* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? [not found] ` <1pt6s-686-9@gated-at.bofh.it> @ 2004-02-15 14:59 ` Ryan Reich 0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Ryan Reich @ 2004-02-15 14:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-kernel Sander wrote: > Jesse Allen wrote (ao): > >> On Fri, Feb 13, 2004 at 11:01:45PM +0200, aviv bergman wrote: >>> i had very frequent lockups after upgrading to 2.6.0, flashed to the >>> latest bios, and the system is rock stable since (2.6.1 w/apic) >> >> Wow, another fixed shuttle board? Looks like shuttle knows what the >> bug is then. > > > I've never read the Shuttle boards where unstable. I thought people had > problems with the normal size boards from Asus and others. I have a Shuttle AN35N-Ultra with an Athlon 2600+ on it which had the infamous lockups under 2.4 until I figured out that it was the APIC and turned that off. I just flashed the BIOS with the latest on Shuttle's site and they seem to have gone, at least for now. Someone claims that he got one after five days uptime, but I'm a wimp and turn my computer off every night so I'll never see that. -- Ryan Reich ryanr@uchicago.edu ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* is nForce2 good choice under Linux? @ 2004-02-13 20:10 Grzegorz Kulewski 2004-02-13 20:32 ` Daniel Drake 2004-02-13 22:12 ` Jesse Allen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Grzegorz Kulewski @ 2004-02-13 20:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-kernel Hi, I am recently considering buying Abit AN7 motherboard with NVIDIA nForce2 Ultra 400 with MCP-T bridge. But I found some posts on the Internet that states there are some problems with nForce2 chipsets under Linux. So my questions: 1. What is the status of nForce2 support under Linux? What works what not? 2. Are the drivers binary or source or open source? Are the drivers in mainline kernels or do I need a patch? 3. Are there any problems with this chipset? Are the problems hardware based or soft based (= will/can be fixed)? Are ACPI, APIC, IRQ and so on working OK? 4. Are there any workarounds in the kernel for hardware bugs? Do they affect performance/stability? 5. Should I choose other mainboard? Why? Which? 6. Any comments from people which use this mainboard/chipsets under Linux? I am mainly interested in 2.6 kernels, if it does change anything. thanks in advance and sorry for my english Grzegorz Kulewski ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 20:10 Grzegorz Kulewski @ 2004-02-13 20:32 ` Daniel Drake 2004-02-13 21:01 ` aviv bergman 2004-02-13 21:24 ` Grzegorz Kulewski 2004-02-13 22:12 ` Jesse Allen 1 sibling, 2 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Daniel Drake @ 2004-02-13 20:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Grzegorz Kulewski; +Cc: linux-kernel Hi, I own an Abit NF7-S 2.0. I generally stick to the latest 2.6-mm kernels. Grzegorz Kulewski wrote: > 1. What is the status of nForce2 support under Linux? What works what not? I haven't tried the SATA or firewire capabilities of my board, but I believe both work. Everything else (sound, network, ...) works OK. > 2. Are the drivers binary or source or open source? Are the drivers in > mainline kernels or do I need a patch? There are binary sound drivers, but you are best off to go with the ALSA intel8x0 drivers (open source). There are binary network drivers, but you are best off to go with the forcedeth drivers (open source). There is nvidia ide support in the kernel. My only gripe is that, as I understand it, the onboard sound chip is powerful. However, neither the ALSA/OSS drivers, or nvidia's own binaries, will take advantage of the good features such as hardware mixing. This means that you cannot play two sounds at the same time, unless you use software mixing (dmix, arts, esd) or go out and buy a cheapy SB Live :) Apparently, nvidia are working on new (binary) drivers for nforce-audio which will do hardware mixing and the likes. > 3. Are there any problems with this chipset? Are the problems hardware > based or soft based (= will/can be fixed)? Are ACPI, APIC, IRQ and so on > working OK? Yes, there is a problem. This is a hardware problem, which can likely be fixed in a BIOS update. Those who have tried contacting manufacturers have basically failed. There is a bug relating to the C1 disconnect feature of AMD CPU's. It causes a total system freeze. There is some quite detailed info on this in recent threads, search the archive if you are interested. For the majority of people (as I understand it), these lockups can be totally avoided by *not* using APIC/IOAPIC. I never met a lockup until I enabled APIC for the first time. The older XTPIC paths are generally not fast enough to trigger the C1 bug. Ross Dickson has done some great work here, and he has produced patches which workaround this particular bug. His last two