Friday, October 27, 2017

12.04 - What does x86 mean for installing a new hardware enablement (HWE) stack in 64 bit Ubuntu



I'd like to install 13.10 (Saucy) hardware enablement (HWE) stack to my Ubuntu 12.04 (64-bit) because I need a newer Linux kernel.




This wiki page explains what "hardware enablement stacks" are. Among other things it says:




Only the -generic x86 kernel flavor ... will be supported...




Also, this answer says:




...This is only recommended for x86 hardware installations...





Is x86 here synonymous to 32-bit/i386 architecture (but not 64-bit/AMD64), or is it i386/AMD64 (but not ARM)?



Can I install this "hardware enablement stack" in a 64-bit/AMD64 Ubuntu? Will it be supported with future updates?



Yes, x86 means amd64 or i386. The reference only the -generic kernel flavor refers to the various kernel packages available; "generic" is the regular kernel, but there are also kernels optimised for virtual machines and low latency, and those other kernels are not supported by the hardware enablement stack.


No comments:

Post a Comment

11.10 - Can't boot from USB after installing Ubuntu

I bought a Samsung series 5 notebook and a very strange thing happened: I installed Ubuntu 11.10 from a usb pen drive but when I restarted (...