Table of Contents

IBM-Lenovo Thinkpad T61

Introduction

This is a guide to running Linux with the IBM-Lenovo Thinkpad T61 laptop. The T61 is a high end laptop from Lenovo with a price tag to match.

For full specifications see the Lenovo ThinkPad T61 specifications page.

This guide is intended to provide you details on how well this laptop works with Linux and which modules you need to configure. For details on how to actually install and configure the required modules have a look at our guides section for distribution specific instructions.

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Linux Compatibility

DeviceTypeCompatibilityComments
ProcessorIntel Core 2 Duo (Merom) 1.8, 2.0, 2.2, 2.4 GHz 800MHz FSB, 2-4MB L2 Cache CPUYes
Intel Core 2 Duo (Penryn) 2.1, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6 GHz 800MHz FSB, 3-6MB L2 Cache CPUYes
Screen14.1” WXGAYes
RAM1GB
HDD120GBYes
Optical DriveDVD+-RWYes
GraphicsIntel X3100Yes
nVidia Quadro NVS 140mYes
Sound YesUse the snd-hda-intel module
Ethernet10/100/1000Yes
WirelessIntel 3945ABG 802.11abgYesuse the ipw3945 driver
Intel 4965AGN 802.11abgnYes
Bluetooth Yes
56K Modem Not Tested
USB3 x USB2.0Yes
Firewire1 x FirewireYes
PCMCIA Slot Not Tested

Notes

Graphics

Version of the T61 with the Intel X3100 should work without any extra configuration on most recently release Linux distributions.

Version with the NVIDIA Quadro NVS 140M should also work just fine in 2D mode with recent distributions, however you will need the proprietary nvidia module for 3D support. See the guides section for details.

Wireless

Some models of the T61 use the 4965AGN wireless controller. This works with the iwlwifi drivers. Installation instructions are available here.

Edit (9 Jan 2009)

The Linux 2.6.27 kernel has built-in support for both the 3945 and 4965 wireless cards, and the drivers are now called iwl3945 and iwl4965. Gentoo users should also run emerge iwlXXXX (XXXX for whichever card) - this installs some necessary micro code.

Audio

You will need at least version 1.0.15rc2 of the ALSA modules to get sound working properly. Some older Linux distributions may only have an older version of ALSA so you may need to install the latest version manually. Fedora 8 and Ubuntu 7.10 are known to work just fine.

Summary

Quite a lot of work and Linux experience is required to get the Lenovo Thinkpad T61 working with Linux. Definitely not a install and use laptop but you can get everything working with a bit of work. Update: Ubuntu 7.10 and more than likely other recently released distributions now include good support for this laptop. The sound and wireless work without extra configuration.


If you are looking to purchase a Lenovo laptop you can visit Lenovo's laptop page.




Discussion

Robert Smits, Wednesday 30 of December, 2009 [18:54:09]

Installed opensuse 11.2 KDE recently after running opensuse 11.0 for several years on my T61. 11.2 is definitely more install friendly than 11.0 - Everything worked out of the box, and it was very easy to add multimedia support.

Kevin, Tuesday 09 of March, 2010 [03:02:48]

Brother! How did you get the audio to work? It's been fighting me for 2 days now and I just can't get it running

Tristan_Sydney, Tuesday 18 of August, 2009 [05:48:13]

I have been using Windows 7 for the last few months and really enjoying it. I decided to install Ubuntu 9.04 64 bit via Windows 7 which arranged auto dual boot. I found it worked really well that way. Everything worked straight out of the box including NVS 140M and my built in microphone. Skype also worked which was a major bonus.

It differs a lot to the time I installed 9.04 64 bit as the main OS. A lot of hardware didn't work straight out of the box and mic never came online. I can't tell you the reason why it worked a lot better installing Ubuntu along side Windows 7 rather than Ubuntu alone. I'm a newb, sorry.

im watching csi lol, Tuesday 07 of July, 2009 [03:52:55]

debian 5 (lenny) is running good. The touchpad scroll bar (right side of touchpad) is delayed and scrolls long after you lift your finger, makes scrolling with touchpad almost impossible. battery life was horrible to start with, i got 1:30 on a 9-cell battery (win7 is getting twice that+). i installed laptop-mode-tools from synaptic and now I have 1:30 left and I'm at 66% battery so it seems to be working nicely. I believe the hdd wasn't spinning down when idle before…not sure though. it may be my wireless router (qwest stock modem/router) but it keeps messing up my /etc/resolf.conf i have to manually set dns back to opendns after dhcp (dhcp seems to set it to the router's address which fails to retrieve IPs from domain names).

