- These Contents
- Overview
- Package Availability
- Minimum Requirements
- Licensing
- What The Installer Contains
- What The Installer Does
- Installation
- Configuration
- Loading The Drivers
- Module Parameters
- Audio Control Panel
- Troubleshooting
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Acknowledgments
- Change List
The nForce chipset contains a number of hardware devices that can be
run under Linux; a network device (MAC), audio hardware, storage
controllers (IDE and SATA), and OHCI/EHCI USB controllers. Many of the
components of the nForce chipset use industry standard interfaces; thus,
not all components require custom drivers to be used on Linux.
Bug reports and installation questions may be directed to:
linux-nforce-bugs@nvidia.com
Before submitting a bug report, please read the Troubleshooting and FAQ
sections first, and review the Known Problems list for the driver
version you are using. This can be found at NVIDIA's web site, on the
release page for the driver version.
If you decide to submit a bug report, make sure to include
nforce-bug-report.log in the bug report by running nforce-bug-report.sh.
This package can be found at the NVIDIA web site:
http://www.nvidia.com/content/drivers/drivers.asp
We strongly urge you to only use software obtained from this website
or a trusted Linux distribution for your nForce hardware.
At the current time, the nForce drivers require a 2.4 or 2.6 series
kernel running on 32- or 64-bit AMD CPUs.
NVIDIA's audio driver is an OSS driver, and requires OSS sound support
in the kernel. NVIDIA's audio control panel is a Qt-based application,
and requires Qt run-time libraries in order to run.
The network and audio driver provided by NVIDIA is subject to the
NVIDIA software license; the license is available on the NVIDIA website,
and is included in this package. By using this software, you are
agreeing to the terms of the license.
The package contains the following items:
- This Installation Guide
- The NVIDIA license for the network driver software
- Pre-built kernel library for the nForce audio driver
- Pre-built kernel library for the nForce network driver
- Audio control panel binary
- Pre-built kernel interface binaries for major distributions
- Source for the kernel interface portion of the audio driver
- Source for the kernel interface portion of the network driver
This installer will prepare a network driver and an audio driver,
then place them in the appropriate locations for loadable kernel
modules. The network and audio drivers are from NVIDIA. If
the audio driver is installed, the installer will also install the audio
control panel application.
Nvidia has provided a self-extracting installer that will prepare
the drivers and install them into the appropriate location for your
kernel's module tree. Note that there is a 32-bit installer as
well as a 64-bit installer. The 64-bit installer is required for
x86_64 kernels. You can check what kind of machine you are
currently running on by checking the output of uname -m
.
If the output reports x86_64
, you are running a 64-bit
kernel and should use the 64-bit installer.
To install the drivers, simply run the installer binary under a
shell with root privileges, and follow the onscreen instructions.
The .run file accepts many command line options. Here are a
few of the more common options:
--info
Print embedded info about the .run file and exit.
--check
Check integrity of the archive and exit.
--extract-only
Extract the contents of the .run file, but do not run
'nforce-installer'.
--help
Print usage information for the common command line options and exit.
--advanced-options
Print usage information for the common command line options as well as
the advanced options, and exit.
The installer will use an ncurses-based user interface if it can
find the correct ncurses library. Otherwise, it will fall back to
a simple interactive text interface. To disable use of the ncurses
user interface, use the option '--ui=none'.
The installer contains pre-built drivers for major Linux
distributions. In the event that the installer cannot find a
pre-built driver for your kernel, the installer will attempt to build
the driver. In this case, it is necessary to install the kernel
source corresponding to the kernel for which the driver will be
installed for.
You might want to check the BIOS configuration on your system to
ensure that the audio and networking devices will be detected. See the
System BIOS Configuration description in the Troubleshooting section.
NOTE that for network driver
updates, you must first deactivate the NVIDIA network device prior to
running the installer. Otherwise the module count for that device will
not be zero and installation of network driver will fail.
