As I build fglrx drivers for personal use and have to build them on every update of kernel from the patches and specs created by sndirsch over at X11:Drivers:Video repository on openSUSE Build Service, I decided to share them here in case someone wants to test Compiz and other 3D stuff on Beta3.

The packaging is not distribution quality, just posting as I found a lot of visitors refered from google search with ATI fglrx on openSUSE 11.0.

Here are the steps to perform in shell as root:

  • Make sure you are running exactly the following kernel(openSUSE installs pae kernel, install the default one for these drivers to work) :

uname -a
Linux prime 2.6.25.3-2-default #1 SMP 2008-05-10 07:46:36 +0200 i686 athlon i386 GNU/Linux

  • wget -c http://giannaros.org/other/cyberorg/ati/fglrx-drivers-2.6.25.3-2-default-i586.tar.bz2
  •  tar xvf fglrx-drivers-2.6.25.3-2-default-i586.tar.bz2
  •  rpm -Uvh *fglrx* –force –nodeps (required as I’ve been lazy changing the version miss-match, note that there are double-dashes in front of force and nodeps, wordpress messes them up)
  •  init 3
  •  sax2 -r -m 0=fglrx
  •  init 5
  •  Run simple-ccsm as normal user and enable “Desktop Effects”

Did you note that there is no editing of xorg.conf? BTW, you won’t have to do all this hard work when 11.0 is released as the drivers would be available via 1-click and directly through yast when you add ATI/NVIDIA repo. All thanks to openSUSE’s X team and Stefan Dirsch :)

Have a lot of fun!

This week
by cyberorg, Friday, May 16th, 2008 @ 11:19 am Comments (1)

Hi Folks,

First let me ask you all the check out the cool new look of my blog, yes it is green, getting ready to paint the world green to welcome openSUSE 11.0. Thanks Ryx for creating this great theme and iXce for fixing it up for me.

openSUSE 11.0 Beta 3 was quitely released yesterday, I am running it at the moment, needless to say it is shaping out real well. Get it from here if you haven’t already.

Jan Weber, our Google Summer of Code student this year is all set to start coding for the project at the end of the month. Follow his blog to keep up with the progress  he is making. He is currently working on a proof of concept of his design ideas.You can also participate in the project and influence the course it takes over the next few months. Check out the project white board for the status reports, meeting transcripts, task list etc.

The project also featured on the Linux Journal, nice article on current state of LTSP by Shawn Powers, the Associate Editor for Linux Journal. Go digg it :)

Simple-ccsm enhancements
by cyberorg, Friday, May 9th, 2008 @ 7:29 pm Comments (8)

Thanks to Rodrigo’s work, simple-ccsm now has a switch to easily enable/disable Compiz.

On openSUSE 11.0 users will not have to fiddle with any commandline, hack scripts or xorg.conf to enable Compiz. AIGLX is enabled by default on all the supported hardwares, and as soon as ATI/NVIDIA drivers are installed via 1-click, so all that is required is launch simple-ccsm (Desktop Effects) application and enable compiz.


In case you are wondering what theme I am using, it is just the default openSUSE gilouch theme, greened just the way I like it. Download and drag and drop the tarball on “Appearence” caplet if you want it too.

Here is one more of “cube” mode to make users of other OS jealous ;)

openSUSE users grab compiz-fusion-git packages from home:cyberorg (experimental/unstable) repository. Wait till all the packages (except emerald*) are synced out to the mirrors and have the same version (080502).

I am very happy to announce that LTSP GUI, that I’d be mentoring along with Lars Rupp of openSUSE-EDU project, has been selected for this year’s Google Summer of Code through openSUSE project.

Announcement on http://news.opensuse.org

Jan Weber would be working on the project, here is the idea page:

http://en.opensuse.org/Easy-LTSP

Here are the mock-ups screenshots made by the student:

http://www.luckylemon.de/ltspgui/

Looking forward to all of your help and a successful project.

Wishing all the luck to Jan

Call me Captain Cyberorg
by cyberorg, Sunday, April 27th, 2008 @ 12:47 pm Comments (2)

Back from 6 days of Paragliding pilot training course (P1), logged 7 minutes of flying time.

Full album here.

