Difference between revisions of "Installing Arch Linux on a ThinkPad X40"
m (→Suspend) |
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{{cmdroot|pacman -S pm-utils}} | {{cmdroot|pacman -S pm-utils}} | ||
− | Add {{bootparm|acpi_sleep|s3_bios}} to the {{path|/boot/grub/menu.lst}}. | + | Add {{bootparm|acpi_sleep|s3_bios}} to the file {{path|/boot/grub/menu.lst}} as kernel option. |
− | I added following modules to the /etc/pm/config.d/config file in the order they are dependant of eachother. The last ones depend on the first modules. | + | I added following modules to the {{path|/etc/pm/config.d/config}} file in the order they are dependant of eachother. The last ones depend on the first modules. |
SUSPEND_MODULES="wlan_wep wlan_scan_sta ath_rate_sample ath_pci wlan ath_hal" | SUSPEND_MODULES="wlan_wep wlan_scan_sta ath_rate_sample ath_pci wlan ath_hal" | ||
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esac | esac | ||
− | Put the script in | + | Put the script in {{path|/etc/pm/sleep.d/}}. The changing of the virtual terminals with chvt is used to avoid a garbled screen after invoking vbetool in X. |
To get the suspend keycombo (fn+f4) to work, I installed xbindkeys: | To get the suspend keycombo (fn+f4) to work, I installed xbindkeys: |
Revision as of 21:34, 28 January 2009
Some notes to get Arch Linux running on a Thinkpad X40.
TODO
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Not fnished yet. I'm documenting the installation process as it goes
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Contents
Preface
I downloaded the FTP installation CD on http://www.archlinux.org/
Wireless
My main concern was getting the WIFI to work. As the downloaded ISO also functions as a livecd, I tried to get it up and running with that. Without success. I found the answer to my question here: http://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=482359
I installed madwifi and madwifi-utils. In the modules section of /etc/rc.conf I banged the ath5k module, disabling it. With ath5k not banged the card showed up as wlan0, associated correctly with the AP, but didn't get a DHCP lease. Even with manually setting the IP and adding the default route, I couldn't ping the AP.
After banging ath5k, the wireless card shows up as ath0. Associating works, DHCP doesn't time out. :)
Power Managerment
The two most important factors of a mobile device are battery life and weight. I'm always a bit disgrunted when an advertisement doesn't mention one or either.
Without any powersaving installations the 8cell battery still managed for a nice 4 hours.
CPU Frequency Scaling
CPU Frequency Scaling is a technology primarily for notebooks that enables the OS to scale the CPU speed to system and/or power use.
I simply followed the following instructions: http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Cpufrequtils
Suspend
I tried pm-utils. 2
# pacman -S pm-utils
Add acpi_sleep=s3_bios
to the file /boot/grub/menu.lst as kernel option.
I added following modules to the /etc/pm/config.d/config file in the order they are dependant of eachother. The last ones depend on the first modules.
SUSPEND_MODULES="wlan_wep wlan_scan_sta ath_rate_sample ath_pci wlan ath_hal"
But suspending seems to work even without this.
The backlight wasn't working when resuming from suspend, but the following fixed it [1]:
#!/bin/bash case $1 in suspend) ;; resume) chvt 1 vbetool post & sleep 1 kill $! chvt 7 ;; esac
Put the script in /etc/pm/sleep.d/. The changing of the virtual terminals with chvt is used to avoid a garbled screen after invoking vbetool in X.
To get the suspend keycombo (fn+f4) to work, I installed xbindkeys:
# pacman -S xbindkeys
And placed the following in ~/.xbindkeysrc
"sudo pm-suspend" c:223
The keycode I found out running xev and looking for the appropriate keycode.
Xorg
Installed xorg with
# pacman -S xorg
Then generated the xorg.cong file with
# hwd -xa
(I know, risky ;))
Looked good, but X didn't start with this (couldn't find display). I installed the xf86-video-intel and changed the display driver from i810 to intel in /etc/X11/xorg.conf:
Section "Device" Identifier "Card0" Driver "intel" VendorName "All" BoardName "All" EndSection
Getting the back/forward special keys to work
Add the following to your ~/.Xmodmap 1
keycode 77 = Num_Lock keycode 234 = XF86Back keycode 233 = XF86Forward
Enabling scrolling with middle mouse button
Add the following to your /etc/X11/xorg.conf, to the PS/2 mouse section 1
Option "EmulateWheel" "true" Option "EmulateWheelButton" "2"
Postface
Don't forget to run:
# alsaconf
to get the sound to work properly.
FOOTNOTES [Δ] |