Installing Fedora 8 on a ThinkPad T61p
Contents
Introduction
This document outlines configuring Fedora 8 on your Thinkpad T61p. Most items will work out of the box and a base install will provide you with an almost completely working system. Due to the modular nature of the T61 there are many different configuration, please read carefully and only make the changes specific to your system.
Feel free to update this Wiki with your information however please ask questions on the Talk page.
Please look here for further informations as well:
Installation Notes
Booting from the installation CD/DVD is only working in text mode due to the nVidia cards, you can use later vesa mode or nVidia drivers or livna nVidia drivers for X
Display/Video
You have following alternatives for your graphics in X:
- vesa mode, no 3D support
- nVidia drivers, download from the vendor
- nVidia drivers by livna (prefered)
The last options is provided by following packages: kmod-nvidia, xorg-x11-drv-nvidia.
Mouse
Important note: the synaptics driver, which is detected by default does not give the acceleration setting to a attached mouse or the trackpoint. Please replace the section for the synaptics driver with the following one:
Section "InputDevice"
Identifier "Logitech"
Driver "mouse"
Option "Device" "/dev/input/mice"
Option "ZAxisMapping" "4 5 6 7"
Option "Protocol" "auto"
EndSection
Brightness
As of kernel update: 2.6.23.9-85 and its linked drivers from livna funtion keys are working even in X and the nvidia driver.
Audio
Working, but volume keys do not work with the nVidia card at least. If you want to use KDE, make sure you install the kde-desktop group: yum groupinstall kde-desktop. This will install among others kde-settings-pulseaudio.
Todo
- Volume keys.
- The sound is a bit delayed for signals like warnings, console bells, is this is a KDE problem?
Network
Ethernet and Wlan is fully supported. Wlan will be detected as wlan0.
Suspend to RAM
Working.
Suspend to Disk / Hibernate
Has display problems (black after resume until hard reset), perhaps tuxonice should give a try.
Fingerprint Reader
Is supported by the thinkfinger package. Gnome and KDM (kde login manager) seem to be working quite well, KDE is not fully supported yet.
Install thinkfiner package and edit /etc/pam.d/system-auth and add the pam_thinkfinger.so module right before pam_unix.so. So your system-auth should start like this:
#%PAM-1.0
# This file is auto-generated.
# User changes will be destroyed the next time authconfig is run.
auth required pam_env.so
auth sufficient pam_thinkfinger.so
auth sufficient pam_unix.so nullok try_first_pass
auth requisite pam_succeed_if.so uid >= 500 quiet
auth required pam_deny.so
...
Then save a fingerprint for each user that is allowed to log in via fingerprint. For example, for the account auser this is done with
tf-tool --add-user auser
Now whenever you are asked to enter the password for auser, you can also swipe your finger:
[anotheruser@thinkpad ~]$ su auser
Password or swipe finger:
[auser@thinkpad ~]$
You probably want to enroll the root account so you can just su to the superuser without entering the root password.
Memory
I had to use the PAE kernel to be able to use all 4GB, otherwise a maximum of 3GB is only seen.