HighWayToHell - Tag - howto花园里, 篱笆下2023-08-13T10:38:15+08:00Druggourn:md5:79dfcacdbfd6434dfc57423d51240051DotclearIntel direct rendering HOWTOurn:md5:5e3fe6a94dd3e3d0f9c0a88ee1d25b042008-02-17T22:40:00+08:002008-02-17T22:40:23+08:00admin计算机direct renderinggentoohowtointellinux <p><a hreflang="zh" href="http://zh.gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Intel_Drivers">HOWTO_Intel_Drivers</a></p>
<p>现在公司电脑用的是</p>
<p>Intel Corporation 82Q963/Q965 Integrated Graphics Controller</p>
<p>安装了驱动,效果不错,enemy-territory也挺流畅。</p>http://blog.druggo.org/post/2008/02/17/Intel-direct-rendering-HOWTO#comment-formhttp://blog.druggo.org/feed/atom/comments/161从 initrd 到 Initramfsurn:md5:3a1ed9b81dbaf228a643064c1ab088872006-08-23T11:09:00+08:002006-08-23T11:12:39+08:00admin计算机cpiohowtoinitrdlinuxramfs <blockquote><div id="qhide_592321" style="display: block;" class="qt">Jim Gifford wrote: <br /> > Question: Initramfs is going to replace initrd, but I haven't seen <br /> > anyone explain how to copy modules that are built during the build <br /> > process moved into the initramfs archive. Has somebody done, this or is <br /> > this still a work in progress? <br /> </div><p>Easy. </p>
<p>1) Unpack a vanilla kernel and build and install it as you usually do for a <br /> system that doesn't need initramfs. </p>
<p>make menuconfig <br /> make <br /> make modules_install <br /> cp arch/i386/boot/bzimage /boot/linux-2.6 </p>
<p>2) Make a temporary directory (say, "initramfs") and put all files that you <br /> want to go to your initramfs there. Don't forget the "/init" file, it is <br /> used as a starting point for initramfs. </p>
<p>3) Make the initramfs image: </p>
<p>cd initramfs <br /> find . | cpio -o -H newc | gzip -9 >/boot/initramfs-2.6.cpio.gz </p>
<p>4) Add /boot/linux-2.6 and /boot/initramfs-2.6.cpio.gz to your LILO or GRUB <br /> as you would normally do with a kernel image and the initrd: </p>
<p>image=/boot/linux-2.6 <br /> label="Linux" <br /> initrd=/boot/initramfs-2.6.cpio.gz <br /> root=/dev/hda1 # if your initramfs "/init" script understands this <br /> read-only # if your initramfs "/init" script understands this </p>
<p>5) Upon reboot, the kernel will automatically determine that the image is <br /> really an initramfs, not an initrd. </p>
<p>-- <br /> Alexander E. Patrakov<br /><br />from: http://groups.google.com/group/linux.kernel/msg/f78cf557a5c0b602 </p>
</blockquote>http://blog.druggo.org/post/2006/08/23/initrd-Initramfs#comment-formhttp://blog.druggo.org/feed/atom/comments/37