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Top Forums Programming Open Source What is your favorite Linux distro? Post 302079234 by hitechredneck on Friday 7th of July 2006 02:40:47 PM
Old 07-07-2006
I love certain distros for certain uses.

Knoppix is awsome for recovering data and such on my clients Windoze boxes

SuSE ran great on my old laptop (Omnibook with a PIII in it) where as Mandrake ran better on my old Dell (PII).

FreeBSD (while it's not a Linux) WOULD be my favorite if I could get it to run on ANY laptop!!!! Smilie
 

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MICROCODE_CTL(8)					      System Manager's Manual						  MICROCODE_CTL(8)

NAME
microcode_ctl - microcode utility for Intel IA32 processors SYNOPSIS
microcode_ctl [-h] [-u] [-q] [-Q] [-f microcode] DESCRIPTION
The microcode_ctl utility is a companion to the IA32 microcode driver written by Tigran Aivazian <tigran@aivazian.fsnet.co.uk>. The utility has two uses: a) it decodes and sends new microcode to the kernel driver to be uploaded to Intel IA32 processors. (Pentium Pro, PII, Celeron, PIII, Xeon, Pentium 4 etc) b) it signals the kernel driver to release the buffers containing the copy of microcode data actually applied to given CPU, linear array of 2048 bytes per CPU, see struct microcode in include/asm/processor.h for information on the layout of chunks buffers may hold The microcode update is volatile and needs to be uploaded on each system boot i.e. it doesn't reflash your cpu permanently, reboot and it reverts back to the old microcode. -h display usage and exit -u upload microcode (from default filename) -f upload microcode from named Intel formatted file -q run silently when successful -Q run silently even on failure EXAMPLE
microcode_ctl -u Upload microcode using defaults FILES
/usr/share/misc/intel-microcode.dat The default microcode location AUTHOR
Microcode utility written by Simon Trimmer Linux Kernel driver written by Tigran Aivazian. REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to either Simon Trimmer <simon@urbanmyth.org> or Tigran Aivazian <tigran@aivazian.fsnet.co.uk> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2000 VERITAS Software This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU- LAR PURPOSE. SPECIAL THANKS
Thanks to the Intel Corporation, for supplying microcode update data and publishing the specifications that enabled us to write microcode driver for Linux. SEE ALSO
The brave are recommended to view the driver source code located in the Linux Kernel source tree in arch/i386/kernel/microcode.c Visit http://www.urbanmyth.org/microcode/ for more information and microcode updates. microcode_ctl 19 September 2006 MICROCODE_CTL(8)
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