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Summary
Product:
P5K Premium
Vendor:
Asus
Tested operating systems:
Ubuntu Linux
Most recent version of this submission:
P5K Premium
Average Rating:
Tagged as:
Premium
Submit a new result for this product
2007-12-31 22:45:11 - Operating System/Rating: Ubuntu Linux
2008-04-06 10:53:29 - Operating System/Rating: Ubuntu Linux
Anonymous
Post License:
GNU LGPL
Post License:
GNU LGPL
The issue listed with the dual ethernet ports was a reality with me. Fortunately I found the workaround and I don't use the ethernet ports anymore anyway.
The wireless works out-of-the-box on Gutsy, but there's a known bug with the driver; on rare occasions (most noticably with high CPU load + high upstream + downstream traffic) the driver stops working and you need to modprobe it out and back in again. Annoying, but I run into it rarely.
Works:
Wireless
Ethernet ports (both of them)
Firewire
USB
SATA
CPU scaling
Audio output through rear port
Doesn't work:
Suspend and hibernate (note: I don't have a swap partition and I'm running Nvidia, this could be the cause).
Audio input - possibly a later version of ALSA would do the trick.
Reported CPU temperature is way too low (18 Celcius at idle), but I believe it reports the correct temperature when under load. The new version of lm-sensors should detect it all correctly anyway once Gnome is switched over to use it.
This is a good choice of motherboard for a Linux machine. Later versions of the kernel, wireless drivers, ALSA and lm-sensors (already out) will improve compatibility, I'm sure.
The wireless works out-of-the-box on Gutsy, but there's a known bug with the driver; on rare occasions (most noticably with high CPU load + high upstream + downstream traffic) the driver stops working and you need to modprobe it out and back in again. Annoying, but I run into it rarely.
Works:
Wireless
Ethernet ports (both of them)
Firewire
USB
SATA
CPU scaling
Audio output through rear port
Doesn't work:
Suspend and hibernate (note: I don't have a swap partition and I'm running Nvidia, this could be the cause).
Audio input - possibly a later version of ALSA would do the trick.
Reported CPU temperature is way too low (18 Celcius at idle), but I believe it reports the correct temperature when under load. The new version of lm-sensors should detect it all correctly anyway once Gnome is switched over to use it.
This is a good choice of motherboard for a Linux machine. Later versions of the kernel, wireless drivers, ALSA and lm-sensors (already out) will improve compatibility, I'm sure.
Post License:
GNU LGPL
There is a workaround available online for it. With the workaround in place, everything works well. Note that most people will use DHCP on their networks anyway, or not use Ubuntu, so that's okay.
I haven't tried suspend and hibernate yet.