Installing SUSE 10 on a ThinkPad TransNote
This page tells about installation of SUSE on a ThinkPad TransNote.
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Introduction, general installation notes
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TPB
- The nvram module doesn't get loaded by default. Hence you have to add it into the boot process yourself. In /etc/sysconfig/kernel adjust the following line:
MODULES_LOADED_ON_BOOT="nvram"
Power Management
SUSE 10, like any other SUSE version, uses powersaved for power management. powersaved attaches himself to acpid via a file socket, acpid is only running to forward all events to powersaved.
While the basic PM functionalities work out of the box, it gets a bit tricky when you want to enable ibm-acpi and tpb.
SUSE comes with a modified kernel 2.6.13, and has the individual ACPI support options compiled as modules. Trying different modules loading orders or including part of the modules into the kernel, didn't help making ibm-acpi to work reliably. Hence the conclusion was to try and built a vanilla kernel.
While doing so, kernel 2.6.14 was used and the ACPI option modules were built into the kernel. Unpack the kernel source into /usr/src/, relink /usr/src/linux to point to Template:Paht. Copy the .config file from the old kernels source dir. Change into the new kernels source dir and configure the kernel to include processor, ac, battery, fan, thermal and button support rather than having it compiled as modules. Compile the kernel and copy the appropriate kernel image to the /boot directory. You need to copy System.map as well. Then edit /etc/sysconfig/kernel and adjust the line:
INITRD_MODULES="piix reiserfs"
After that, recreate the initrd using mkinitrd. There is no need to update your menu.lst file, since the symlinks get adjusted by mkinitrd.
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This info needs to be more detailed.
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- Also make sure that ibm_acpi is never unloaded, since it would cause trouble. In /etc/sysconfig/powersave/common adjust the following line:
ACPI_MODULES_NOT_TO_UNLOAD="ibm_acpi"
- Powersaved complains about missing cpufreq support on boot. It might be good to switch to userspace frequency scaling. In /etc/sysconfig/cpufreq adjust the following line:
CPUFREQ_CONTROL="userspace"