Compiz Fusion Git packages got updated in home:cyberorg repository, this time it has a cool new effect “Cube Cylinder” from onestone. This picture would tell more.

Notice the details on the fishes, atlantis has received a lot of love too. Use compiz-git-all 1-click to get it. Note that these are unstable packages meant for testers and developers use only.

In other news, I went at the client’s place today for OpenOffice.org training, the lab setup that I required was not available, they had windows machine with OpenOffice.org installed which do not have all the goodies that Novell Edition that is available on openSUSE has.

So in a minute we converted one openSUSE 10.3 machine into a KIWI-LTSP server, PXE booted all the 10 clients from the server and the training session was safely conducted on that :)

SOSS-08, a great success
by cyberorg, Monday, April 14th, 2008 @ 1:01 pm Comments (0)

April 12 and 13, 2008 we organized a Symposium on Open Source Software at the Computer Center, Maharaja Sayajirao University(MSU) of Baroda, Vadodara, India. The event was attended, well over our capacity, by varied group such as students, educators, professionals working in industries around Baroda.

Thanks to Sandeep Menon, Novell India, for sending excellent kits for all the participants. Huge thanks also goes to Dr Dhanesh Patel, the symposium Director, Mr Vinay Pandya, Mr Devendra Jadav, Mr Kishor Gorasia - the symposium co-ordinators, Mr Dhaval Pancholi, Mr Brijesh Bhatt, Mr Ambrish Vadnekar, the technical team of the Computer Center for setting up entire IT infrastructure required, Mr Sandip for handling all our accounting and Punjabhai and all the other staff of the centre for their contributions.

The event inauguration panel consisted of the Chief Guest, Mrs Shobhna Jain, the Director General of the Railway Staff College, presided by the MSU Pro Vice-Chancellor Professor S M Joshi and the guest of honor Mr Ashok Shah, IT head of Modern Petrofils.

The training sessions were conducted by Mr Vinay Pandya and Mr Devendra Jadav on MySQL administration on openSUSE, Mr Nilesh Vaghela on Mailserver and Clustering on Red Hat Linux, Mr Ashish Bhavalkar on Squid proxy server on openSUSE and Oracle 10g implementation on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 and sessions on Virtualization and Thin Client Computing using KIWI-LTSP on openSUSE by me. We will be putting up online, the slides and other documentations given to the participants.

Professor Bhuvan Parekh, the Dean, the Faculty of Engineering and Technology presided over the closing ceremony.

I would not be doing the review of the event instead here is the review by Ishan, one of the participating students to give you an idea about how the event went (btw, yaar with any number of ‘a’ means ‘friends’).

Here is the walk-through of the event in pictures.

Busy week
by cyberorg, Thursday, April 10th, 2008 @ 8:42 pm Comments (2)

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday tried building Compiz Fusion git packages, compiz-fusion-plugins-git packages, that has new cmake build system, are broken in home:cyberorg repo :(

Thursday getting everything organised for Symposium on Open Source Software this Saturday and Sunday

Phew!

Compiz and Compiz Fusion 0.7.4 released
by cyberorg, Friday, April 4th, 2008 @ 12:17 pm Comments (3)

Dennis “onestone” Kasprzyk announced the release of Compiz 0.7.4 followed by an announcement of Compiz Fusion 0.7.4 release from Guillaume “iXce” Seguin.

Here is the major changes in Compiz from the last release:

  • Configurable handling of overlapping output devices.
  • Enhanced focus stealing prevention with configurable amount of focus stealing prevention.
  • Added configurable, optional delay for edge actions to prevent accidental invocation.
  • Generalized vertex system to improve plugin compatibility.
  • Optimized Gaussian blur shader to support more hardware.

Highlight of Compiz Fusion release are:

  • Expo has a new transformation mode: “Curve”
  • New plugin: bicubic, which adds shader based bicubic filtering to improve the quality of scaled textures
  • CCSM got Improved look of edge and button selector widgets and Advanced Search rewrite
  • simple-ccsm got little enhancements: Added expo plugin to effects page, widget to configure global edge settings, and ed ‘mag’ plugin as ‘area zoom’ to zoom page

As always  packages for openSUSE are available via 1-click install from the openSUSE Build Service X11:XGL replository,  for more information of how to install or set everything up, see http://en.opensuse.org/Compiz_Fusion

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