revisions of patches have worked great for me (and others), not a lockup since. Of course, you might get lucky and not get problems at all. I have heard from a couple of people who use nforce2-based systems, with default configs (plus APIC) and have never experienced a lockup. > 4. Are there any workarounds in the kernel for hardware bugs? Do they > affect performance/stability? See above. > 5. Should I choose other mainboard? Why? Which? I have been perfectly happy with my NF7-S, except from the one time it failed on me (didn't boot up), and I had to get it replaced. I think there is a general risk involved in buying nforce2 boards, their rate of failure is fairly high. Still, the benefits are nice. hope this helps Daniel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 20:32 ` Daniel Drake @ 2004-02-13 21:01 ` aviv bergman 2004-02-13 21:36 ` Grzegorz Kulewski ` (2 more replies) 2004-02-13 21:24 ` Grzegorz Kulewski 1 sibling, 3 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: aviv bergman @ 2004-02-13 21:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-kernel On Friday 13 February 2004 22:32, Daniel Drake wrote: > I have been perfectly happy with my NF7-S, except from the one time it > failed on me (didn't boot up), and I had to get it replaced. I think there > is a general risk involved in buying nforce2 boards, their rate of failure > is fairly high. Still, the benefits are nice. the shuttle FN41 (sn41g2 xpc) is probably safe - i had very frequent lockups after upgrading to 2.6.0, flashed to the latest bios, and the system is rock stable since (2.6.1 w/apic) you better check if the specific board you are going to buy has a fixed bios. aviv ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 21:01 ` aviv bergman @ 2004-02-13 21:36 ` Grzegorz Kulewski 2004-02-13 22:17 ` Jesse Allen 2004-02-14 0:37 ` John Dee 2 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Grzegorz Kulewski @ 2004-02-13 21:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: aviv bergman; +Cc: linux-kernel Thanks for response! > the shuttle FN41 (sn41g2 xpc) is probably safe - i had very frequent lockups > after upgrading to 2.6.0, flashed to the latest bios, and the system is rock > stable since (2.6.1 w/apic) > > you better check if the specific board you are going to buy has a fixed bios. The newest BIOS for AN7 is 1.4. But there is nothing about APIC in changelogs. How old is the update for Your board? (The oldest BIOS for AN7 is from 2003/11/11, so maybe it has this fix already in?) Thanks again! Grzegorz Kulewski ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 21:01 ` aviv bergman 2004-02-13 21:36 ` Grzegorz Kulewski @ 2004-02-13 22:17 ` Jesse Allen 2004-02-13 22:36 ` Craig Bradney 2004-02-15 11:53 ` Sander 2004-02-14 0:37 ` John Dee 2 siblings, 2 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Jesse Allen @ 2004-02-13 22:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: aviv bergman; +Cc: linux-kernel On Fri, Feb 13, 2004 at 11:01:45PM +0200, aviv bergman wrote: > the shuttle FN41 (sn41g2 xpc) is probably safe - i had very frequent lockups > after upgrading to 2.6.0, flashed to the latest bios, and the system is rock > stable since (2.6.1 w/apic) > Wow, another fixed shuttle board? Looks like shuttle knows what the bug is then. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 22:17 ` Jesse Allen @ 2004-02-13 22:36 ` Craig Bradney 2004-02-15 11:53 ` Sander 1 sibling, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Craig Bradney @ 2004-02-13 22:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jesse Allen; +Cc: aviv bergman, linux-kernel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 756 bytes --] On Fri, 2004-02-13 at 23:17, Jesse Allen wrote: > On Fri, Feb 13, 2004 at 11:01:45PM +0200, aviv bergman wrote: > > the shuttle FN41 (sn41g2 xpc) is probably safe - i had very frequent lockups > > after upgrading to 2.6.0, flashed to the latest bios, and the system is rock > > stable since (2.6.1 w/apic) > > > > Wow, another fixed shuttle board? Looks like shuttle knows what the bug is > then. I just looked on the Shuttle site (shuttle.com), and found no mention of anything obvious for the XPC minipc series, but for the AN35N motherboard we have the latest entry as: AN35S00L Checksum: 8B00H Date Code: 12/05/03 1.Support 0.18 micron AMD Duron (Palomino) CPU. 2.Add C1 disconnect item. Craig [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 22:17 ` Jesse Allen 2004-02-13 22:36 ` Craig Bradney @ 2004-02-15 11:53 ` Sander 1 sibling, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Sander @ 2004-02-15 11:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jesse Allen, aviv bergman, linux-kernel Jesse Allen wrote (ao): > On Fri, Feb 13, 2004 at 11:01:45PM +0200, aviv bergman wrote: > > the shuttle FN41 (sn41g2 xpc) is probably safe I too have a shuttle SN41G2 barebone system with the FN41 