Installing Ubuntu/Breezy on a ThinkPad T42
General installation
Here comes installation instructions for Ubuntu Breezy Badger on T42 2374-ZEP.
Get a copy of Ubuntu from UbuntuLinux.org.
Kernel support
How to get the correct kernel:
$ sudo apt-get install linux-686
Kernel modules
| TODO | Load the different kernel modules, and their configuration | 
ibm_acpi module:
Turning on experimental features:
/etc/modprobe.d/ibm_acpi.modprobe:
options ibm_acpi hotkey=enable,0xffff experimental=1
Starting with wireless off:
/etc/modprobe.d/ipw2100.modprobe:
options ipw2100 disable=1
ibm_acpi modules compilation
Kernel 2.6.12-9 included in Breezy only included ibm_acpi version 0.8. However a version 0.11 is available, and included in 2.6.13.
http://bugme.osdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4947
ACPI
| TODO | Hibernate, suspend, buttons, lid, speedstep | 
Because of "options ipw2100 disable=1" the wireless lan is initially turned off by a software feature. The default script in Breezy does not turn on the software part. Modification to turn on wireless: /etc/acpi/wireless.sh:
#!/bin/bash
# Find and enable/disable wireless devices
for DEVICE in /sys/class/net/*; do
    if [ -d $DEVICE/wireless ]; then
# $DEVICE is a wireless device. Check if it's powered on:
	if [ `cat $DEVICE/device/power/state` = 0 ]; then
# It's powered on. Switch it off.
	    echo -n 3 > $DEVICE/device/power/state;
	    echo 0
	else
# It's powered off. Switch it on.
	    echo -n 0 > $DEVICE/device/power/state;
	    echo -n 0 > $DEVICE/device/rf_kill;
	    echo 1
	fi
    fi
done
Xorg
Relevant part:
Section "InputDevice" Identifier "Configured Mouse" Driver "mouse" Option "CorePointer" Option "Device" "/dev/input/mice" Option "Protocol" "ImPS/2" Option "Emulate3Buttons" "true" Option "EmulateWheel" "true" Option "EmulateWheelButton" "2" Option "ZAxisMapping" "4 5" EndSection Section "InputDevice" Identifier "Synaptics Touchpad" Driver "synaptics" Option "SendCoreEvents" "true" Option "Device" "/dev/psaux" Option "Protocol" "auto-dev" Option "HorizScrollDelta" "0" EndSection Section "Device" Identifier "ATI Technologies, Inc. Radeon Mobility 7500 (M7 LW)" Driver "radeon" BusID "PCI:1:0:0" Option "DynamicClocks" "off" Option "AGPMode" "4" Option "AGPFastWrite" "yes" EndSection
Initng
Very great initiative for optimizing the boot process. Initng
Dep packages can be found: http://alioth.debian.org/projects/pkg-initng/
Installation:
$ sudo dpkg -i initng_0.3.3-2_i386.deb
To run nice a few things and scripts need modification as follows:
Load modules on startup
Unfortunately it seems not all relevant modules are loaded automaticly when using InitNG.
Please help finding the proper scripts to do this.
Just add the proper modules to /etc/modules.
This is my list:
lp mousedev psmouse #Additional ACPI features ibm_acpi #Frequency scaling cpufreq_userspace cpufreq_powersave speedstep_centrino #Sound snd-intel8x0 snd-intel8x0m #Wireless ipw2100
Grup kernel options
To enable initng an option must be appended to the kernel load command in grub.
/boot/grub/menu.lst:
kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.12-9-686 root=/dev/hda9 ro quiet splash video=radeonfb init=/sbin/initng
Runlevel
/etc/initng/default.runlevel:
system daemon/acpid daemon/dbus daemon/hald daemon/vixie-cron daemon/ifplugd system/alsasound system/speedstep system/laptop-mode daemon/syslogd daemon/klogd daemon/gdm daemon/cupsd daemon/powernowd
Scripts
dbus.i
daemon/dbus.i has a few faults, on Ubuntu it is "dbus" not "dbus-1"!
