Installing Ubuntu 6.06 on a ThinkPad T43
Installation Log of Ubuntu 6.06 on a T43
Overview
Worked right out of the box
- 1400*1050 resolution
- Battery Management
- Ultra Nav (Trackpoint and synaptic touchpad)
- WLAN (Atheros, IBM 11a/b/g Wireless LAN Mini PCI Adapter II)
- Hibernate and Standby
- Fn keys (switch between monitors untested)
- Audio Keys
- ThinkLight
Was easy or required some work
- easy ubuntu (includes skype and some codecs)
- middle key of Ultra Nav (Trackpoint)
- ATI 3D Acceleration (Mobility Radeon X300)
- Xgl / Compiz
Still TODO
- Fingerprint reader
- Forward/Backward keys, Access IBM Key
Untested
- Bluetooth (light indicates working)
- Modem
- IrDA
- TV out, VGA out
Failed / still requires work
- Active Protection System
Installation
Recovery copy of data
Before installing a new OS you should create a security copy of your old system. As the IBM Rescue and Recovery tool quit with an error message I used the Ubuntu live CD, mounted and cd'ed into my external hard drive and ran the following command:
$ cmduser|sudo dd if=/dev/sda1 | gzip | dd of=./sda1.img
where /dev/sda1 is the device with my windows partition and sda1.img the gzipped security copy. In case of problems one can now restore lost information using
$ sudo dd if=./sda.img | gzip -d | of=/dev/sda1
After creating the recovery copy we are ready to resize the existing windows partition. This article assumes you want to keep your IBM Rescue and Recovery Partition, shrink in size, but keep your windows partition and create a new partition for Dapper Drake.
Resizing Partitions
Probably the best choice is now to boot from the alternate CD (read [1] to know why) and use it to resize the existing NTFS partition. Unfortionately in my case it didn't work. So I booted the Live CD, but gparted and parted refused to resize my Windows, too. If the same happens to you, use the example here to know how to resize it "manually" using ntfsresize and fdisk.
After resizing your windows partition you should reboot window to check everything's in order. It probably will run checkdisk and reboot two times - according to experieces you can read in the web, you should better let windows do that.
Installation of Ubuntu
Now it's the time to install Ubuntu. I used the alternate CD for that because I chose to install grub into the Linux partition and not into the Master Boot Record (read why). The graphical LiveCD installer automatically installs grub to the MBR. If you want to use grub in the MBR read Rescue and Recovery. There is a description of what you have to do in order to still be able to use the IBM R'n'R partition.
- remember that you're installing GRUB to an sda mount, not an hda mount like the GRUB installer will prompt you for what you should enter after you tell GRUB not to install in the MBR will be something like this:
/dev/sda3
After the installation is finshed it will reboot your system. Now windows should start. In my case it didn't, but playing around, booting into the R'n'R partition, starting PC Doctor and doing some Diagnostics (no changes) somehow and surprisingly made windows boot again.
To boot you freshly installed Linux you have to reboot the LiveCD one last time. Use
$ sudo dd if=/dev/hda3 of=ubuntu.img bs=512 count=1
to copy the first block of grub into an image file and use e.g. an usb flash drive to transfer it to your newly booted windows. Copy paste the image to C:\ and add the following line to your C:\boot.ini:
C:\ubuntu.img="Ubuntu Dapper Drake" $
At the next restart the windows boot manager should now welcome you with the choice to boot windows or ubuntu. Choose ubuntu to (finally ;-) boot your newly installed linux for the first time.
Configuration
Easyubuntu
Easyubuntu is a helpful tool to install Skype, codecs, ATi 3D drivers and further things that can make your live easier.
Keyboard Layout
My T43 has a German keyboard layout. Most worked just fine, but some keys (in my case the "at" and the "tilde" among others) just didn't. If the same happens to you, just go to the Gnome System Preferences menu and choose the right layout for your keyboard (probably named after your language and something like eliminate-dead-keys or no-dead-keys)
3D Acceleration and Xgl/Compiz
If you have an ATI Radeon X300, use this explanation to make your hardware 3d acceleration work.
To test if it works type
$ glxinfo | grep rendering
The answer should be: "direct rendering: Yes". If it says "No", you don't have 3D acceleration.
If you want to install Xgl/Compiz like me, here is a great installation help for ATI cards (use way two.)
If you have another card you might find a good explanation here.
3D Acceleration using open-source radeon driver and AIGLX/Beryl
From my experience it was better to use "radeon" driver, the open source one, on top of "drm" driver, also part of the kernel, instead of fglrx. I get direct rendering and similar purformance---maybe fglrx driver gives 50-100 more fps. The most annoying thing about fglrx driver is that it can cause hard locks every now and then and your suspend doesn't work properly...believe me I tried the ones that the Thinkwiki says supposed to work.