mainboard. I added a XP3000+, 2x 512MB Corsair memory and a 200GB Maxtor. It has always been stable running 2.5/2.6 24/7 at maximum cpu load (folding@home). I love the system for it's intelligent cpu cooling system which takes heat generated by the cpu out immediately. CPU runs between 40 and 50 degrees Celcius (at max cpu load). It is noisy though, and the fan speed regulator is stupid which makes the noise annoying when the cpu is alternating between 39 and 40 degrees (at 16 degrees room temperature, so for example at night when you try to sleep) and the fan changes it's speed all the time (speed is stable above 40 degrees, and these values are adjustable in the bios). The case looks nice too and is conveniently small. I didn't dare to put more than the 200GB disk in to make sure it can get rid of it's heat (now running between 25 and 35 degrees C.). The rest is external. > > i had very frequent lockups after upgrading to 2.6.0, flashed to the > > latest bios, and the system is rock stable since (2.6.1 w/apic) > > Wow, another fixed shuttle board? Looks like shuttle knows what the > bug is then. I've never read the Shuttle boards where unstable. I thought people had problems with the normal size boards from Asus and others. Kind regards, Sander -- Humilis IT Services and Solutions http://www.humilis.net ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 21:01 ` aviv bergman 2004-02-13 21:36 ` Grzegorz Kulewski 2004-02-13 22:17 ` Jesse Allen @ 2004-02-14 0:37 ` John Dee 2 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: John Dee @ 2004-02-14 0:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: aviv bergman; +Cc: linux-kernel -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I have a shuttle FN41G2. It works well for my needs. have an extra ethernet card handy, though, because without the forcedeth patch, you won't have ethernet. aviv bergman wrote: | On Friday 13 February 2004 22:32, Daniel Drake wrote: | |>I have been perfectly happy with my NF7-S, except from the one time it |>failed on me (didn't boot up), and I had to get it replaced. I think there |>is a general risk involved in buying nforce2 boards, their rate of failure |>is fairly high. Still, the benefits are nice. | | | the shuttle FN41 (sn41g2 xpc) is probably safe - i had very frequent lockups | after upgrading to 2.6.0, flashed to the latest bios, and the system is rock | stable since (2.6.1 w/apic) | | you better check if the specific board you are going to buy has a fixed bios. | | aviv | - | To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in | the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org | More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html | Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (MingW32) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFALW2thf6hBevzxKARAoofAJwInRCuqxdCu0567X2PVonTjeMzMwCeOfBJ wuyv2bXTbFw2DISWiiSSGZQ= =1RaN -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 20:32 ` Daniel Drake 2004-02-13 21:01 ` aviv bergman @ 2004-02-13 21:24 ` Grzegorz Kulewski 2004-02-13 22:05 ` Daniel Drake 1 sibling, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Grzegorz Kulewski @ 2004-02-13 21:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Daniel Drake; +Cc: linux-kernel Thanks for your fast response! > I haven't tried the SATA or firewire capabilities of my board, but I believe > both work. Everything else (sound, network, ...) works OK. Is anybody using these features? I am thinking about connecting two 120GB WD SATA drives (raid) to improve performance and seek times. But I have to know if SATA controller works under Linux... (i think it is Silicon Image controller or something like that...) Is TCQ supported on these controllers? Or it depends on disks being used? > Apparently, nvidia are working on new (binary) drivers for nforce-audio which > will do hardware mixing and the likes. Hope it will work with ALSA... > Yes, there is a problem. This is a hardware problem, which can likely be fixed > in a BIOS update. Those who have tried contacting manufacturers have basically > failed. > There is a bug relating to the C1 disconnect feature of AMD CPU's. It causes a > total system freeze. There is some quite detailed info on this in recent > threads, search the archive if you are interested. > > For the majority of people (as I understand it), these lockups can be totally > avoided by *not* using APIC/IOAPIC. I never met a lockup until I enabled APIC > for the first time. The older XTPIC paths are generally not fast enough to > trigger the C1 bug. Ross Dickson has done some great work here, and he has > produced patches which workaround this particular bug. His last two revisions > of patches have worked great for me (and others), not a lockup since. You mean that kernel 2.6-mm with this patch with APIC and ACPI enabled works OK? Is this patch a complete fix or a