service daemon/dbus {
        need = system/initial system/mountfs system/bootmisc
	
        pid_file = /var/run/dbus/pid
        daemon {
              DAEMON=/usr/bin/dbus-daemon
              NAME=dbus
              DAEMONUSER=messagebus
              PIDDIR=/var/run/dbus
              PIDFILE=$PIDDIR/pid
              DESC="system message bus"
              if [ -e /etc/default/dbus ]; then
                . /etc/default/dbus
              fi
              if [ ! -d $PIDDIR ]; then
                mkdir -p $PIDDIR
                chown $DAEMONUSER $PIDDIR
                chgrp $DAEMONUSER $PIDDIR
              fi
              if [ -e $PIDFILE ]; then
                PIDDIR=/proc/$(cat $PIDFILE)
                if [ -d ${PIDDIR} -a  "$(readlink -f ${PIDDIR}/exe)" = "${DAEMON}" ]; then
                  echo "$DESC already started; not starting."
                else
                  echo "Removing stale PID file $PIDFILE."
                  rm -f $PIDFILE
                fi
              fi
              echo -n "Starting $DESC: "
              $DAEMON --system $PARAMS
              echo "$NAME."
              }
}
hald.i
daemon/hald.i
service daemon/hald {
    need = system/initial system/mountfs daemon/dbus
#    use = daemon/acpid
    daemon {
        PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
        DAEMON=/usr/sbin/hald
        PIDDIR=/var/run/hal
        NAME=hal
        DAEMONUSER=hal
        DESC="Hardware abstraction layer"
        if [ -f /etc/default/hal ] ; then
          . /etc/default/hal
        fi
        if [ ! -d $PIDDIR ]; then
          mkdir -p $PIDDIR
          chown $DAEMONUSER:$DAEMONUSER $PIDDIR
        fi
        echo -n "Starting $DESC: "
        $DAEMON --daemon=no $DAEMON_OPTS
        echo "$NAME."
        }
}
gdm.i
daemon/gdm.i, to add locale support to the GDM login screen:
service daemon/gdm {
    need = system/initial system/mountfs system/hostname net/lo system/modules system/bootmisc
    use = daemon/xfs system/static-modules system/coldplug system/netmount    
#    daemon = /usr/sbin/gdm
#    daemon = /usr/bin/gdm
#    daemon_args = -nodaemon
    daemon {
	PATH=/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin
	if [ -r /etc/default/gdm ]; then
	    . /etc/default/gdm
	    if [ -z "$LANG" ]; then
		:
	    else
		export LANG
	    fi
	fi
	
	gdm -nodaemon
    }
    #pid_file = /var/run/gdm.pid
}
cupsd.i
Somethings wrong in the way the initNG scripts loads cups with hplip.
I did an ugly hack: daemon/cupsd
service daemon/cupsd {
	need = system/initial system/mountroot net/lo
#	use = daemon/printconf daemon/hpiod daemon/hpssd
#	daemon = /usr/sbin/cupsd
#	daemon_args = -f
	daemon {
	    /etc/init.d/hplip start
	    /etc/init.d/cupsys start
	}
}
Helpfull tools
Rovclock
Utility to overclock and underclock the ATI radeon chip. Can be used to underclock to reduce power, especialy when on batteries.
Get it from: http://www.hasw.net/linux/
Stable clock speeds: Core: 100MHz Memory: 120Mhz for LCP only, 180Mhz when using DVI out on port replicator.
Ex:
$ sudo rovclock -c 100 -m 120
noflushd
Noflushd is a daemon that spins down disks that have not been read from
after a certain amount of time, and then prevents disk writes from
spinning them back up. It's targeted for laptops but can be used on any
computer with IDE disks. The effect is that the hard disk actually spins
down, saving you battery power, and shutting off the loudest component of
most computers.
$ sudo apt-get noflushd
ifplugd
ifplugd is a daemon which will automatically configure your
ethernet device when a cable is plugged in and automatically
unconfigure it if the cable is pulled. This is useful on laptops with
onboard network adapters, since it will only configure the interface
when a cable is really connected.
$ sudo apt-get ifplugd
/etc/default/ifplugd:
INTERFACES="eth0" HOTPLUG_INTERFACES="eth0" ARGS="-q -f -u0 -d10 -w -I -b" SUSPEND_ACTION="stop"
gnubiff
gnubiff is a mail notification program that checks for mail and displays headers when new mail has arrived. Has a tray icon for gnome. Supports SSL which I needed. http://gnubiff.sourceforge.net/
$ sudo apt-get install gnubiff
Known problems
| TODO | List of bugs from kernel, Xorg and Ubuntu | 
