Difference between revisions of "Installing Ubuntu on a ThinkPad R60e"
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There are no particular problems installing Ubuntu on a R60e. | There are no particular problems installing Ubuntu on a R60e. | ||
− | The notes here refer to 6.06.1 install disk and subsequent updates | + | The notes here refer to 6.06.1 install disk and subsequent updates. Significant changes that apply to Edgy (6.10) and Feisty (7.04) are noted here. |
'''Ubuntu 6.10 "Edgy Eft"''' | '''Ubuntu 6.10 "Edgy Eft"''' | ||
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'''Ubuntu 7.04 "Feisty Fawn"''' | '''Ubuntu 7.04 "Feisty Fawn"''' | ||
− | Installs ok with Herd1 CD image | + | Installs ok with Herd1 CD image. |
== Partition and Boot == | == Partition and Boot == |
Revision as of 02:44, 1 February 2007
Contents
Overview
There are no particular problems installing Ubuntu on a R60e.
The notes here refer to 6.06.1 install disk and subsequent updates. Significant changes that apply to Edgy (6.10) and Feisty (7.04) are noted here.
Ubuntu 6.10 "Edgy Eft"
If the wireless kill switch is active during boot, that is wireless and bluetooth are switched off, there is a high probability that a "soft lockup on CPU0" will occur during boot. Boot appears to be ok provided the wireless is on during boot. See Bug 63418.
Ubuntu 7.04 "Feisty Fawn" Installs ok with Herd1 CD image.
Partition and Boot
If the Windows and Service Partitions are to be retained then the Gnome Partition Editor can be used from the live cd to shrink the Windows partition (sda1). The IBM recovery partition is placed at the end of the HD disk and contains a cut down version of WinNT. Note that the Recovery partion is not located on a cylinder boundary and is placed between 'unused' disk areas, 3MB in front and 7MB behind. These appear to contain the diagnostics programs and should not be moved or resized if the diagnostics and R&R programs are required.
To repartion: boot to Windows and immediately create a Rescue and Recover disk set. The first disc of the set must be a CD (though if you put a DVD in it will be formatted and writen as a CD disc); this is a bootable disc. The second stage of the disc writing process will write to either one DVD or 5 CDs. Restoring from these disks will restore to factory state, which means the entire hard drive is reformatted. After the disc set is created it is not possible to create a second set.
However, if you have a USB HD you can also create a Rescue and Recovery copy on that. I have not tried (sucessfully) but I it should be possible to boot and restore from a USB HD recovery set and preserve any new partitions provided that: the windows partition is not too small, and the Recovery partition is preserved.
boot with Ubuntu live CD, use Gnome Partition editor to shrink the IBM_PRELOAD (sda1) partition.
reboot to Windows and let it run chkdsk
boot Ubuntu Live CD and install
The live CD will install GRUB to the MBR, this is ok, the installer will identify both IBM_PRELOAD and the service partition and provide boot options for both. Edit /boot/grub/menu.lst to add the hide and unhide lines (this will prevent Windows showing the Service Partition).
# This entry automatically added by the Debian installer for a non-linux OS # on /dev/sda1 title Microsoft Windows XP Professional hide (hd0,1) root (hd0,0) savedefault makeactive chainloader +1
# This entry automatically added by the Debian installer for a non-linux OS # on /dev/sda2 title IBM/Lenovo Maintenance unhide (hd0,1) root (hd0,1) savedefault makeactive chainloader +1
Kernel
The default kernel at install will be linux-image-386. Install Base System linux-image-686 for full support of the core-duo processor including SMP. (The older linux-image-SMP kernel is not required and may not perform as well as it is intended for servers and does not have the pre-emption patches.) You will also need Base System (restricted) linux-restricted-modules-686 as the Intel wireless card driver loads binary firmware.
For Edgy-Eft (6.10) the default kernel linux-image-generic will fully support SMP so installing a kernel should not be necessary.
Xorg.config for two screens
Intel 945GM
The config options are described in the driver man page $ man i810
. The following sections are for a configuration with the laptop screen as the primary display and an second display on the D-SUB15 analog VGA port. The second display is expected to be a flat panel or a data projector ('beamer').