#download laptop-mode-tools from synaptic
#change /etc/resolv.conf to read: nameserver 208.67.222.222

rokafeller, Sunday 31 of May, 2009 [12:06:39]

Puppy Linux 4.2
T61 model 7663-B22 1440×900 Nvidia Quadro NVS 140M
Detailed specs.

Basic functionalities (audio, wifi, usb, etc.) but nvidia quadro+xorg. Native drivers don't support nvidia chipset in order to run xorg, so you're forced to use xvesa.
To make nvidia quadro work and finally run xorg I had to install this package:

http://download.tuxfamily.org/nop/NVIDIA-177.82-k2.6.25.16.pet

check also this thread for complete procedure (very easy):
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=42910

Keyboard keys for volume/mute don't work, as well as Fn+F# keys. Only Fn funcionalities that are working are Fn+Home/End to control LCD luminosity and Fn-PgUp to light the white led.

Jacob, Friday 08 of May, 2009 [18:02:22]

T61 7664 18G 14.1” 1440×900 Nvidia Quadro NVS 140 Cpu T7300 2ghz dualcore 120gb 5400 hdd 2gb ram

Works out of the box with Ubuntu 9.04 and Kubuntu 9.04, and same goes for the Advanced mini dock.(Thinkfinger not tested.) Biosupdate by iso available from Lenovo support downloadpages and works fine on a Linux only machine.

HDAPS and SMAPI (HDDprotection and battery mgmt) available in general repos and works fine. All buttons (blue thinkvantagebutton not tested) works (change to T60/T61 keyboard). Mute-button works - but needs to be assigned to master in “general shortcuts”. Virtualisation-functionality for CPU works. ThinkLight works. Scrolling with trackpoint by following advices in thinkwiki.

Kernel 2.6.28/2.6.29 with Xorg 1.6 provides improvements that are valuable to the T61 as Suspend/hibernation/sleep now works out of the box (Nvidia 180.51 driver).

Bootchart gives 17 sec boot with a standard Kubuntu 9.04 installation in dualboot.

Ext4 with boot/grub on Ext4 works fine and Arch Linux performs well on this machine.

I do recommend a update to a distribution based upon 2.6.28/29 kernel or later with Ext4 simply because of performance and compatiblity.

Will, Monday 13 of April, 2009 [08:11:54]

I was able to order the Thinkpad T61 with SLED (Novell's SUSE linux) when it first came out. It's a shame that they don't seem to offer a discounted blank linux-ready laptop, or a pre-installed version anymore, based on my last glance on the lenovo site.

I admit the problem is that SLED 10 was not quite up to par. To shut down properly, I had to first log out, then press the power button. The shutdown buttons would not work for some reason. Then the Novell account interaction and updates were buggy. It made me really disappointed, and I barely ended up using it, which was a huge waste.

I just recently installed OpenSUSE 11.1 (you'd think SLED, the contract version of opensuse would work better) on the T61, and the machine is beautiful. Everything, including the integrated X3100 graphics, sound, audio buttons, several special function buttons like web-back/forward, worked out of the box. Power management and simple things like shutting down, work like they're expected. I love the ease of reconfiguring the partitions with the opensuse installer. Of course if I was trying to resize some windows partition, then it might be a hassle.

The wireless/networking applet is great; it has really improved a lot. The T61 has a manual wireless disable switch on the front lip, and SLED seemed to have a problem re-enabling the wireless when the switch was toggled on/off, which was a royal pain, and still a greater pain b/c something as simple as shutting down was not functioning as it should. Either this (reactivating wireless) was fixed in opensuse 11.1 or the toggling of the networking in the applet is doing the trick.

I didn't realize how fast 2.4GHz dual core 2gig memory is compared to Pentium 4 3GHz 1GB memory. Also the software options in the opensuse repository is a million times better than on SLED, though I assume that they would have worked fine on SLED. I never tried to add them, b/c I didn't see any documentation that it was possible. It's nice having the options of the many tools available on the opensuse repository.

I decided to try the multimedia codecs with mplayer from opensuse community, and the machine is more entertainment friendly. It would be nice if the SLED version had been up to par, so that Lenovo would not discontinue it.

