> Based on th wiki, avoid kernel 2.6 unless you know what you are doing. > Likewise with fedora, which seems to work but needs kernel thread turned off.Just my experience: I have installed Asterisk twice on Fedora Core 1 with kernel 2.4.22-1.2188.nptlsmp on Dual Xeon systems. It has worked perfectly both times, without needing any additional compiler flags, and no kernel panics. What I have found out is that I had to disable hyperthreading, or I would be getting very choppy audio (I think that's what you mean when you say "needs kernel thread turned off"). By the way, the "noht" flag in lilo/grub isn't enough, it has to be disabled in the BIOS. Don't know if that's an issue on other Linuxes as well. -Manuel ___________________________________________________ Ticinocom SA - Via Stazione 5 - 6600 Muralto Tel 0844 007070 - Fax 0844 007071 http://www.ticinocom.com
On 24/06/2004, at 4:48 PM, Manuel Wenger wrote:>> Based on th wiki, avoid kernel 2.6 unless you know what you are doing. >> Likewise with fedora, which seems to work but needs kernel thread >> turned off. > > Just my experience: I have installed Asterisk twice on Fedora Core 1 > with kernel 2.4.22-1.2188.nptlsmp on Dual Xeon systems. It has worked > perfectly both times, without needing any additional compiler flags, > and no kernel panics. >I'm running two production systems on Fedora Core 1 with the 2.4.22-1.2188 kernel - one with Digium hardware and one running zaprtc & CAPI cards. Both systems run fine, compiled straight out of the box, and as of yet I have had no issues. I've also run it quite happily on RedHat 8 under VirtualPC with no additional hardware. Andrew