Cleaned up install notes

Apr 29, 2008 15:58

I had really gotten used to Linux being painless.  Thanks to Ubuntu, the last few times I've installed Linux on a PC, it was a piece of cake so putting Ubuntu on my Macbook was quite reminiscent of the good ol' days when Linux was a true blue PITA.  I had to do this by trial and error and a half-dozen failed installs.  I hope that if you take the same steps I took, you'll save yourself some time and possibly heartache, YMMV:

For the most part, I used the tutorial here:  https://help.ubuntu.com/community/MacBook_Santa_Rosa

The hardware: Black macbook Santa Rosa 4.1, 2gb Ram core 2 duo 2.4ghz 250gb hard drive

The OS: Ubuntu Linux 8.04 "Hardy Heron" AMD 64 version http://www.ubuntu.com

Steps:
  • I followed the instructions in the tutorial all the way down to the reboot part.

  • If you only reboot, an error will occur when you try to boot up under Ubuntu to the tune of "No boot media...".  You must use the rEFIt partition tool to re-sync the partition tables.  After that, everything is just peachy.  You can boot under OSX or Ubuntu at will.  This one really got me and I wasted a lot of time figuring out the solution (which was brutally simple once you figure it out).  I'll also point out that you really can't (at least I don't think you can) have a swap partition.  Ubuntu simply won't boot.  I'll have to look into this more later.  It's a good thing I have lots of RAM.

  • I attempted to install the patched kernel as described in the tutorial.  Obviously, the repositories should be:

    deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/mactel-support/ubuntu hardy main
    deb-src http://ppa.launchpad.net/mactel-support/ubuntu hardy main
    The thing is, it seems like the problems that the kernel patch are supposed to fix are already fixed. Namely the touchpad.  It appears that no kernel update actually took place which tells me that the mactel folks either haven't made a patched kernel because it's already patched or hardy is just too new.

  • Either way, I've skipped step 5 for the moment because the keyboard and touchpad, while not behaving exactly as they do under OSX, are actually working really well and haven't bothered me that I've noticed.  I may futz with this more later...

  • The next thing I attacked was the wireless.  I use wifi a lot and I can't live without it (or barely).  I followed the instructions in the tutorial for Gutsy and it worked (as far as I can tell for the moment) perfectly.

  • Next I jumped to the 'disable touchpad while typing' fix.  The Macbook touchpad is really large and it's nearly impossible to type without bumping it all the time.  Follow the instructions here:  http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=271052

  • Next, I looked at sound because, well, it wasn't working.  The fix in the tutorial worked fine.  I also had to fiddle with the audio controls and I don't remember exactly what I did or in what order... sorry.  I seem to remember having to check the 'speaker' switch in the Alsa mixer.

  • On the function / media keys.  Some of them 'just worked', namely the eject, the three volume controls and the play / pause key.  The brightness keys didn't seem to work so I went ahead and installed the pommed package.  Remember, I'm using the 'hardy' repositories.  Pommed fixed the brightness keys.  The dashboard and other keys don't do anything for the moment.

  • Suspend works fine.  Actually, this is the first time I've successfully gotten any Linux to suspend without harsh side-effects.  Need more time to be sure...

  • So far, I can't get the i-sight to work.  I'll have to revisit this.

  • If you boot up with your headphones plugged in, the speakers and headphones work at the same time - known bug.

  • I can't get Compiz Fusion to work exactly the way I want.  I'll be disappointed if I can't get this figured out because Compiz is about the best thing to happen to Linux since the penguin.

Now I need a break, stay tuned!

x-posted to
linux_on_mac

Observations:

I was really pleasantly surprised to see 'U.S. Macintosh' proposed at setup time for a keyboard map.

linux, hardy, macbook, ubuntu

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