Fedora Core 4 on my Iwill DVD266-R system
My main system at work is a dual Pentium-III SMP system
based on an Iwill DVD266-R motherboard. This board is
based on the VIA Apollo Pro 266 chipset consisting of
a VT8633 "Northbridge" that handles the DDR memory and the
AGP slot; and a VT8233 "Southbridge" that handles the PCI
bus, the ATA100 interface and other odds and ends.
This board also has an AMI MG80649 RAID controller
(aka CMD-649) which I use for my single ATA disk drive.
It also has a C-Media CMI8738 PCI sound chip, which is
pretty nice actually, but I have it disabled (via motherboard
jumper ?), and I use a PCI Soundblaster Live (emu10k1).
The board also has a Winbond W83627HF system monitor chip that
I should set up to use lmsensors someday.
On Wednesday 7-5-2005, I decide to upgrade my system from
Fedora Core 3 to Fedora Core 4.
I also decide to do a full install instead of an upgrade
just because I like a lot of pain and hassle and they say
that whatever doesn't kill you makes you stronger.
New hard drive
A while back I bought a big Western Digital hard drive
that has been my hdc for a long time. I partitioned it
with a /boot partition, and about 30G to be a root partition
someday. This is the day. Before I screw with hardware I
get the CD iso images onto my hard drive in my /u1 partition
(the part of the 250G drive that I actually have been using
and that I will not reformat). Then I actually burn the
first CD, so I can boot from it. I also burn the Fedora
Core 4 rescue CD (just in case) as well as a Ubuntu disk
that will run standalone off the CD. Then I am ready to
go. I check the sha1 checksums for the images before I
turn everything off, then dive in.
I turn the system off, swap cables on my hard drives so
that my old hda becomes hdc and vice versa. This will
leave my old FC3 root intact on the new hdc both for
reference purposes, and in case I get in trouble I can
swap the cables back and boot the old FC3 system and
I have not burned any bridges. I am particularly
paranoid about a web site I host that uses a lot of
PHP and the move to PHP 5 (and mysql 4), but this
proves to not be a problem. The ability to have my
old root partition around does turn out to be very
very handy.
Hard drive install
1) I turn the system back on and boot the first of the Fedora
core 3 CD set. To do a hard drive install you must
boot linux via:
linux askmethod
After this I tell it the fedora 4 isos are on /dev/hda3
as /fedora/FC4 (this was /u1/fedora/FC4 under the old
system) and I am off to the races. I use disk druid to
name the mount points for the partitions. The boot disk
fails the linux mediacheck test, but this was the
case under Core 3 also, and as near as I can tell is a
CD rom driver issue, not an actual media problem, so I
press on. The actual rpms are on my hard drive anyhow.
SMP and acpi business
2) My system is an Iwill-266 SMP board with a pair of
1 Ghz Pentium III. The smp kernel will not work (I had
this problem back with FC3) and I rediscover the fix by
looking at my old grub.conf. The non smp kernel works
fine while I sort things out. I need to add some kernel
options to the grub line, namely:
acpi=off pci=usepirqmask
After adding this (and turning off the red hat
graphical boot nonsense -- this is not essential
but is just a matter of taste)
I am up with the smp kernel.
Sound
3) I have no idea if sound works yet (I have no speakers)
but at least the SoundBlaster Live (emu10k1) driver doesn't
hang the boot sequence like it did back under Core 3.
ntp
4) To get ntp going, copy a valid /etc/ntp.conf from
somewhere (caliente in my case) and then do:
chkconfig --level 35 ntpd on
service ntpd restart
ntpq -p provides a good check to verify this is
all working.
Web server
5) My web server is not working.
I need to do:
chkconfig --level 35 httpd on
service httpd start
There is more than this though since I run a virtual
host setup. I need to go to /etc/httpd/conf and
edit httpd.conf (I have a patch file which does the
dirty work for me). And I need to recreate some links:
ln -s /u0/www /www
ln -s /u0/mmt /mmt
ln -s /u1/opt /opt
I also need to edit my old changes into /etc/php.ini
and restart httpd again.