Configuration
The installer does not update configuration files. After
installing the drivers, configure the system to use the drivers by using
the distribution's built-in configuration mechanisms for networking and
sound, or edit the required files manually.
Module
Configuration File Location
Module configuration files are
different for 2.4 and 2.6 series kernels. The various Linux
distributions also differ in how they handle module configuration.
- For distributions based on a 2.4 series kernel, the module
configuration file is typically called
/etc/modules.conf.
- For distributions based on a 2.6 series kernel, the module
configuration file is typically called
/etc/modprobe.conf
.
Some distributions use a subdirectory, /etc/modprobe.d/
,
to hold individual configuration files for sound modules, etc.
Configuring the network driver
SuSE
For SuSE Linux Enterprise Server 9,
use YaST to configure the network driver. Start the YaST GUI, select
"Network Devices", then select "Network Card". This should bring up the
"Network cards configuration" dialog.
Select "Other (not detected)", then select the "Configure" button. In
the "Kernel Module" section, set "Module Name" to "nvnet", then select
the "Next" button. Configure the interface parameters as required,
select the "Next" button to return to the card configuration dialog, and
select "Finish".
Red Hat
For Red Hat Enterprise Linux version
3, Red Hat 8, Red Hat 9
and Fedora Core 1, follow the
instructions in other
distributions to edit the configuration file /etc/modules.conf
.
Once this is done, configure the network interface parameters using the
Network Configuration tool on the System Settings menu. The
configuration tool can also be launched directly as "neat".
For Fedora Core 2, follow
the instructions in other
distributions to edit the configuration file /etc/modprobe.conf
.
Once this is done, configure the network interface parameters using the
Network Configuration tool on the System Settings menu. The
configuration tool can also be launched directly as "neat".
Mandrake
For Mandrake 10, use Mandrake Control Center
(available via the mcc
command) to configure the network
driver. Select "Network & Internet", then select "New Connection".
Select "LAN Connection", select "Next", then select "Manual
Choice". From the list of available network drivers, select
"nvnet", then select "Next". and select "autoprobe". At this point, the
driver will be configured and a new interface made availabe; select the
newly-added interface to configure IP address settings, etc.
For earlier Mandrake distributions, follow the instructions in other distributions to edit the
configuration file /etc/modules.conf
. Once this is done,
Mandrake Control Center can be used to configure IP address settings,
etc., on the network interface supported by nvnet.
Other distributions
If the distribution you are using provides a configuration mechanism
for network drivers, use it to select the nvnet driver module for use
with the nForce ethernet device, and to set the networking parameters
(IP address, etc.) for the interface. Otherwise, manually edit the
module configuration file.
If your configuration file already contains an entry for the forcedeth
driver (an open-source network driver that supports the nForce network
controller), that entry needs to be commented out with a #
or removed:
# alias eth0 forcedeth
Add the following line to the configuration file:
alias eth0 nvnet
If your system has multiple ethernet interfaces, you may need to use
'eth1' or higher in place of 'eth0'.
Configuring the audio driver
SuSE
For SuSE Linux Enterprise Server 9,
at the time of writing it isn't possible to use YaST to configure
the nvsound audio driver. Following the instructions in other distributions to edit the
configuration file /etc/modprobe.d/sound
.
Red Hat
For Red Hat Enterprise Linux version
3, Red Hat 8, Red Hat 9
and Fedora Core 1, follow the
instructions in other distributions
to edit the configuration file /etc/modules.conf
.
For Fedora Core 2, follow
the instructions in other
distributions to edit the configuration file /etc/modprobe.conf
.
Mandrake
At the time of writing, it isn't possible to use Mandrake Control
Center to configure the nvsound audio driver.
Follow the instructions in other
distributions to manually edit the configuration file. For Mandrake 10 or other Mandrake
distributions running 2.6 kernels, the configuration file is /etc/modprobe.conf
.
For earlier distributions that run 2.4 kernels, the configuration file
is /etc/modules.conf
.
