I read somewhere that the PCIe issue is indicative of some other hardware (PCIe SSD; etc) not working correctly. Also, the 4.10 kernel is not the kernel out of the box. In a environment with 10 or more servers do you really want a custom kernel? How do you maintain all of these custom kernels (i.e. is a different kernel required for a HP Gen 8 server different than a HP Gen 9 server?)? I've learned my lesson from using the FOSS HPLIP HP printer driver - every time the kernel is updated you have to re-install the driver... TIA
Hi,
At the time of testing support for the Ryzen CPU was added in February of this year. This kernel was used for testing.and we usually build them as rpm's.
Regards Phil
On Thu, 18 May 2017 at 22:24 Eugene Poole etpoole60@comcast.net wrote:
I read somewhere that the PCIe issue is indicative of some other hardware (PCIe SSD; etc) not working correctly. Also, the 4.10 kernel is not the kernel out of the box. In a environment with 10 or more servers do you really want a custom kernel? How do you maintain all of these custom kernels (i.e. is a different kernel required for a HP Gen 8 server different than a HP Gen 9 server?)? I've learned my lesson from using the FOSS HPLIP HP printer driver - every time the kernel is updated you have to re-install the driver... TIA
-- Eugene Poole Woodstock, Georgia
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