I'm not running a cheap motherboard. I have a Iwill dn800-sli with 2 x dual core Xeons, pci-express msi 7800 gtx, and 2 gb of ddr2-400 ram. It is a problem with hardware functioning outside of the 64-bit addressing space.Curs0r wrote:Well, after an exhaustive search for someone else that has this same motherboard I finally found one. He doesn't have the same video card or even use linux but it turns out he has a similar audio issue to one I'm having in XP x64. Talking to many other people about their hardware I find that not many people have this same audio issue (stuttering and crackling when gaming). I think this and other issues are probably caused by this motherboard. I shall know in 2 or 3 days when my new MSI motherboard arrives. Little tip for the people out there: DO NOT be seduced by low priced equipment, you'll probably run into many mysterious issues and end up buying a more expensive board anyway.
Well, the Microsludge Technology Advancement Program stated to qualify:Birtz wrote:feliperal, that was just hillarious, can't stop laughing (sorry)
Not a good idea. I'm running on dual AMD 246s and an Asus K8N-D with an XFX GT6600 PCIe. Same issue. I thought it was just the 6600s...glad I didn't shell out some extra $$$ to fix it with a new card.Curs0r wrote:Well, I got my new MSI motherboard and every single one of the issues I had before still exists. I have to guess at this point that the Intel CPU is to blame, it has to be since I've changed everything else already. This is very very frustrating.
The solution is to run your box in 32-bit mode. I suggest, getting a 32-bit copy of fedora core and using that for playing games.sarumont wrote:Not a good idea. I'm running on dual AMD 246s and an Asus K8N-D with an XFX GT6600 PCIe. Same issue. I thought it was just the 6600s...glad I didn't shell out some extra $$$ to fix it with a new card.Curs0r wrote:Well, I got my new MSI motherboard and every single one of the issues I had before still exists. I have to guess at this point that the Intel CPU is to blame, it has to be since I've changed everything else already. This is very very frustrating.
Threads for reference:
http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-35 ... ight-.html
http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/showthr ... ge=1&pp=15
Guess nVidia's solution for us is to take our thumbs and shove them up our asses.
You misuse the word solution. That's not a solution; it's a workaround.feliperal wrote:The solution is to run your box in 32-bit mode. I suggest, getting a 32-bit copy of fedora core and using that for playing games.sarumont wrote:Not a good idea. I'm running on dual AMD 246s and an Asus K8N-D with an XFX GT6600 PCIe. Same issue. I thought it was just the 6600s...glad I didn't shell out some extra $$$ to fix it with a new card.Curs0r wrote:Well, I got my new MSI motherboard and every single one of the issues I had before still exists. I have to guess at this point that the Intel CPU is to blame, it has to be since I've changed everything else already. This is very very frustrating.
Threads for reference:
http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-35 ... ight-.html
http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/showthr ... ge=1&pp=15
Guess nVidia's solution for us is to take our thumbs and shove them up our asses.

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kernel /2.6.13-rc6 root=/dev/sda3 video=vesa:ywrap,mtrr vga=0x31A pci=biosirq pci=irqroute clock=pmtmr notscI tried feeding the pci=biosirq and pci=noacpi. Howerver it doesn't work on my setup:paulisdead wrote:Are you guys using any extra options to boot up your kernels with? I think i have had a similiar problem with the 6800 and 7800 series with newer drivers if I don't bootup my kernels with the "pci=biosirq" option on the kernel line in grub. I've been booting with that option now for so long, I almost can't remember exactly why.There's everything I bootup my kernel with if you're intrested, though the irqroute clock and pmtmr are what I used to fix a timer bug with the X2 CPUs. You can also try pci=noacpi.Code: Select all
kernel /2.6.13-rc6 root=/dev/sda3 video=vesa:ywrap,mtrr vga=0x31A pci=biosirq pci=irqroute clock=pmtmr notsc
If this fixes it, you guys are gonna kill me for keepin my mouth shut so long.

MS stuffed up. They should have released Win 64 Pro that installs and boots only if it finds a valid, activated copy of Win 32 Pro on a partition on your hdd. A 64 bit driver/app not work? Reboot into 32 for it while you wait for a patch.feliperal wrote:Well, the Microsludge Technology Advancement Program stated to qualify:Birtz wrote:feliperal, that was just hillarious, can't stop laughing (sorry) :lol:
1) You must have purchased or built your x64-based PC between March 31, 2003 and June 30, 2005.
2) Have a legitimate copy of Windows XP.
I fufilled both of those stipulations. I feel ripped of and mislead. I am entitled to my free upgrade, and if I had big pockets, I'd sue Microsoft, or at least try to publicly humilate them. I will not pay for Windows XP 64-bit!
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PCI: Cannot allocate resource region 0 of device 0000:02:00.0
PCI: Cannot allocate resource region 3 of device 0000:04:00.0Code: Select all
Thu Sep 08 -- 10:39:32
~
sarumont@illusion $ cat /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:04\:00.0/resource
0x00000000f8000000 0x00000000fbffffff 0x0000000000000200
0x00000000c8000000 0x00000000cfffffff 0x000000000000120c
0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000
0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000
0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000
0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000
0x00000000d0000000 0x00000000d001ffff 0x0000000000007202
And how is this different than what we have in Linux x86-64? They have a their 32bit schema and we have ours to make our 32bit stuff work in a 64bit environmet. I dislike MS$ just like the next guy but for real reasons: Legally Stealing VMS and MTFS, Dropping OS/2 when they found the NT ( ie stolen VMS OS ) could give them sole domination and their clever, albeit illegal trade practices. If any OS for x64 is pure of 32bit application compatability layers then let that OS cast the first stone.neuron wrote:64bit windows is such a lie anyway, it's not 64bit, yeah, the kernel is 64bit, but most of the applications still run in their 32bit emulation layer.feliperal wrote:I will not pay for Windows XP 64-bit!
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emerge =xorg-x11-6.8.99.15-r2 (not sure if this is required)
emerge nvidia-kernel
emerge -C nvidia-kernel
sh /path/to/NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-1.0-7676-pkg2.run --extract-only
cd NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-1.0-7676-pkg2
patch -p0 < /path/to/NVIDIA_kernel-1.0-7676-1359015.diff.txt
make install
modprobe nvidia
emerge -O --oneshot nvidia-glx
eselect opengl set nvidia
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mknod /dev/nvidiactl c 195 255
for nn in 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ; do
mknod /dev/nvidia$nn c 195 $nn
done
chown root:video /dev/nvidia*
chmod 0660 /dev/nvidia*Code: Select all
media-video/nvidia-kernel
media-video/nvidia-glx