...it might even work.Celeron (Mendocino), aka Celeron1 (Intel)
vendor_id : GenuineIntel
cpu family : 6
model : 6
model name : Celeron (Mendocino)
stepping : 0
CHOST="i686-pc-linux-gnu"
CFLAGS="-march=pentium2 -O2 -pipe -fomit-frame-pointer"
CXXFLAGS="-march=pentium2 -O2 -pipe -fomit-frame-pointer"
Running yes (it runs perfectly well), it's compiling times that are going to... hmm... kinda turn you down. X takes somewhere between 8 and 12 hrs on a PII/350 with 128MB ram. But... (here's why I'd vote for 1 on 3) flags make it worth the effort, and with distcc you're all set. And if you don't mind it humm along while you sleep... it's even better. I guess it boils down to your situation./Astr4y wrote:I've heard of Gentoo running just fine on even slower machines, you should be fine...
loki99 wrote:Edit: The easiest way to find out, would be to ask the Jackass! Support Group.



Yes you can. But use CFLAGS that work with a P2.a13x wrote:I'm doing a Jackass! P2 install right now. Can I use emerge --buildpkgonly some_package to build the bigger packages for the Celeron on my Athlon XP machine ? I'm talking about big packages like Samba, wxGTK, aMule.


Thx. Now I can start compiling the big stuff.a13x: all celerons are i686. There is no i586 celeron.
For your needs, I'd probably go with Debian. I don't know if they have uber-latest versions of aMule/e17, but it shouldn't be too hard to compile them by hand.
If you're into trying new stuff, OpenBSD may be cool too.