Other distributions
If the distribution you are using provides a configuration mechanism
for audio drivers, use it to select the nvsound driver module for use
with the nForce audio device. Otherwise, manually edit the module
configuration file.
If your configuration file already contains an entry for the
i810_audio, snd-intel8x0, or nvaudio drivers (open-source audio drivers
that supports the nForce audio controller), that entry needs to be
commented out with a #
or removed:
# alias sound-slot-0 i810_audio
Add the following line to the configuration file:
alias sound-slot-0 nvsound
On some distributions, you may need to replace sound-slot-0
with snd-card-0
.
Loading The Drivers
The installer may or may not leave the new modules loaded after the
installation, depending on the existing configuration. You can force the
module to be loaded using insmod or modprobe :
insmod <modulename>
or
modprobe <modulename>
On subsequent reboots, the modules should load automatically.
Module Parameters
The run-time behavior of NVIDIA drivers may be configured by use of
module parameters. These can be specified either on the command
line when loading the module, or in the module configuration file
(such as /etc/modules.conf). For example, to have the nForce ethernet
driver use throughput optimized mode, add the following to the module
configuration file:
options nvnet optimization=1
Or if loading the module manually from the command line:
modprobe nvnet optimization=1
The module parameters for the ethernet driver can be verified using the
command:
modinfo -p nvnet
The following sections contain descriptions of all driver module
parameters.
nvnet Module Parameters
The nForce network driver supports the following optional parameters:
- hardware offload mode
- optimization
- negotiation mode
- speed and duplex
- media
- max TX packets
- max RX packets
- MTU
- poll interval
- segmentation offload
- TX checksum offload
- RX checksum offload
Hardware Offload Mode
This parameter controls the hardware offload mode. The nForce
network driver supports two hardware offload modes:
- hwmode=1 - off
- hwmode=2 - on
When hardware offload mode is on, TX checksum offload, RX checksum
offload, segmentation offload, and RGMII (Reduced Gigabit Media
Independent Interface) is used, and the MTU can be set to a non-default
value. When hardware offload mode is off, these offload modes are
turned off and MII (Media Independent Interface) is used, and the MTU
parameter is ignored.
The default hardware offload mode will depend on the network
controller. The hardware offload mode can be specified by
supplying the module parameter "hwmode".
Optimization
The nForce network driver supports two optimization modes:
- optimization=0 - Throughput optimization
- optimization=1 - CPU optimization
CPU optimization mode reduces the CPU utilization by using interrupt
moderation.
Throughput optimization mode maximizes the throughput. This mode
has higher CPU consumption.
By default, the driver runs in throughput optimization mode. The
optimization mode can be specified by supplying the module parameter
"optimization".
Negotiation Mode
The nForce network driver supports two negotiation modes:
- autonegotiate=0 - disabled
- autonegotiate=1 - enabled
When negotiation mode is enabled, the controller will negotiate for the
desired speed and duplex. If negotiation mode is disabled, the
controller will force the speed and duplex setting without negotiation.
By default, autonegotiate is enabled.
Speed and Duplex
The "force_speed_duplex" module parameter can be used set the interface
speed and duplex of the ethernet controller. The following values
are supported:
- force_speed_duplex=0 - autonegotiate
- force_speed_duplex=1 - 10Mbps half duplex
- force_speed_duplex=2 - 10Mbps full duplex
- force_speed_duplex=3 - 100Mbps half duplex
- force_speed_duplex=4 - 100Mbps full duplex
- force_speed_duplex=5 - autonegotiate for 10Mbps half duplex
- force_speed_duplex=6 - autonegotiate for 10Mbps full duplex
- force_speed_duplex=7 - autonegotiate for 100Mbps half duplex
- force_speed_duplex=8 - autonegotiate for 100Mbps full duplex
- force_speed_duplex=9 - autonegotiate for 1000Mbps full duplex
If a value of 0 (autonegotiate) is used, the controller will negotiate
for the optimum speed and duplex.
