On Sat, 2008-04-05 at 14:54 -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
Alan Bartlett wrote:
(2) We must not loose sight of what CentOS basically is. CentOS == RHEL less RH. A stable, server orientated OS. On the fora, we often see evidence that CentOS is believed to be similar to *other* distros (that are more suitable for laptops & "home" use) and that it, CentOS, can be loaded onto typical laptops or home PCs. Then the grumbling starts about the non-operation of a bottom-of-the-range NIC or video controller or how multi-media doesn't work straight out of the box. The complaints that really irritate me are those that end with ". . . . whilst 'foo' (or 'bar' or 'xyzzy' or 'y2') runs o.k. on my hardware. So why doesn't CentOS?"
This is more a symptom of the kernel age than anything else, and with the backported drivers that sometimes end up in CentOS, this is subject to change as the minor version numbers get their install images rebuilt. And with the CentOS plus kernel, this doesn't necessarily track RHEL exactly either. Is there a place to find out whether a certain piece of hardware will work that stays up to date with the updates?
I thought you can get a list of the provided modules with each kernel update from the kernel source code it self. for instance. go to the directory in question and execute #] ls >log then you have a complete text listing of them.
The Kernel Developer should have a list of such drivers to work. "He or She would have to. Wouldn't they??