I may try one of the others sometime. Which contract flavor of linux does one recommend, that comes with all the codecs? (and is nearly as user-friendly as
opensuse)

BTW, openSUSE 11.1 with Gnome is awesome. The OpenOffice is awesome, and it's nice to have the programming capacity available. I hope to use it for some financial analysis eventually. I hope a professor can help me figure out how to access some good financial data.

Biggest gripe is the search engine though. I wish it gave you more options. Beagle collects all kind of crap sometimes or nothing, when all you want is a “find …” search. Many people that use suse (sled/opensuse) end up disabling it I heard (…there's a plugin portion, and a general daemon it seems). Any advice on improving search features?

The T61 is a well-built system, and seems to run well on opensuse. There are useful power management applets. The CPU clocking monitor is kinda kewl. Compiz is nice, but at first unsteady (locked twice during initial configuration; but that could be the fault of the 3D drivers for my integrated graphics). The T61 monitor on my system is its weakest point; nothing compared to the apple or sony screens. Hopefully, the newer thinkpads (t400 and t500's) have improved this.

Otherwise the system is pretty rock-steady. I look forward to making some serious use of it. The developer resources in the main repository and the extras on the pacman repository (added when you add the multimedia codes from opensusecommunity site's link) are awesome, and the yast does a beautiful job of configuring and updating your system. It's really beautiful compared to SLED 10 or the old flavors of linux I tried years ago.

Will2, Thursday 24 of September, 2009 [02:55:02]

More evangelism: linux on laptops… try opensuse on the thinkpad t61!
For everyone who wants an easy-to-setup, well-designed system, great out-of-the-box hardware drivers support and wants to use linux, I very highly recommend trying opensuse 11.1 with Gnome on the Thinkpad T61. The remark in the main article that much effort is required is false, esp. I know for my configuration: linux only, no fingerprint reader, no discrete graphics or webcam, 3945 wireless, as everything worked without any special config files or any extra work.

Everything else including special function keys like suspend and hibernate, mute, web navigation, wireless toggling work great, as well as things like WPA2 wireless security, etc.

Originally, when Lenovo actually sold this laptop to American consumers in March 2008 with SLED (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop) pre-installed, which is like a limited, official, contract version of OpenSUSE, the system was very mediocre b/c they had not worked out the hardware compatibility bugs of the system. Now, OpenSUSE (and presumably much of the linux community) has inherited the trials and experience of this brief experiment, b/c everything pretty much works as expected without tinkering, which can often be pretty hard to get on a linux laptop, as each vendor has non-standard hardware. It's a great tragedy, that Lenovo seems to have wavered on providing full support to the linux community, in ensuring that the t400's and t500's continue the now great compatibility of the t61.

After several months of using it, I have to say that the amount of standard software readily available through the OpenSUSE installation system is pretty impressive, and that the installation system is good at handling dependency conflicts, etc. for you. Adding the extra repositories from opensuse-community is highly recommended, with some great additional software.

The only things I might be unsure about is using Compiz (can be unstable, tho could some 3d driver's fault), or the Beagle search engine. In OpenSUSE, YaST is the name of the system admin control center, a fairly user-friendly centralized GUI, and is especially great for those of us with modest command line proficiency or inclination (those manual pages and options always seemed too tedious for rarely used functions), in addition to the standard Control Center for typical user system settings. In the standard Control Center, you can go to Sessions and disable or remove the Beagle engine (tho some ppl like it), and in the Firefox tools>add-ons as well for the default Firefox Beagle extension. In either the standard software repositories or the added ones (they're by default merged in the search filters for software install management), I found a great replacement that basically does the standard file name search, a standard filename search utility, gnome search, I think. The only gripe I still have is that it doesn't seem to respect my first choice for preferred application when opening files, from within it's dialog.

Lastly, my earlier complaint about the weak monitor is fading away, b/c it seems the new drivers somehow have fixed previous problems of fuzzy screens. Also the T61's VGA port on the left side works absolutely great with my new LG2361VG monitor an incredibly amazing 23” monitor that I nabbed for $220 online. (For safety, I try to ensure they're both off when hooking, if not when disconnecting, tho don't know how much it matters.) The dual-head monitor system works fine in linux; you can have it expand the desktop space or duplicate the screen (limits resolution and dimensional format tho with 2nd option). Battery life is almost 3hrs.