If a value between 1 and 4, inclusive, is set for this parameter, then
negotiation behavior will depend on the value of the autonegotiate
module parameter. If autonegotiate is enabled, the controller will
negotiate for the desired speed and duplex. If autonegotiate is
disabled, the controller will set the speed and duplex of the controller
without negotiation.
If a value between 5 and 9, inclusive, is set for this parameter, then
the controller will negotiate for the desired speed and duplex. In
this case, the autonegotiate module parameter is implicitly enabled.
By default, the controller will autonegotiate for the optimum speed and
duplex.
Media
The "media" module parameter can be used to specify the interface
media. This module parameter supports the following values:
- media=0 - auto
- media=1 - RGMII
- media=2 - MII
The default value of this parameter depends on whether hardware offload
mode is enabled or disabled. If hardware offload mode is enabled,
RGMII is the default. If hardware offload mode is disabled, MII is
the default.
Max TX packets
The "max_tx_packets" module parameter controls the maximum number of
outstanding TX (transmit) packets. This parameter takes a value
between 32 and 1024, inclusive. By default, 64 maximum TX packets
will be used.
Max RX packets
The "max_rx_packets" module parameter controls the maximum number of
outstanding RX (receive) packets. This parameter takes a value
between 32 and 1024, inclusive. By default, 64 maximum RX packets
will be used.
MTU
The "mtu" module parameter controls the MTU size in bytes. This
parameter takes a value between 576 and 9202, inclusive. By
default, a 1500 byte MTU is used. This parameter is only relevant
when hardware offload mode is turned on.
Poll Interval
The "poll_interval_in_us" module parameter is used to control the rate
at which hardware events are polled, and is only relevant when running
in CPU optimization mode. This parameter is ignored in throughput
optimization mode. This parameter takes a microsecond value
between 0 and 2000, and defaults to 0.
Segmentation Offload
The nForce network driver supports two modes for segmentation offload:
- seg_offload=0 - disabled
- seg_offload=1 - enabled
If hwmode=0 (disabled), the "seg_offload" module parameter defaults to
0 (disabled). If hwmode=1 (enabled), the "seg_offload" module
parameter defaults to 1 (enabled).
TX checksum Offload
The nForce network driver supports two modes for TX checksum offload:
- tx_checksum_offload=0 - disabled
- tx_checksum_offload_offload=1 - enabled
If hwmode=0 (disabled), the "tx_checksum_offload" module parameter
defaults to 0 (disabled). If hwmode=1 (enabled), the
"tx_checksum_offload" module parameter defaults to 1 (enabled).
RX checksum Offload
The nForce network driver supports two modes for RX checksum offload:
- rx_checksum_offload=0 - disabled
- rx_checksum_offload_offload=1 - enabled
If hwmode=0 (disabled), the "rx_checksum_offload" module parameter
defaults to 0 (disabled). If hwmode=1 (enabled), the
"rx_checksum_offload" module parameter defaults to 1 (enabled).
nvsound Module Parameters
There are currently no nvsound module parameters.
Audio Control Panel
A control panel application, nvmixer, is included with the audio
driver to control the features of the nForce audio driver. These
features include:
- Speaker setup
- Master volume control
- Per channel volume control / mute
- Input source selection
- Analog and digital output control
- SoundStorm HW mixing
Usage
The audio control panel may be invoked by typing "nvmixer" at the
command line:
example% nvmixer
For those that are migrating from an existing NVIDIA audio driver, note
that the old "nvaudio" control panel will not work with the new audio
driver.
System Requirements
The nvmixer application uses the Qt graphical user interface toolkit.
The pre-built nvmixer shipped with this release is built using Qt
version 3.1, and requires Qt 3.1 run-time libraries to be present on
your system in order to run.
