Difference between revisions of "Talk:MacBuild Intel Checklist"

From FreekiWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Blanked the page)
 
(4 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Creating the Intel Desktop and Laptop Build Checklist here.  When completed it will have its own page and this current page will be the PPC Build Instructions
 
  
=Getting Started=
 
 
==Visual inspections==
 
*'''What kind of computer are you working on?''' Is it a tower, laptop, all-in-one? Does it have an Intel or PPC processor?  What's the model number printed on the bottom (if you can read it, mark it on your triage checklist)?
 
*'''Check for damage'''
 
If the case is dirty, clean it off with a rag.  If the (laptop) battery looks beaten up or warped, change it with a good one.
 
 
==Set Up Your Computer==
 
'''SEE MACBUILD SPECS TO DETERMINE WHAT KINDS OF HARDWARE YOU SHOULD BE INSTALLING IN THE COMPUTER YOU ARE REBUILDING'''
 
===Towers:===
 
*Replace RAM with tested memory (if we have the appropriate tested RAM)
 
*If the computer has an Intel processor, install a hard drive with a Xubuntu image installed
 
*If the computer has a PPC processor, install a blank hard drive
 
===Laptops:===
 
*Find the appropriate power supply for your laptop.  Check the bottom of the laptop for power requirements.  Ask your instructor if you can't find this.
 
*Laptop RAM is never tested before being installed, so you can leave the RAM the computer came with for the moment
 
*For MacBooks -- replace the HDD with an imaged one
 
*For iBooks, MacBook Pros and other hard-to-work-on laptops, leave the HDD where it is and you'll follow directions to wipe it later
 
*Attach keyboard/mouse, monitor, network cable, and power cord (as necessary)
 
===iMacs:===
 
*INTEL: HDDs are difficult to install, so you'll wipe the drive and install an operating system following the directions in this packet later.  RAM is easy to install, but it's laptop-sized memory, which we only test in systems, so it's okay to leave the pre-installed RAM where you'll test it later.
 
*PPC: HDDs are difficult to install, so you'll wipe the drive following the directions in this packet later.  Depending on the model, RAM is easy to install.  Check the model number on iFixit.com to see which one you have.  Ask your instructor for clarification.
 
 
=OS X Triage=
 
 
==Booting into OS X==
 
There are a couple of ways to boot into OSX 10.  Apple computers tend to boot to external hard drives more reliably, but the hard drives themselves are not as reliable as the network.  As of writing this, Photobooth is not available on network boots, so if you are working on a computer with a built-in camera, you should boot to an external drive to test the camera.
 
 
'''From Network:'''
 
* Connect ethernet cable from the wall to the system
 
* Hold down the ''N'' key on the keyboard while the system starts up to enter the network boot screen.
 
 
'''From External HDD:'''
 
* Connect the OS X 10.5 Firewire HDD to the system
 
* Connect the Firewire HDD to a power source
 
* Make sure the Firewire HDD is turned on (there's a power switch on the back of the drive)
 
* Hold the ''Option'' key on the keyboard while system starts up to enter the Startup Manager
 
* Select the Firewire drive (OS X Testing HDD) from the Startup Manager to boot into OS X
 
* If a warning box appears while you are logging in, just click "ignore"
 
 
----
 
 
==Confirm hardware==
 
*Click on the System Profiler icon in the dock.
 
*Check the '''ATA''' and '''Memory''' sections of ''System Profiler'' to confirm that it matches what you've added to the system so far
 
**If you did not install RAM or a HDD earlier, check the amount of memory now and compare with the [[MacBuild Specs|MacBuild Spec Sheet]]. You can adjust RAM by shutting the computer down and removing or adding RAM at this point.  Remember that you will probably still need to test the RAM
 
**If it fails to see the HDD or reports the amount of memory incorrectly, the system may have a bad logic board and end up getting recycled.  Ask an instructor for troubleshooting assistance
 
