Hi list! I read the trixbox anouncement that they downgraded to kernel version 34 to get rid of some audio problems I'm not running trixbox but normal Centos 4 with asterisk installed. I tried to find some further info on this but couldn't find any. Do audio problems occur with normal Centos and the latest kernel version too? (In other words, should every centos user downgrade??) I'm now running kernel-2.6.9-42.0.3.EL Thanks!
On Oct 13, 2006, at 7:58 PM, Remco Barendse wrote:> Hi list! > > I read the trixbox anouncement that they downgraded to kernel > version 34 > to get rid of some audio problems > > I'm not running trixbox but normal Centos 4 with asterisk installed. I > tried to find some further info on this but couldn't find any. > > Do audio problems occur with normal Centos and the latest kernel > version > too? (In other words, should every centos user downgrade??) > > I'm now running kernel-2.6.9-42.0.3.ELNot really an answer to your question, but I found out all kernels above 2.6.16 do a better job on asterisk systems then the ones before that. No idea how this is possible as I'm in no way familiar with the inner workings of the linux kernel, but I found out after upgrading one system and because it was better there I upgraded a lot of other boxes and they all became better. Maybe you can get a newer kernel on centos then the 2.6.9 --- Michiel van Baak michiel@vanbaak.eu http://michiel.vanbaak.eu GnuPG key: http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x71C946BD "Why is it drug addicts and computer afficionados are both called users?" -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: PGP.sig Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 186 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part Url : http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20061013/a4f200a4/PGP.pgp
From: Remco Barendse> Possibly, but I would have to start worrying about > kernel configs, compiling the lot and solving the > problem of the box no longer being able to boot the kernel :)You'd be better off starting with a Fedora kernel. Unfortunately RHEL/CentOS 4 is based on Fedora Core 3 which has been tagged legacy for quite some time now. The last kernel version was around 2.6.13 or so IIRC. And trying to go with a Fedora Core 5, 6 Test or Development (aka Rawhide) might not build because GCC has been upgraded to 4.0/4.1 from 3.4.> I looked for CentOS repo's but cannot find one > that will throw a plain vanilla kernel my way.And you're not likely to find one. RHEL/CentOS is based on a set kernel version with minimal changes, backporting required fixes/security updates only as necessary. Red Hat's focus with RHEL is 7 years of SLAs with no ABI changes, period - unlike Fedora Core (or Red Hat Linux before it for that matter - which did co-exist with RHEL for 2 years before the trademark change).> There's only a centos plus kernel but these are > basically the same as the original kernels just with > some filesystems enabled.As I hinted above, the changes are just significant enough that Red Hat only backports, to the anal power when it comes to RHEL. And although Fedora Core/Development would be a "good start" for an updated kernel (far vanilla where countless things would break), there is so much that has changed in the toolchain and user-space of Fedora Core 4-6 that offers a 2.6.16+ release that many people probably haven't bothered. Especially since most people run RHEL/CentOS for its longevity and unchanging ABI/backports approach to an almost anal-level.