If your system does not have Qt 3.1 libraries installed, you will most
likely receive an "relocation error: ... undefined symbol" error message
when you try to run nvmixer. If this occurs, there are two ways to solve
this problem:
This section covers problems that commonly occur when installing
nForce drivers on Linux. If you encounter problems, please read this
section and the FAQ , and review the Known Problems
list for the driver version you are using. This can be found at NVIDIA's
web site, on the release page for the driver version.
If you decide to submit a bug report, make sure to include
nforce-bug-report.log in the bug report by running nforce-bug-report.sh.
Bug reports and installation questions may be directed to:
linux-nforce-bugs@nvidia.com
Since the audio and network drivers work on the nForce chipset,
these devices along with other motherboard devices are controlled by the
System BIOS. If the installed drivers don't recognize hardware on your
system, the problem may be your System BIOS's plug and play
configuration. If your audio or network devices are disabled in the
BIOS, or the system BIOS expects the operating system to configure
hardware devices, and your Linux kernel doesn't support ACPI-style
configuration, you'll need to change your BIOS settings.
To view or change an Award-style system BIOS, reboot the machine,
and press the Delete key. When you get a configuration screen, select
"PnP/PCI Configurations" in that screen if "PNP OS Installed []" Has
"Yes" chosen, change the selection to "No".
If your BIOS is Phoenix-style, use the F2 key instead of Delete, and
scroll through the menus to find OS Type, and chose "Other". The exact
details of System BIOS configuration vary with BIOS vendor, so the
screens may not be exactly the same.
Warning: You should write down the original configuration of the
BIOS before changing it. Changing your system BIOS configuration may
adversely affect the operation of the system, and even make it
unbootable.
- Q: When I try to build, I get a message telling me that I
should never try to use system headers. What's wrong?
A: You need to install the sources for your kernel. Please
download and install the appropriate kernel-source package for your
kernel
-
Q: How do I tell if I have my kernel sources installed?
A: If you're running on a distro that uses RPM (Red Hat,
Mandrake, SuSE, etc), then you can use RPM to tell you. At a shell
prompt, type:
example% rpm -qa | grep kernel
and look at the output. You should see a package that
corresponds to your kernel (often named something like kernel-2.4.18-3)
and a kernel source package with the same version (often named something
like kernel-source-2.4.18-3). If none of the lines seem to correspond to
a source package, then you'll probably need to install it. If the
versions listed mismatch (ex: kernel-2.4.18-10 vs.
kernel-source-2.4.18-3), then you'll need to update the kernel-source
package to match the installed kernel. If you have multiple kernels
installed, you need to install the kernel-source package that
corresponds to your running kernel (or make sure your installed
source package matches the running kernel). You can do this by looking
at the output of "uname -r" and matching versions.
- Q: I just upgraded my kernel,
and now the NVIDIA kernel module will not load. What is wrong?
A: The kernel interface layer of the NVIDIA kernel module must be
compiled specifically for the configuration and version of your
kernel. If you upgrade your kernel, then the simplest solution is
to reinstall the driver.
ADVANCED: You can install the NVIDIA kernel module for a non running
kernel (for example: in the situation where you just built and installed
a new kernel, but have not rebooted yet) with the command line option
--kernel-name='KERNEL_NAME', where KERNEL_NAME is what 'uname -r' would
report if the target kernel were running.
- Q: nforce-installer does not
work on my computer. How can I install the driver contained within
the .run file?
A: To install the NVIDIA driver contained within the .run file without
using nforce-installer, you can use the included makefile that is
extracted with the --extract-only command-line option. The
makefile for the audio driver is in the nvsound/main directory of the
extracted .run file, and the makefile for the network driver is in the
nvnet directory of the extracted .run file. This method of
installation is not recommended, and is only provided as a last resort,
should nforce-installer not work correctly on your system.
- Q: I have multiple kernels
installed. When I run the NVIDIA installer under one kernel, it removes
modules I previously installed for one of the other kernels. How do I
prevent the installer doing that?
