is /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/ - all files
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ending with ".conf" in this directory are parsed.
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There are several default config files in /usr/share/X11/xorg.conf.d/:
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* 10-evdev.conf
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a "catchall" file for input devices using the evdev driver; this
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should work for most hardware in the absence of a better driver
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* 50-synaptics.conf
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overrides the earlier 10-evdev.conf file and uses the synaptics
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driver for all touchpads
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* 50-wacom.conf
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overrides the earlier 10-evdev.conf file and uses the wacom driver
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for Wacom tablets
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* 90-keyboard-layout.conf
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this sample ("normal" en layout) keeps the "old" default of
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allowing Zap'ing the Xserver.
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If you need to modify any of these defaults, then copy the relevant file
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from /usr/share/X11/xorg.conf.d/ to /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/ and edit the
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copy.
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You can still create an xorg.conf file if you wish, or you can create some
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minimal xorg.conf snippets with only the specific contents that you wish
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to override (as an example, to use a binary-only video driver) as separate
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files in the /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/ directory.
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Regardless of your chipset (though it seems more common with intel), if KDE
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crashes on startup, try disabling the Composite extension (which will also
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disable all of the fancy desktop effects). Place the following content in
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a file at /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/disable-composite.conf:
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Section "Extensions"
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Option "Composite" "Disable"
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EndSection
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Now that KMS (Kernel Mode Setting) for graphics cards has (mostly) stabilized,
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it is enabled by default for intel, ati, and nvidia graphics chipsets. It
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is possible to disable it use "nomodeset" as a kernel append in lilo.conf,
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but Xorg will not work at all on intel and ati chips if you do that.
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If you want to change the resolution of the KMS console, that can be done
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with something like this as a kernel append in lilo.conf:
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append="video=1024x768"
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Speaking of lilo.conf and KMS, make sure you use either vga=normal or
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vga=extended -- some of the framebuffers don't like KMS very much...
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The (formerly) patented bytecode interpreter is now enabled in the freetype
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package, so your fonts might look a bit different. If this is undesirable,
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you can restore the previous default with this line:
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# ln -s ../conf.avail/10-autohint.conf /etc/fonts/conf.d/
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If you are using a KVM switch, you might experience problems with the mouse
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when switching from one system to another. If so, you probably need to be
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using the imps protocol for the psmouse driver, and that's a simple edit:
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uncomment the following line in /etc/modprobe.d/psmouse.conf:
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#options psmouse proto=imps
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Next, unload and reload the psmouse module (do this as root):
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modprobe -r psmouse ; modprobe psmouse
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If you have set up an encrypted root partition, you will need to have access
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to your keyboard in order to type the passphrase. This may require you to
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add the uhci-hcd and usbhid modules to your initrd image if you have a USB
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keyboard. Also note that if you are using a non-US keyboard, you can use the
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'-l' parameter to the 'mkinitrd' command in order to add support for this
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keyboard to your initrd.
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If you have permission errors when attempting to burn a cdrom or dvd image,
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such as the following:
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/usr/bin/cdrecord: Operation not permitted. Cannot send SCSI cmd via ioctl
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then cdrecord almost certainly needs root privileges to work correctly.
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One potential solution is to make the cdrecord and cdrdao binaries suid root,
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but this has possible security implications. The safest way to do that is
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to make those binaries suid root, owned by a specific group, and executable
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by only root and members of that group. For most people, the example below
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will be sufficient (but adjust as desired depending on your specific needs):
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chown root:cdrom /usr/bin/cdrecord /usr/bin/cdrdao
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chmod 4750 /usr/bin/cdrecord /usr/bin/cdrdao
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If you don't want all members of the 'cdrom' group to be able to execute the
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two suid binaries, then create a special group (such as 'burning' which is
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recommended by k3b), use it instead of 'cdrom' in the line above, and add
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to it only the users you wish to have access to cdrecord and cdrdao.
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Input methods for complex characters (CJK, which is shorthand for Chinese,
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Japanese, Korean) and other non-latin character sets have been added. These
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input methods use the SCIM (Smart Common Input Method) platform.
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The environment variables for SCIM support are set in /etc/profile.d/scim.sh
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The requirements for getting SCIM input methods to work in your X session
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are as follows:
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(1) Use a UTF-8 locale. Look in /etc/profile.d/lang.sh for setting your
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language to (for instance) en_US.UTF-8. As a word of warning: maybe you
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should leave root with a non-UTF-8 locale because you don't want root's
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commands to be misinterpreted. You can add the following line to your
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~/.profile file to enable UTF-8 just for yourself:
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export LANG=en_US.UTF-8
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(2) Make the scim profile scripts executable. These will setup your
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environment correctly for the use of scim with X applications. Run:
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chmod +x /etc/profile.d/scim.*
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(3) Start the scim daemon as soon as your X session starts. The scim daemon
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must be active before any of your X applications. In KDE, you can add a
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shell script to the ~/.kde/Autostart folder that runs the command
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"scim -d". In XFCE you can add "scim -d" to the Autostarted Applications.
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If you boot your computer in runlevel 4 (the graphical XDM/KDM login)
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you can simply add the line "scim -d" to your ~/.xprofile file.
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This gives you a Desktop Environment independent way of starting scim.
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When scim is running, you will see a small keyboard icon in your system tray.
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Right-click it to enter SCIM Setup. In 'Global Setup' select your keyboard
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layout, and you are ready to start entering just about any language
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characters you wish! Press the magical key combo <Control><Space>
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in order to activate or deactivate SCIM input. The SCIM taskbar in the
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desktop's corner allows you to select a language. As you type, SCIM will show
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an overview of applicable character glyphs (if you are inputting complex
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characters like Japanese).
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If you have an older machine (with a BIOS released prior to 2001) and it will
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not power off on shutdown, try adding this to your kernel's lilo stanza:
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append = "acpi=force"
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If you have a Thinkpad T400 or T500, you probably want to append "pci=reboot"
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to the kernel boot parameters. For more information about this issue, see
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https://encrypted.google.com/search?hl=&q=t400+%22pci%3Dreboot%22
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