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Gigabyte's ASPM Motherboard Fix: Use Windows

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  • #61
    Originally posted by Tundra View Post
    The thing is that this isn't MY problem, I'm not having any problem, it's THEIR faulty product. And I won't ask for any support agreement with a company that doesn't care at all when they are noticed their products are DEFECTIVE (look at it how you want, but a faulty or incomplete bios implementation makes a board defective). That's why my boss ordered me to buy a different branch.

    They have two problems now, defective products and less people wanting to buy their products.
    It sounds like you're being sensationalist. You registered just to post that you were changing from Gigabyte to whatever. The ASPM bug affects more boards than it doesn't. Gigabyte is not doing anything different than nearly every other manufacturer does.

    I have no lower opinion of Gigabyte than I did before this e-mail. Nearly every board in my house (Main PC, Garage PC, 3 HTPCs) is a Gigabyte. They have never had any issues with Linux. You (and your boss) are making a mountain out of a mole hill.

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    • #62
      the good point of gigabyte mainboard is the dual-bios they have on all mainboards .
      the highest model of it with x58 , is very liked by those doing sli/crossfire with 3 cards or more @ 16x
      this model also has radiators for chipsets ready to get in water cooling loop . that is a great good point and i never seen others doing that .

      Lasting Quality from GIGABYTE.GIGABYTE Ultra Durable™ motherboards bring together a unique blend of features and technologies that offer users the absolute ...

      for the rest , like all others motherboards makers , they have all prices and quality . benchmarks based on chipset show clearly that all brands have close results when no overclocking . overclocking leads intel boards to be last ;']

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      • #63
        Originally posted by RealNC View Post
        Is there a reason why Linux can't provide signatures that allow installation?
        Ya there is a couple of issues. First of all using a signed key could be seen as a form of DRM which has it's issuses with gpl code. Secondly the code verification would have to be done in a open manner which kind of defeats the purpose of signature protection.

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        • #64
          Originally posted by Wyatt View Post
          I think I heard the UEFI signing is done by MS, but please don't quote me on that....
          Not quite, MS has their own signature, every other entity would be responsible for their own signing. It is up to the UEFI vender to determine what signatures the UEFI will accept. Even if licensing issues where not a factor (but they are as well) it would still be up to those MB manufacturers to add acceptance to other signatures or to provide a toggle to disable the signature checking. Either way I do not put a lot of faith in motherboard manufacturers providing those options given their reluctance to even fix ASPM issues as well as provide any other data to kernel developers for their vender specific feature set.

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          • #65
            Maybe the solution is to some vendor support a way to reflash BIOS with some open BIOS. For sure the actual scenario we have is a lock down.

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            • #66
              Originally posted by marcello.dimarino View Post
              Maybe the solution is to some vendor support a way to reflash BIOS with some open BIOS. For sure the actual scenario we have is a lock down.
              This is exactly what coreboot wants to accomplish. It is far from where we want it to be, but several server motherboards run extremly well and boot in less then 2 seconds

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              • #67
                Originally posted by oliver View Post
                This is exactly what coreboot wants to accomplish. It is far from where we want it to be, but several server motherboards run extremly well and boot in less then 2 seconds
                Unfortunately, server motherboards are not really where 2 second boots are needed.

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                • #68
                  Server mobos do need very short boot times. Shorter than Desktops actually

                  Originally posted by deanjo View Post
                  Unfortunately, server motherboards are not really where 2 second boots are needed.
                  I can see why you would think that though, but obviously are around the enterprise server market and not in the embedded server market. Servers are EXACTLY where short boot times are needed. When you are using servers for embedded applications (like VoIP, CallCenters, etc), you want short boots to help you keep five 9's when you have to do a reboot for whatever reason. The current IBM uEFI/IMM based servers take around 5 minutes to start booting the OS.

                  Cheers
                  Jeff

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                  • #69
                    Originally posted by Qaridarium
                    i do have a gigabyte mainboard right now but to read this about gigabyte makes me sad--

                    maybe i really buy supermicro or tyan next time.

                    i do have a Tyan mainboard in the past but the nvidia nfoce 3600 pro makes many trouble with the graphic driver and the bios do have tons of bugs like the 128gb first boot pardition bug if you have a pardition greater than 128gb it fails to start grub. also the bios do have a bug that force me to use ext3 or raiserfs it does not start with ext4...

                    but maybe the modern mainboards with amd chipset are much better than that.
                    I've got several servers running Tyan mainboard. Due to my loath for nvidia products, they are ALL AMD chipsets. I've never had a problem with one of those boards, brutally stable. I've got a couple with uptimes pushing a decade.

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                    • #70
                      I have a Biostar (GeForce 6100 am2 (v1.x)) motherboard. I don't know whether it supports ASPM or not, but I wouldn't hope for them to release a BIOS that did. It works alright, but it has it's quirks (suspend isn't quite what you'd expect, and it displays a warning at every POST if you upclock anywhere beyond the base 200Mhz...whatever that means; actual processor speed doesn't seem to change).

                      They haven't updated the BIOS for this board since December 2007, and it was a beta version. Of course, the 3.x revision of the motherboard has a more recent (not beta) BIOS, but I dare not try to use it on my board....

                      Lessons learned: do (actual) research before you buy, and don't buy cheep. >_<

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