There are some tradeoffs with Xorg.conf, the version below is intended to give the best available resolution with a variety of external screens without the need to change xorg.conf. See the notes at the end of this section for some other optimisations.
Section "Device" Identifier "Intel 945GM Internal LCD" Driver "i810" BusID "PCI:0:2:0" Screen 0 Option "MonitorLayout" "CRT,LFP" VideoRAM 126976 EndSection
Section "Device" Identifier "Intel 945GM External D-SUB15" Driver "i810" BusID "PCI:0:2:0" Screen 1
# some additional possibilities # Option "CheckLid" "no" # Option "Clone" "no" # Option "CloneRefresh" "60" # Option "FlipPrimary" "no" # Option "DisplayInfo" "yes" # Option "Rotate" "CCW" EndSection
Resolution and timing
X and the graphics adaptor will detect an external screen if present and attempt to auto negotiate an appropriate resolution and refresh rate. It is unclear from the Xorg/XFree documentation how the useable video modes are selected/rejected but it appears that if a monitor is connected to the VGA connector the highest available VESA resolution will not be selected unless it has a refresh rate of 75Hz or more. As the optimum refresh rate for a flat panel display is usualy 60Hz, and often the highest (native) resolution only available at this rate, it may be necessary to set a mode line for best performance.
In the case of a data projector, these appear designed to accept inputs for resolutions and refresh rates far in excess of their native SVGA or XGA capabilities and automaticaly convert down, which may entail a loss of image quality. Thus, for these also, forcing a reasonable resolution and refresh rate is desirable.
The possible modes for a connected monitor can be discovered by looking at the X log file $ sudo nano -w /etc/X11/xorg.conf
or by running $ xvidtune
.
Section "Modes" Identifier "V75" ModeLine "VGA 75" 31.50 640 656 720 840 480 481 484 500 ModeLine "SVGA 75" 49.50 800 816 896 1056 600 601 604 625 ModeLine "XGA 75" 78.80 1024 1040 1136 1312 768 769 772 800 Modeline "SXGA 75" 135.00 1280 1296 1440 1688 1024 1025 1028 1066 EndSection Section "Modes" Identifier "V60" Modeline "XGA 60" 65.00 1024 1048 1184 1344 768 771 777 806 ModeLine "SXGA 60" 108.00 1280 1328 1440 1688 1024 1025 1028 1066 ModeLine "UXGA 60" 160.00 1600 1664 1856 2160 1200 1201 1204 1250 EndSection
The monitor
Most recent monitors will supply X with data on available built in modes, and this will overide the HorizSync and VertRefresh values in the config file. However some projectors do not supply this information and fail to display unless the HorizSync and VertRefresh are configured.
Section "Monitor" Identifier "LCD on D-SUB15" Option "DPMS" HorizSync 31-75 VertRefresh 59-75 UseModes "V60" UseModes "V75" EndSection
Section "Screen" Identifier "External Screen" Device "Intel 945GM External D-SUB15" Monitor "LCD on D-SUB15" DefaultDepth 24 SubSection "Display" Depth 24 # Modes "1024x768" "1280x1024" "1600x1200" "640x480" "600x800" Modes "XGA 60" "SXGA 60" "UXGA 60" "VGA 75" "SVGA 75" EndSubSection EndSection
Section "Screen" Identifier "Laptop LCD" Device "Intel 945GM Internal LCD" Monitor "Lenovo 15in LCD" DefaultDepth 24 SubSection "Display" Depth 24 Modes "1024x768" # Virtual 1600 1200 # ViewPort 0 0 EndSubSection EndSection
Section "ServerLayout" Identifier "Default Layout" Screen 0 "Laptop LCD" Absolute 0 0 Screen 1 "External Screen" RightOf "Laptop LCD" # Screen 1 "External Screen" Absolute 1024 0 InputDevice "Generic Keyboard" InputDevice "Configured Mouse" EndSection
Note 1 With this layout the mouse will move off the right hand edge of the laptop screen and make an entrance on the left of the external monitor. If you can't find the mouse it may be on the other screen, try moving it top left.
