On Monday, February 16, 2015 08:46:17 AM Artem Vakhitov wrote: > Hi, > > are there any good (binary) alternative kernels usable with the recent > versions of Linux Mint? I have Linux Mint 17.1 on an oldish (~2007) > laptop, and the stock low-latency kernel is not adequate for audio and > MIDI work on this machine even with LXDE. > > Artem Look in the repo for a kernel with rt-preempt in its name string. Alternatively download the source tarball from the kernel.org site, install build-essential, and build your own. Make a hard copy of an lsmod report, and using "make xconfig", disable most of what is shown as a default module build (a period is shown in the checkbox, clear the box by clicking on it) leaving only what is shown on the lsmod listing, then near the top of this seemingly unlimited choices of characteristics, check on the stuff needed to make it an rt-preemptable build, including in the makefiles extra version entry so it will be made with that now unique name. rt-preempt seems like a good name to add. as you, make clean;make;make modules; sudo make headers-install sudo make modules-install sudo make install sudo update-grub (or grub-update, I furgit) Watch the output of this to verify that it found your newly installed kernel. If it did, then reboot to it and test it. If the attempted boot fails, write down the failure msg, reboot to the original kernel, run make xconfig again and see if you can find, from what you wrote down, whats missing and re-enable it. Repeat the above make loop till it works. TANSTAAFL:* Bear in mind that running such an entirely performance configured kernel you will probably need a cooler fan equipt parking place for your lappy, and its use can reduce the life of a battery charge to as little as 25% of what it gets with the kernel that was originally installed, so I would always plug its psu/charger in when being booted to this high performance kernel. *TANSTAAFL, from E. Hemingway, popularized by R.A. Heinlein, for "There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch" I have a script I use for the build/install that I can post if there is any interest. Cheers, Gene Heskett -- "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) Genes Web page <http://geneslinuxbox.net:6309/gene> _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user