On Mon, Nov 19, 2007 at 08:49:25AM -0000, aldeby wrote:
> It is very easy to update manually the iwl4965 driver to the latest
> build, follow these steps:
>
> 1) download the latest iwlwifi driver from www.linuxintelwireless.org
> http://intellinuxwireless.org/iwlwifi/downloads/iwlwifi-1.1.21.tgz
I don't really recommend that folks install the driver this way as a
permanent solution, as it will replace files supplied by the packaging
system (which will then be overwritten on upgrades), though it would be
useful to know if the new version does in fact fix the issues.
> 2) install linux-source: sudo apt-get install linux-source
> go in /usr/src: cd /usr/src
>
> 3) locate the linux-source-2.6.xxx.bz2 package and unpack it:
> sudo bunzip2 linux-source-2.6.xxx.bz2
> sudo tar xf linux-source-2.6.xxx.tar
> sudo ln -s /usr/src/linux-source-2.6.22 /lib/modules/`uname -r`/source
The correct way to do this is to run:
sudo apt-get install linux-headers-`uname -r`
which gets only what you need (the kernel headers), in a single step, and
works properly across upgrades.
On Mon, Nov 19, 2007 at 08:49:25AM -0000, aldeby wrote: ireless. org intellinuxwirel ess.org/ iwlwifi/ downloads/ iwlwifi- 1.1.21. tgz
> It is very easy to update manually the iwl4965 driver to the latest
> build, follow these steps:
>
> 1) download the latest iwlwifi driver from www.linuxintelw
> http://
I don't really recommend that folks install the driver this way as a
permanent solution, as it will replace files supplied by the packaging
system (which will then be overwritten on upgrades), though it would be
useful to know if the new version does in fact fix the issues.
> 2) install linux-source: sudo apt-get install linux-source 2.6.xxx. bz2 package and unpack it: 2.6.xxx. bz2 2.6.xxx. tar linux-source- 2.6.22 /lib/modules/`uname -r`/source
> go in /usr/src: cd /usr/src
>
> 3) locate the linux-source-
> sudo bunzip2 linux-source-
> sudo tar xf linux-source-
> sudo ln -s /usr/src/
The correct way to do this is to run:
sudo apt-get install linux-headers- `uname -r`
which gets only what you need (the kernel headers), in a single step, and
works properly across upgrades.
--
- mdz