workaround? Btw. Is CPU frequency scaling supported on this board (with ACPI)? What about other power saving technologies? > I have been perfectly happy with my NF7-S, except from the one time it failed > on me (didn't boot up), and I had to get it replaced. I think there is a > general risk involved in buying nforce2 boards, their rate of failure is > fairly high. Still, the benefits are nice. Wow! This fringtens me! What do you mean? Why are they so failure-able? Are they worse than other new boards in it? Are they, at least, easily, fast and free replaced (under warranty)? Thanks again! Grzegorz Kulewski ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 21:24 ` Grzegorz Kulewski @ 2004-02-13 22:05 ` Daniel Drake 0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Daniel Drake @ 2004-02-13 22:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Grzegorz Kulewski; +Cc: linux-kernel Hi, Grzegorz Kulewski wrote: > You mean that kernel 2.6-mm with this patch with APIC and ACPI enabled > works OK? Is this patch a complete fix or a workaround? Yep, it works fine. The patch is a workaround, I think it disables going into C1 disconnect state too early, and refuses to go into C1 disconnect state when we know we will reconnect right afterwards. I'm not too sure on the details here, check Ross Dicksons previous posts for clarification. >>I have been perfectly happy with my NF7-S, except from the one time it failed >>on me (didn't boot up), and I had to get it replaced. I think there is a >>general risk involved in buying nforce2 boards, their rate of failure is >>fairly high. Still, the benefits are nice. > Wow! This fringtens me! What do you mean? Why are they so failure-able? > Are they worse than other new boards in it? Are they, at least, easily, > fast and free replaced (under warranty)? Before I bought this board, I was doing some reading up, as you do. I found quite a few cases of people having problems (DOA, bootup trouble, bios not saving settings on reboots, etc.). The general word going around at the time was that the boards were great, but failures and problems were quite common. This was quite a while ago (June-July 2003) so you might want to check around for newer opinions. You will probably also discover the word going around about the very first AN7s, involving gashes in the board to fix late bugs, and hand soldered components. As for getting replacements, yes, I got a replacement with my supplier, even though they said they wouldn't guarantee any returns after 3 months. After I purchased the board I discovered that the Abit UK offices are very near me, and when I approached them to get it repaired, they refused - they will only repair boards that came directly from them. So, check with your supplier before you buy, because you probably wont have any luck with Abit directly. Daniel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: is nForce2 good choice under Linux? 2004-02-13 20:10 Grzegorz Kulewski 2004-02-13 20:32 ` Daniel Drake @ 2004-02-13 22:12 ` Jesse Allen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Jesse Allen @ 2004-02-13 22:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Grzegorz Kulewski; +Cc: linux-kernel On Fri, Feb 13, 2004 at 09:10:36PM +0100, Grzegorz Kulewski wrote: > Hi, > > I am recently considering buying Abit AN7 motherboard with NVIDIA nForce2 > Ultra 400 with MCP-T bridge. Short answer: don't. Nvidia sucks -- they don't support open source at all. Longer answer: You can probably get away with it if you make a good choice with a board. Read up specifically on which boards work. My suggestion, based on experience: Get a Shuttle AN35N and flash the bios to the latest to fix the lockup bug. It's a $40 board and comes with 5 PCI slots and 1 AGP. No firewire or SATA, but if you want them you could now buy quality, supported PCI cards instead. This motherboard can run vanilla 2.6.2, with nforce IDE, sound and net. The sound and net nforce drivers need some work done, so if you don't like how they run you still have lots of PCI slots. It doesn't have built on video so you have an option here too. And you should get a good supported ATI card anyway if you want 3d. I use this board. It is stable, cheap, fast, and fully functional. Though if I had a choice to buy a board again, it will not be nvidia. Jesse ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
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2004-02-15 14:59 ` is nForce2 good choice under Linux? Ryan Reich
2004-02-13 20:10 Grzegorz Kulewski
2004-02-13 20:32 ` Daniel Drake
2004-02-13 21:01 ` aviv bergman
2004-02-13 21:36 ` Grzegorz Kulewski
2004-02-13 22:17 ` Jesse Allen
2004-02-13 22:36 ` Craig Bradney
2004-02-15 11:53 ` Sander
2004-02-14 0:37 ` John Dee
2004-02-13 21:24 ` Grzegorz Kulewski
2004-02-13 22:05 ` Daniel Drake
2004-02-13 22:12 ` Jesse Allen
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