Originally posted by: Nothinman
ralink, atheros, PrismGT, Intel 3945, Marvell Libertas, TI ACX100/ACX111, and Realtek RTL8180 wireless adapters (in usb, cardbus, and various forms of PCI where available)?
Does it support 10Gb Ethernet? What about T1/E1 hardware?
No, yes and not sure. If by T1/E1 hardware you're talking about WAN ports that support T1 frames, then yes but I don't know the extent of the support. But you picked wifi because you know it's an area that Linux is lacking compared to OpenBSD and it's probably the only area. Is there a driver for the broadcom wifi chipsets in OpenBSD yet?
So, if I pick up a Mac SE30 I can run a vanilla kernel on it?
Maybe, there is a m68k port but I can't imagine why you'd put yourself though the pain of using that machine.
I said before if you know what you're doing with compiling then you're not going to have to test anything.
Right, because you automatically know which module is causing the problem if you're compiling but if you're just disabling modules you don't?
No you don't because you can be a newbie that has a problem, asks for help and someone tells them to disable it this way. I was talking more from a background of compiling experience, where being a newbie you're not going to get away with this so easy.
Either way you can be a newbie getting help for disabling a mod or compiling the kernel, but it's not what I meant. Now just because you've complied the kernel, it's not going to mean you know every module by heart, so when you have a problem trying to track it down, it might turn into a bit of a hunt to figure it out and disable it. But if you compile what you know, what works, then you can escape this issue of doing a module hunt. Again this all really gets down to what you are comfortable doing.
Well that depends on your system, and how much you compile in, yes I must admit that was not a fair average to say in time. Personally, but now that's my box and requirements, I can configure and compile ALL in like 10-15mins.
Then you've either got a machine roughly twice as fast as mine or you're leaving out support for a lot of stuff. I turned up the build concurrency to 3 and got it down to 15m, but I still don't see a good reason for doing that. What happens if you buy some new hardware tomorrow? You've got to recompile again and hope you got everything required for it, it's just not worth it.
AMD XP 3000+ I just don't use or need a lot of things in the computer for what I use Linux for. And for a recompile being not worth it, well that really gets down to someones experience level. When you've compiled year after year almost day in and day out, it's no worse then compiling a piece of software, this just depends on experience. People can recompile a box on new hardware with experience in 20-30 mins.
Sure there are, why because after using Linux 10 years you don't think I know by now, and you need me to start going off with a list of all of them?
I've been using Linux for almost as long as you and I don't seem to have half of the problems that you're worried about. If you had all of the problems that you say you did I would assume you'd have an anecdote or two to tell, I know I can come up with some.
Bugs, flaky hardware, etc.. don't excuse the facts that even though they don't happen for everyone means it should be totally dismissed. They are bugs for a reason because they are there, some more then others and flaky hardware and not perfect software will always be around. All the problems I'm worried about? LOL. Have you ever used the IRC Freenode network?
If you have then you know I'm not the only one that sees problems all the time. I've been on Freenode when it started from the beginning when it was the Open Projects Network.
It the past I wasn't just your average Linux user I was the hardcore geek 24/7 and I use to run a Slackware support site, building custom slackpacks for Slackware.
For almost 7 years I use to give Linux support, and let me tell you there are thousands of people on a daily basis that have issues. This has nothing to do with worry, it's just a fact of life with hardware and software and Linux is no exception when it comes to this.
Now when you say troublesome modules, I'm not just talking about mods being the issue, I'm always talking about having flaky hardware even if the modules are all 100% correct.
Flaky hardware doesn't count, if your hardware is suspect the software running on it can't be counted on to do anything reliably.