El 22/03/13 16:04, Carl Hartung escribió:
Hi All,
Unlike the prior quiet running 11.4 (x86_64/GNOME2) installation I had on this system, 12.3 (x86_64/KDE) is exhibiting the following:
a) At installation via DVD, the system hung almost immediately at udev. Typing 'acpi=off' before selecting 'Installation' circumvented the hang.
OK, udev "hanging" without "acpi=off" is a bug in the kernel, please file one, however acpi=off is like a using a tank to kill ants. You need to figure exactly what piece is broken.
The system is an ASUS laptop, model X83VB-X1, with nVidia GeForce 9300M GS graphics adapter (512 MB video RAM.) The mainboard is an 'N80VB (ver. 1)'. It's configured with 4 GB RAM and an internal 500 GB SATA HD.
Ok, the "nouveau" driver does not handle the nvidia card fans properly, this is a known problem, my only suggestion will be installing the nvidia propietary driver.
cpufreq.service loaded failed failed LSB: CPUFreq modules loader
The CPUfreq service is a legacy x86 specific thing, that was needed in the distant past when the kernel did not autoload the needed drivers, you should mask it. systemctl mask cpufreq Now, in the case the kernel does not autoload a cpufreq driver, you have to fill a bug report in the kernel, doing this is not userspace work.
These are the _only_ wrinkles remaining to be ironed out on this otherwise beautiful installation. I'd like to avoid burning out the GPU and/or it's fan while undergoing my combined 12.3 / KDE / systemd learning curve. Ideas and suggestions will be gratefully appreciated.
the GPU issue only solution is to install the nvidia propietary driver. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org