$ glxinfo | grep rendering direct rendering: Yes OpenGL renderer string: Mesa DRI R300 20060815 TCL
Use the directions in the previous section to install fglrx driver, library. (I just installed them from shell rather than making them into packages, I found the uninstall script in /usr/share/fglrx to work properly). FYI, I used the version 8.26.18-x86.
If you don't get rendering use LIBGL_DEBUG=verbose glxinfo to diagnose the problem. The most common problem is that xorg looks for DRI library files in /usr/X11R6/lib/dri, which didn't exist for me. A simple way to solve this is creating a symlink to where those files are located (/usr/lib/dri/):
$ cd /usr/X11R6/lib/ $ ln -s /usr/lib/dri/ .
Open your /etc/modules file and add these lines and comment 'fglrx' if there is any:
intel-agp drm radeon
Also, from my experience, it was better to use AIGLX than Xgl and Beryl instead of Compiz in terms of performance and integration---things like suspend and hibernate. And you can use nice start/shutdown scripts to disable beryl-manager since it can cause hang when you resume from suspension. For more information about suspend/resume scripts, here. For more information about installing aiglx and beryl, see here).
ATI X300 is pretty pitiful though...I get around ~570 average FPS when running AIGLX/beryl
2850 frames in 5.0 seconds = 569.997 FPS 2925 frames in 5.0 seconds = 584.925 FPS 2904 frames in 5.0 seconds = 580.741 FPS 2923 frames in 5.0 seconds = 584.524 FPS...
With metacity (default Gnome window manager) I get around slightly over 1000 FPS
5073 frames in 5.0 seconds = 1014.423 FPS 5073 frames in 5.0 seconds = 1014.531 FPS 5252 frames in 5.0 seconds = 1049.326 FPS 5803 frames in 5.0 seconds = 1160.502 FPS
If anyone know how to get rid of the weird warning, I would really appreciate it:
libGL warning: 3D driver claims to not support visual 0x4b
Active Protection System
The T43 has a great system to protect your hard disk, the Active Protection System APS. How to protect the harddisk through APS describes how you can use it.
If you didn't until now you will have to install make, libc, gcc, ... Best is you use
$ sudo apt-get install build-essentials
Determine your kernel version using
$ uname -a
You should see somthing like
Linux ibm 2.6.15-26-386 #1 PREEMPT Thu Aug 3 02:52:00 UTC 2006 i686 GNU/Linux
Install the kernel sources "linux-source" e.g. using Synaptic. Download the right kernel patch from HDAPS#Applications according to your kernel version and system (I chose "sata/ide disk protection patch for 2.6.15") adapt following steps to your needs:
$ cd /usr/src/ $ sudo su # bunzip2 linux-source-2.6.15.tar.bz2 # tar -xf linux-source-2.6.15.tar # cd linux-source-2.6.15 # patch -p1 -l < /home/silvan/hdaps_protect.20060118.patch
You should see several lines with the word "suceeded". If you see many "failed" instead you probably chose the wrong patch for your kernel. You can use the --dry-run option to try it out first. If you get errors in the following steps you should better stop unless you know what you are doing.
# make clean # make oldconfig # use old config, ask for new items, only # make clean # make # takes quite a long time, several minutes # make modules # make modules_install
Afterwards use the debian sources mentioned in How to protect the harddisk through APS to install the user space deamon hdapsd and the gnome applet gnome-hdaps-applet, e.g. using Synaptic.
If this worked for you, you can find some nice applications at HDAPS#Applications which make use of the APS.
Track Point Middle Key Scrolling
In my case the track point worked out of the box, but the middle mouse button for scrolling did not. How to configure the TrackPoint explains how to solve this. The steps you need to follow are in section "Using the X server (kernel 2.6.11+)". However you don't need to follow the steps in "EmulateWheelTimeout temporarily broken (-> fix for Ubuntu Dapper)" as this is fixed already if you have all your packages up-to-date.
Follow the instructions in the sections "Configure firefox for using trackpoint horizontal scrolling" and "Configure Opera for using trackpoint horizontal scrolling" as well, if you are using one of the two browsers.
Fingerprint Reader
TODO
|
Needs editing
|
Look at How to enable the fingerprint reader if you want to use your fingerprint reader.
Forward / Backward Keys, Access IBM
TODO
|
Needs editing
|
You'll find more here: How to get special keys to work
IrDA
TODO
|
Needs editing
|
Find information here: How to make use of IrDA
Hope this helped anyhow :-)
Greetz
tec
References
External Sources
- This guide is listed at the TuxMobil Linux laptop and notebook installation survey (IBM/Lenovo).