Mount the new hard drive
6) Disk druid was stubborn about no letting me set up a mount
point for /u1 since that was where the hard drive install
files were, so I need to edit /etc/fstab and get /u1 set up
and mounted. I also mount up my old root partition
/dev/hda2 on /old (oughta do this readonly).
X11 and dual head
7) Gotta get my dual head Nvidia driver going.
First I need the old dual head config file that I copy
to /etc/X11/xorg.conf from /old/etc/X11/xorg.conf.
I also had the foresight to download the latest driver
from the Nvidia site before I did the upgrade, so I go
and install this now (have to telinit 3 before it will
allow this, and then telinit 5 when done).
telinit 3
chmod a+x NVIDIA-Linux-x86-1.0-7667-pkg1.run
./NVIDIA-Linux-x86-1.0-7667-pkg1.run
telinit 3
firewall
8) I want my very own personal iptables firewall script that
allows my skidoo project network boot as well as ntp and
other things to keep me happy. I copy over /etc/rc.firewall
and use my trust patch file to mangle /etc/rc.d/init.d/iptables
and then do a service iptables restart and I am on
the air.
sendmail
9) sendmail won't work. I need to go hack on /etc/mail/sendmail.mc
and comment out the line that makes it only listen on the loopback
interface:
dnl # tjt
dnl # DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Port=smtp,Addr=127.0.0.1, Name=MTA')dnl
I also copy over the file /etc/mail/local-host-names that gives
names of other alteregos for my machine and then restart sendmail.
I then do telnet cholla 25 from another machine to verify
that sendmail is running and the firewall is open.
mailman
10) I need to get my mailman mailing lists up and running again.
I find a shortcut that seems to work just fine.
I copy over my old /var/lib/mailman hierarchy and then make sure the
mailman service is started. I also copy over
/etc/mailman/sitelist.cfg and copy over and merge my old
/etc/aliases.
Then I restart the service and make sure it
gets started on every reboot.
chkconfig --level 35 mailman on
service mailman restart
mysql
11) The oasis website needs mysql and the whole mysql database
that is associated with it. This turns out to be the same
shortcut as for mailman, copy over the /var/lib/mysql hierarchy.
I don't need to fiddle with /etc/my.cnf.
However since we have now moved from 3.2.23 or whatever it was to 4.1
I need to run a script they provide to update the grant tables to use
a new password format and what-all.
This (in /usr/bin) is:
mysql_fix_privilege_tables
After this, I start the service via:
chkconfig --level 35 mysql on
service mysql restart
users and passwords
12) I copy over /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow, taking care to merge
in any new system required identities.
yum
13) Now for yum. I get Tim's repository stuff from
/net/caliente/home/tim/MMT/RPMS/fedora/FC4/RPMS/i386/TEP/tep_repos-4.0-1.noarch.rpm.
I hack a bit on the repositories in /etc/yum.repos.d since I want them to get
stuff from our mirror on mmto.org. I take a look at /etc/yum.conf and decide
it is OK, then do (as root) a yum update. There is a new kernel, so I
reboot, fiddle the Nvidia driver and am back up again feeling like I might
be done at last. To enable the nightly updates is simple:
chkconfig --level 35 yum on
service yum restart
dhcp and diskless boot services
14) Now I want to reboot my diskless skidoo box.
First I need to grab my old /etc/dhcpd.conf.
I go into /etc/xinetd.d/tftp and turn the service on.
Then I go and grab all the stuff in my old /tftpboot directory
and copy it then change ownership so my install scripts can overwrite
it as needed. Then:
chkconfig --level 35 dhcpd on
service dhcpd restart
service xinetd restart
printing
15) And now, we would like to be able to print things!!
Frome the Gnome menu, go to Desktop -> System Settings -> Printing
then use the "new" button to add my 2 network printers.
- lw19 Networked Jet Direct Laser Jet 4 plus, lw19 on port 9100
- mmt-cps Networked Jet Direct Color LaserJet 4600, mmt-cps on port 9100
By golly, this seems to work. I am told the absolute most wrong and
worst thing to do (under Fedora anyhow) is to point your browser to
localhost:631 and try to use the CUPS admin utility, i.e. whatever you
do, don't read or follow the CUPS documentation!