*Check the '''Disc Burning''' section of ''System Profiler'' to see what the optical drive in the system can do
 
*Fill out the system specs on the Keeper label if they are not already filled out
 
----
 
 
==Test CD writing==
 
If you determined that the optical drive in the system can write CD-RWs, do the following:
 
*Erase a rewritable CD disk
 
** Insert a CD-RW disk
 
** Open up '''Disk Utility''' (Click on the '''Disk Utility''' icon in the dock)
 
** Click on the optical drive on the left sidebar of the '''Disk Utility''' window
 
** Click on the ''Erase'' tab that comes up on the right side of the window
 
** Confirm that it will perform a quick erase, and click on the '''Erase''' button
 
** When the erasing is complete you'll get a dialog box. Choose '''Open Finder''' from the drop down menu and click OK. This will mount the disk on the desktop.
 
 
*Write to a blank rewritable disk
 
** Select the '''burnme.cdr''' file in the left panel of '''Disk Utility''' and click the '''Burn''' button at the top of Disk Utility.
 
** The disk should automatically eject when finished. If the disk icon still appears on the desktop, drag it into the trash. 
 
----
 
 
==Check if WiFi works==
 
*Click on the AirPort icon near the upper-right corner of the screen
 
*Check to see if the '''Freegeek''' wireless network shows up on the list
 
Disconnect the wired network, select '''Freegeek''' from the list, open up a browser, and navigate to any web page.  If you see the Free Geek click-through page, it works.
 
 
----
 
 
==Stress test the CPU==
 
*Click on the cpu test icon in the dock
 
*choose primenet as the test type and start test
 
**This should take 3-10 minutes
 
*If this or any other test fails, mark the printme sheet with the test results and sell the computer as-is, or recycle it - ask your instructor
 
----
 
 
==Stress test the GPU==
 
*Set up the screen saver for the GPU test.
 
**Under the Apple menu select '''System Preferences''' > '''Desktops and Screen Saver'''
 
**Scroll down to the bottom and select '''GPULife'''
 
**Select '''Options''', unclick '''limit framerate''' and click '''show framerate'''
 
**Set '''Zoom''' to '''1''' and click '''OK'''
 
*Drag your mouse arrow to the very bottom right-hand corner of the screen. 
 
*A black screen should come up with lots of colorful moving dots which are being generated by the GPU.
 
*Look for any artifacting (obvious glitches, lines, popping lights, cross hatching), this points to GPU failure.
 
*Check to see that the frames per second number at the bottom left-hand of the screen stays consistent. 
 
*If everything looks good after a minute or so, you can exit the screen by moving your mouse out of the corner.
 
*If there are any gross artifacts, such as lines on the screen or a plaid screen, consult your instructor. Occasional white pixels are OK.
 
----
 
==Test the iSight camera (Laptop and iMac only)==
 
*Double click on the OS X Testing HDD icon and then double click on Applications. Double click on the Photo Booth application to open it. If you can see yourself in the Photo Booth application the camera works.
 
----
 
 
==Check The Battery (laptop only)==
 
*Select the Coconut Battery icon from dock. Note the battery capacity (not the current charge) and remember that we will need to enter this value in the Notes portion of the printme sheet. For example: "according to Coconut Battery the battery has 67% of original capacity".
 
----
 
 
==Test the memory==
 
This test should only be run if you were not able to install all tested memory (anything with Laptop RAM or older iMacs)
 
*Open "rember" by clicking on the icon in the dock.
 
*click OK, leave selected default settings, and run the test.
 
** The test should take 5-30 minutes depending on the amount of RAM and the speed of the processor. With large amounts of RAM (over 1.0 GB) it may take up to an hour.
 
* If any memory fails the test, replace it with good tested memory
 
----
 
 
==Bless the Hard Drive==
 
*Open a terminal and type
 
sudo bless --device /dev/disk0s1 --setBoot --legacy
 
* You will be prompted for your password, enter "freegeek". It will look like nothing happened, but it worked!
 