A: You can avoid this by using the --kernel-module-only option to the
installer when you install for the second and subsequent kernels in your
installation. This advanced option installs the kernel module only (no
documentation, etc.) and does not remove any previously installed driver
module.
- Q: I've installed the nvsound
driver, but xmms doesn't produce any audio output when I try to play
sound files.
A: Check that xmms is configured to use the OSS output plugin
(nvsound is an OSS driver). The xmms output plugin settings can be
viewed on xmms's Options->Preferences submenu.
- Q: When I try to start nvmixer,
I get a "relocation error: ... undefined symbol" message and
nvmixer doesn't start. What's wrong?
A: This is most likely caused by your system not having the Qt
run-time libraries that nvmixer requires in order to run. Refer to the
section on nvmixer's system requirements
for details on how to fix this.
-
Q: When I start KDE with the
nvsound driver loaded, I get an error message, "Sound server fatal
error: AudioSubSystem::handleIO: write failed len=-1,
can_write=1024, errno=11 (Resource temporarily unavailable)".
A: Open the KDE Control Center (using a menu or the kcontrol
command). Select "Sound & Multimedia", then select "Sound System".
Select the "Hardware" tab and, in the "Select the audio device"
pulldown control, select "Threaded Open Sound System". Select "Apply",
then exit the Control Center. This should fix the sound server error
message seen on startup.
There is currently no troubleshooting information for the nvnet
network driver.
Installer FAQ
- Q: Why does NVIDIA not provide
RPMs anymore?
A: Not every Linux distribution uses RPMs, and NVIDIA wanted
a single solution that would work across all Linux distributions.
As indicated in the NVIDIA Software License, Linux distributions are
welcome to repackage and redistribute the NVIDIA Linux driver in
whatever package format they wish.
- Q: How do I extract the
contents of the .run file without actually installing the driver?
A: Run the installer with the --extract-only command line option.
This will create a directory which contains the uncompressed contents of
the .run file.
- Q: How can I see the source
code to the kernel interface layer?
A: Kernel interface layer source files for the audio driver are in the
nvsound/main directory of the extracted .run file. The kernel
interface layer source files for the network driver are in the nvnet
directory of the extracted .run file.
- Q: Can I add my own precompiled
kernel interfaces to a .run file?
A: Yes, the "--add-this-kernel" .run file option will unpack the .run
file, build a precompiled kernel interface for the currently running
kernel, and repackage the .run file, appending "-custom" to the file
name. This may be useful, for example, if you administer multiple
Linux machines, each running the same kernel.
- Q: Where can I find the source
code for the nforce-installer utility?
A: The nforce-installer utility for the nForce drivers is derived from
the nvidia-installer utility used for the NVIDIA video drivers.
The NVIDIA video driver nvidia-installer utility is released under the
GPL. The latest source code for it is available at:
ftp://download.nvidia.com/XFree86/nvidia-installer/
Driver FAQ
- Q: My IDE hard drive is running very slowly, how can I enable
DMA mode?
A: A kernel patch was added in kernel 2.4.21pre3-ac1 which
enables DMA for the nForce2 IDE controller and should be available in
the final released 2.4.21 kernel. An alternative to upgrading your
kernel is to use the "hdparm" utility to enable DMA for your hard drive.
For example:
example% su
Password: ******
example# hdparm -d 1 /dev/hdX
Where /dev/hdX is the IDE device you wish to enable DMA for. You
must do this every time you reboot, or add it to an rc script. Some
distributions have a file "/etc/sysconfig/harddisks" where you can
enable this for all hard drives on system boot.
- Q: Does NVIDIA supply a Linux driver for the USB and USB2.0
devices?
A: The USB and USB2.0 devices use the industry standard OHCI and
EHCI interfaces, and will work with the standard Linux USB drivers.
- Q: I've rebuilt the Nforce driver, but when I try to insert
it, I get a message telling me I have unresolved symbols.