The graphical tool seems to manipulate files under /etc/cups and is
aware of red hat uniquenesses outside of the CUPS world.
I am not saying this is good,
but it is a working path of minimal pain.
wine
16) And now for wine. I want to run my National Geographic
TOPO! program, which requires wine, and it would seem that wine
is no longer part of fedora core. And as of July 12, 2005 there
are no Fedora Core 4 rpms on the
Wine website,
so I grab the last Core 3 RPM and give it a whirl to see if it
will run under Core 4, namely
wine-20050524-1fc3winehq.i686.rpm and it seems to work,
at least it runs TOPO! just fine. I did turn SE Linux off when
I did the install (and wine would not run if I hadn't according to
some trouble reports I just read). Blows up if I try to print.
matlab
16) Matlab won't run. I need to recreate links for mex
and matlab in /usr/local/bin that point to /u1/Mathworks/bin.
I also need to copy over and start the license manager (by copying the
file /etc/rc.d/init.d/flexlm). chkconfig doesn't work with flexlm,
so I make a links for it manually:
cd /etc
ln -s /u1/Mathworks/etc/lmboot lmboot_TMW
ln -s /u1/Mathworks/etc/lmdown lmdown_TMW
ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/flexlm /etc/rc.d/rc5.d/S90flexlm
service flexlm start
spam
17) I am being overrun with spam, and I already made sure that
spamd is running. It turns out I need my old /etc/procmailrc
file which was the thing that fed my mail to spamc. See my
spam notes for further details.
perl Tk
18) perl-Tk is gone. This is available from fedora extras, and
all that is needed to get it is to (as root) yum install perl-Tk.
BLT
19) BLT (the Tcl plotting package) is gone. It too is in fedora
extras. yum list blt finds it. yum install blt
installs blt.2.4.11z.i386
cron and updatedb
20) Turn on the daily cron job to run slocate/updatedb by editing the
file /etc/updatedb.conf and setting the daily update
option to yes.
add route for private network
21) edit rc.local and add the following line to add a route to
the local unrouted set of addresses we use for various local gizmos:
ip addr add 192.168.100.1/24 brd + dev eth0 label eth0:mmt
Also add these lines to invoke our local rc script:
if [ -f /mmt/scripts/rc.hacksaw ]; then
/mmt/scripts/rc.hacksaw
fi
ruby gtk
22) Some other packages need to be added by hand to what
yum fetches. To use ruby gtk:
yum install ruby-gnome2
perl PDL
To use perl with PDL and PGPLOT graphics (the later from
a TEP repository, do:
yum install perl-PDL perl-PGPLOT
Fedora menus
This isn't really a fedora core 4 thing, but I had to put
this somewhere. To add stuff to the fedora menus that are
presented on a gnome desktop, do this. Hack on the file
/etc/xdg/menus/applications.menu and add the following lines:
<LegacyDir>/mmt/admin/desktop</LegacyDir>
...
<!-- MMTO -->
<Menu>
<Name>MMTO</Name>
<Directory>MMT.directory</Directory>
<Include>
<And>
<Category>MMT</Category>
</And>
</Include>
</Menu>
Then under /mmt/admin/desktop the game starts with the
file MMT.directory.
vmware
Here is another one. After an upgrade to the 2.6.16-1.2111_FC4smp
kernel, I need to run /usr/bin/vmware-config.pl.
I have done this before, however it no longer works.
(Maybe the rub is that we have moved from a 2.4 to a 2.6 kernel which
is not yet supported by vmware).
When it goes to find the C header files for the kernel to build the
vmmon modules I get the message:
The kernel defined by this directory of header files
does not have the same address space size as your running kernel.
Even after creating a link /usr/src/linux pointing to
kernels/2.6.16-1.2111_FC4-smp-i686 we are still out of
luck.
A bit of poking around and I find a link to
ftp.cvut.cz/vmware
Look at the readme.txt, and there is a lot of other
stuff here. In particular, get:
- vmware-any-any-update101.tar.gz
- Maybe also: vmware-config.pl.diff.
I haven't tried the above patch yet (not yet that desperate and
want to research this a bit more first).
Have any comments? Questions?
Drop me a line!
Adventures in Computing / [email protected]