Note 2 The gnome desktop can be configured for each monitor. But it is not possible to transfer a window from on display to the other. Trying to start Firefox on one desktop when it is opened on another monitor will give a message: "Firefox is already running, but is not responding. To open a new window you must first close the existing Firefox process, or restart your system".
Xinerama To be able to drag windows from one screen to another and fix the problem in Note 2, enable Xinerama extension. However with Xinerama enabled the resolution of the external display will default to XGA, the same as the laptop screen. The Gnome menu System:Preferences:Screen Resolution will respond with: "The X Server does not support the XRandR extension. Runtime resolution changes to the display size are not available", nor will Gnome provide a separate desktop task bar etc. note [here] This problem can be overcome by defining the preferred resolution - and only that resolution - for the screen and server layout. eg.
Section "Monitor" Identifier "Dell 2001FP" DisplaySize 408 306 Option "DPMS" HorizSync 31-80 VertRefresh 56-76 ModeLine "1600x1200" 160.00 1600 1664 1856 2160 1200 1201 1204 1250 EndSection
Section "Screen" Identifier "External UXGA" Device "Intel 945GM External D-SUB15" Monitor "DELL 2100FP" DefaultDepth 24 SubSection "Display" Depth 24 Modes "1024x768" "1280x1024" "1600x1200" "640x480" "600x800" EndSubSection EndSection
Section "ServerLayout" Identifier "Default Layout" Screen 0 "Laptop LCD" Absolute 0 0 # To move windows across screen we need Xinerama and will have to force # the screen reolution if we want more than 1024x768 (XGA) Option "Xinerama" "true" Screen 1 "External UXGA" RightOf "Laptop LCD" Screen 1 "External Screen" Absolute 1024 0 InputDevice "Generic Keyboard" InputDevice "Configured Mouse" EndSection
This may be a better config if you always use the same external screen, but less satisfactory if you need to connect to a variety of external screens.
Sound
There is an option in the BIOS setup to disable the modem which seems a good idea if the modem is not needed. Do not do this, if the modem is disabled then sound will not work with Ubuntu (6.06 and Edgy knot2). (Sound does however work in WinXP with the modem disabled)
Mouse and TrackPoint
see How to configure the TrackPoint Note however that to modify sensitivity and scroll rate on R60e with Ubuntu 6.06 the commands are:
# echo -n 96 > /sys/devices/platform/i8042/serio0/speed # echo -n 200 > /sys/devices/platform/i8042/serio0/sensitivity
This needs to be typed in a root window; using sudo gives a permission denied.
Wireless
Works if you install linux-image which depends on linux-restricted-modules-generic, which in turn contains the kernel module ath_pci. ath_pci is loaded automatically at system startup.
Suspend-to-RAM
There seems to be a bug in edgy in relation to cpufreq governors. See Bug 70602 for details and a workaround.
Had to add following script to let the laptop go into supsend after the lid was closed:
#!/bin/sh #/etc/acpi/local/lid.sh.post grep -q closed /proc/acpi/button/lid/*/state if [ $? = 0 ] ; then /etc/acpi/sleep.sh fi
Modem
If not used: see above re sound
If used: install mwave then it should work.
to be continued
Bluetooth [setup appears ok, untested due to lack of bluetooth device]
FnF2 lock Screen working
FnF3 Display Battery Condition
FnF4 Sleep can be configured in Gnome power save option, but seems to disable fn+F12 hibernate; 'blank screen' sets screensaver)
FnF5 toggle Wireless/Bluetooth on/off
FnF7 Switch Screen? (no ibm/hotkey shown with $ acpi_listen
only effective if cloned displays?)
FnF8 TrackPoint? No Effect (ibm/hotkey HKEY 00000080 00001008)
FnF9 (ibm/hotkey HKEY 00000080 00001009) (Easy Eject in WinXP)
FnF12 Suspend to disk, seems to work, but not entirely reliable, some scrambling of text console display during restart Sometimes restart hangs after reading disk, need to deactivate/reactivate wireless.
FnHome screen brighter (ibm/hotkey HKEY 00000080 00001010)
FnEnd screen dims (no ibm/hotkey shown with $ acpi_listen
)
FnPgUp ThinkLight on/off
External Sources
- This guide is listed at the TuxMobil Linux laptop and notebook installation survey (IBM/Lenovo).