<br><div class="gmail_quote"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;"><div class="im">
> > Of the rt kernels, which version works and which version fails? (not<br>
> > that I can really really do much about it...)<br>
><br>
> On my Fedora 11 powered EeePC I have:<br>
><br>
> kernel-2.6.29.4-167.fc11.i586<br>
> kernel-rt-2.6.29.5-1.rt21.1.fc11.ccrma.i586<br>
> kernel-rtPAE-2.6.29.5-1.rt21.1.fc11.ccrma.i686<br>
><br>
> Both rt versions fail. Is it possible, using yum, to re-install the<br>
> previous released fc11.ccrma kernel-rtPAE version ? That one was running<br>
> ok.<br>
<br>
</div>Yes, it should be possible. In fact, it should be still there if you<br>
have not erased it... You have to install the yum-allowdowngrade plugin<br>
and then explicitly tell yum which kernel version you want to install,<br>
something like:<br>
<br>
yum install kernel-rt-2.6.29.x-yyyy --allow-downgrade</blockquote><div><br>Hi,<br>
<br>
Not sure about the status, but I think PlanetCCRMA fc11 is still being worked on since there are no instructions yet for<font size="2">
installing Planet CCRMA on Fedora 11. I tried
planetccrma/11/i386/planetccrma-repo-1.1-2.fc11.ccrma.noarch.rpm anyway
on a 32-bit Pentium M 1200Mhz machine that does only 1.2 gb of RAM. Everything
build okay, except on reboot I get the message that the kernal can't be
used because it is for a PAE CPU and mine is not. It is building Fedora
2.6.29.6-1.rt23.2.fc11.ccrma.i686.rtPAE. I am guessing </font><font size="2">planetccrma-repo-1.1-2.fc11.ccrma.noarch.rpm install doesn't want to recognize that this computer can't do PAE....<br>
<br>
[root@PH7326 sean]# cat /proc/cpuinfo<br>
processor : 0<br>
vendor_id : GenuineIntel<br>
cpu family : 6<br>
model : 9<br>
model name : Intel(R) Pentium(R) M processor 1200MHz<br>
stepping : 5<br>
cpu MHz : 600.000<br>
cache size : 1024 KB<br>
fdiv_bug : no<br>
hlt_bug : no<br>
f00f_bug : no<br>
coma_bug : no<br>
fpu : yes<br>
fpu_exception : yes<br>
cpuid level : 2<br>
wp : yes<br>
flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr mce cx8 apic mtrr pge mca cmov
pat clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 tm pbe up bts est tm2<br>
bogomips : 1196.15<br>
clflush size : 64<br>
power management:<br>
<br>
Is this news? Or am I trying to use something that's not ready? Should
I hold up or is there something I can do to make it make a non-PAE
kernal? This thread seemed related, but different. <br>
<br>
Thanks,<br>
<br>
--Sean</font> <br></div></div><br>