A. Unresolved symbols are most often caused by a mismatch
between your kernel sources and your running kernel. They must match for
the nForce driver modules to build correctly. Please make sure your
kernel sources are installed and configured to match your running
kernel.
- Q: Does NVIDIA have a Linux driver for 1394 on nForce2?
A: The Linux 1394 driver supports the nForce2 1394 controller in
kernel versions 2.4.21 and newer.
- Q: Is the nForce3 IDE controller supported by Linux?
A: nForce3 IDE controller will exist in kernel 2.4.23 and later
- Q: Are there open source networking and audio drivers for
nForce hardware?
A: For audio you can use the i810 audio driver. For networking,
it depends on the version of the kernel you are working with. Some
versions of the kernel will have a driver called forcedeth. Older
versions of the driver only support nForce2 while later versions of the
driver will also support nForce3 gigabit Ethernet.
- Q: Linux distributions are
moving towards ALSA as the standard sound driver architecture, but
nvsound is an OSS driver. Why don't you provide an ALSA driver?
A: Our priority in shipping the nvsound driver was to provide
support for nForce hardware features that were missing in the earlier
nvaudio driver. NVIDIA plans to provide an nForce ALSA driver in future
as our resources allow.
Acknowledgments
The nforce-installer for the nForce drivers is derived from the
nvidia-installer used for the NVIDIA video drivers. The video
driver nvidia-installer was inspired by the loki_update tool:
(http://www.lokigames.com/development/loki_update.php3).
The self-extracting archive (aka ".run file") is generated using
makeself.sh: (http://www.megastep.org/makeself/).
The most recent changes are at the top of the list. Each bullet
indicates a public release on NVIDIA's web site.
- Added pre-built 64-bit binaries for various distributions.
Added support for kernel installations that use separate kernel source
and generated kernel object trees.
Fixed nvnet problem that caused rmmod to crash on systems with more
than one network interface.
Fixed nvnet build issue on uniprocessor systems that have spinlock
debugging enabled.
Fixed nvsound module hangs when APIC is enabled on some distributions.
Fixed nvsound module bugs causing lack of sound or delay in sound with
some games.
- Changed installation method to use the new self-extracting
installer instead of RPM or tarball
Added support for SoundStorm (Hardware Mixing supported)
Added AC3 pass-through
Added support for ethernet driver statistics and configuration
information through procfs
Added support for 2.6 series kernels
Audio control panel executable is now "nvmixer", not "nvaudio"
- Fixed performance problem in network driver that was causing
stuttering in audio playback
Added support for nForce3 platforms
Added support for x86-64 architecture
Added binary RPMs for SuSE Enterprise Server 8 x86-64
Added audio control panel application
Added 6 channel output, audio input selection, speaker selection, per
channel volume control, and analog / digital enable to audio driver.
Added GART patch for kernel 2.4.21
- Added kernel patch to support nForce GART
Added "spdif_status" module parameter to audio driver to enable/disable
S/PDIF support for compatability
Fixed bug in audio driver that was causing MSI nForce board to only use
2 channels
Fixed mmap bug in audio driver causing Quake III to hang.
Fixed RedHat 9 build issue with remap_page_range().
Fixed problem with rebuilding SRPM on RedHat 9.
Added RedHat 9 and Mandrake 9.1 binary RPMs.
- Fixed problem with compiler arguments between gcc3.X and gcc2.X
Changed installation script to use lowest available number when
enumerating network and audio devices in modles.conf
Changed audio driver to be self contained source file based off
i810_audio driver.
Added SPDIF support to audio driver
Updated binary packages for latest releases of RedHat kernels.
Added FAQ section to release notes.
- Added PCI ID support for MCP2 and MCP2 to the i810_audio driver.
Some cleanup of spec file and Makefiles
SRPMs and tar files now use local system's i810_audio.c file,
and complain if it's not there; this makes them more distro independent.
- Changed code to compile properly with gcc3.X and gcc2.X
Added support for Mandrake9.0 and Redhat8.0
nForce2 support for network driver