----
 
 
=Xubuntu 12.04LTS Time!=
 
(this is more of an outline at this point, more details to come.  Go To [[MacBuild_Xubuntu_QC_Checklist]] for more instructions.)
 
 
 
==Test the Keyboard (laptop only)==
 
First insert an iPXE disk into optical drive and turn the computer on, holding the Option key.  Select the Windows disk from boot options
 
*{{Template:Laptop_Input_Testing}}
 
----
 
 
'''Are you working with a MacBook or MacPro?'''
 
*If so you hopefully have already installed an imaged drive with Xubuntu on it. If not you could install an imaged drive now or else you could wipe the hard drive, install Xubuntu and Freegeek customizations using the instructions below.
 
 
'''Are you working on an iMac?'''
 
*If so you probably did NOT install an imaged hard drive with Xubuntu on it. Follow the instructions below to wipe the hard drive, install Xubuntu and Freegeek customizations.
 
----
 
==Set Up Hard Drive==
 
 
{|cellspacing:"1px" style="background-color:#f8fcff"
 
 
| width="100%" style="border: 1px solid #6688AA; background-color:#FFFFFF; padding:1em;" valign="top"|
 
 
'''Instructions for un-wiped hard drives'''
 
===Wipe Hard Drive===
 
*Insert iPXE disk in optical drive and connect computer to a network cable
 
*Boot computer while holding Option key. Choose the Windows disk from the boot options listed.
 
*When the network options come up, choose '''Laptop Build >> Disk Test''' and press enter when prompted to verify the hard dive installed
 
This process, sometimes called '''Badblocks''' may take up to 8 hours, depending on the size of the hard drive.  If it is near the beginning or middle of the shift, check in with your instructor at this point to work on other projects
 
Find more hard drive wiping instructions at [[Hard_drive_wiping_checklist]]
 
----
 
 
===Install Xubuntu===
 
*If you just wiped the disk, follow these steps:
 
**When badblocks has successfully completed, make sure you are still booted to the iPXE disk.
 
***Again Select '''Laptop Build''' but then choose '''Xubuntu install'''
 
**follow prompts and install '''Xubuntu PAE'''
 
**after reboot, select System-> Hardware drivers and activate B43 wireless driver
 
 
===Install Freegeek customization===
 
*If you just installed Xubuntu you will need to add the freegeek customization. Open System->Administration>Synaptic Package Manager and add the
 
freegeek repository to the list of repositories.
 
**click on settings and select repositories
 
** click on the other software tab and then the Add button and enter the address of the freegeek repository
 
** use '''<code>deb http://apt.freegeek.org/ubuntu lucid main</code>''' as the address
 
** close the window and click on the reload button. If you get an error about a public key ignore it.
 
** close the Synaptic Program Manager
 
*Open a terminal window and run updates from Terminal (this may take 20-30 minutes)
 
**<code>sudo apt-get update</code>
 
**<code>sudo apt-get upgrade</code>
 
*From the Terminal window add the freegeek build utilities:
 
**<code>sudo apt-get install freegeek-build-utils && sudo apt-get install freegeek-manual</code>
 
If asked about installing the packages without verification, respond yes
 
*Run updates again (this may take 20-30 minutes)
 
**<code>sudo apt-get update</code>
 
**<code>sudo apt-get upgrade</code>
 
*reboot computer
 
*Select System->Preferences->Screensaver and deselect the lock screen option
 
 
|}
 
'''For all computers'''
 
===Run updates===
 
*If you have installed an imaged hard drive you only need to run the updates.
 
**<code>sudo apt-get update</code>
 
**<code>sudo apt-get upgrade</code>
 
 
PROCEED TO:
 
 
==[[MacBuild Xubuntu QC Checklist|Hardware Testing in Xubuntu]]==
 
 
 
[[Category:Macintosh]]
 
 
[[MacBuild Intel Checklist en Espanol | En Espanol]]
 

Latest revision as of 18:53, 5 November 2013