While it is a drawback not having access to many commercial programs, like Quickbooks, for most users, it has everything you need. For many young developers, it is a great system to try. I hope that there will be growing push to open standards, esp for web apps; some major web apps don't officially.
(Beware there is a challenge to saving DVD's to FAT32 flash drives b/c 4gig limit; so most will probably need to download your opensuse DVD and burn from same system or network filesystem; this messed me up one annoying afternoon)

Looking forward to trying KDE around January, when OpenSUSE 11.2 is finalized.

Burninman, Saturday 28 of March, 2009 [20:52:20]

T61+ Fedora 10 running like a top. minor annoyance with the fingerprint scanner. I was able to make it work in Fedora 8, but no luck yet in 10. As I said, minor annoyance, and everything else runs well enough to justify the install.

Garf, Thursday 05 of March, 2009 [21:54:44]

Fedora 10, rock solid on my T61. Fedora 9 was terrible, never a Fedora odd numbered build will touch this T61 again.

Just about everything worked out of the box. Great distro.

Paul, Monday 09 of February, 2009 [02:53:19]

After some initial problems shrinking the Vista partition (I cloned the original drive to a new, bigger drive, then made the recovery media on the cloned drive, then tried to use the inbuilt Vista partition shrink), I now have Zenwalk 5.4 beta, Vector Linux 5.9 Standard and Vector Linux 6.0 RC4 installed.

Had some initial problems with wireless support in both Zenwalk and Vector 6.0 (5.9 does not support the wireless adapter out of the box), but new firmware for both distros sorted that out. Vector 5.9 also fails to support the T61 sound card, even though it does seem to be loading the correct module.

I've not yet bothered to configure the fingerprint scanner in Linux, but everything else is working well. My T61 has Intel graphics, good support for the WXGA screen from all three distros. Now I need to build a 1280×800 splash screen, since setting the correct framebuffer mode has killed bootsplash.

Very pleased with the performance indeed!

noob, Wednesday 04 of February, 2009 [18:35:54]

As a total noob would do, i roamed the forums looking for an answer to my problem.
my problem is probably easy to solve I'm just getting lost in the jargon.
but i tried installing both linux mint and ubuntu 8.10 on my T61, and when i reboot (either from CD, DVD, or flash) all i get is the bootscreen …some scrolling and then nothing,,,,just a nice blank screen staring back at me…so fare havent found solution, will definitely post when i do

ahmadalian@gmail.com

Bill, Saturday 10 of January, 2009 [05:58:20]

I just installed Ubuntu 8.10 - after upgrading to the Nvidia closed-source drivers (I have a Quadro NVS 140, I have been experience strange X crashes upon restarting X, coming back from suspend.

May be a bug in the new Nvidia driver…

Santosh, Monday 29 of December, 2008 [23:31:31]

My T61 works perfect with debian 5.0. MythTV, Nova TD Stick, Wifi and so on. I installed KDE 4.1. Perfect, works really fine. I have only problems with my micro and skype. I haven't found the right configuration til yet.

grifter, Wednesday 27 of August, 2008 [18:19:32]

I was thinking of buying a T61 with the SUSE Linux weeks ago but Lenovo seems to have discontinued it as of today? I only found an R61 with Linux on their site; although website text does say they offer the T61 with Linux, there seems to be no link to it. Even your link goes to the same page I was earlier: all Windows Vista and no Linux.

bye, Tuesday 12 of August, 2008 [15:31:03]

Suse Linux Enterprise Desktop 10 SP2

I first installed Opensuse 11 with KDE 3.5 and had some problems with knetworkmanager..changing between devices→wifi,lan plus other little 'bugs' PLUS the “switch on/off” for wireless didnt work (and the 'wifi' light, also didnt work) so I moved to SLED 10 SP2 … worring about the standart gnome desktop, BUT Gnome is great, AND everything works…just remember to register with Novell, 'because they will not only add the Nvidia drivers (which work great → WOW compiz!) , but also the repo.! Volume works- Sound work- internal MIC works (just remember to make the right 'track' visible)- dont know if HDD shockprotection works….
Maybe someone cares… I installed Virtualbox 1.6.4 (from virtualbox.org) and it works very well! (seamless integration is still not 100% and USB is a bit of a hassel)

Omaha, Friday 08 of August, 2008 [06:15:12]

OpenSuse 11 KDE 4.1

T61 “Works perfectly” with OpenSuse 11 KDE 4.1 including wifi (intel), GPU (NVS140), bluetooth, docking and fn. Only exemption are the volumebuttons. Batteryadministration works fine with tp_smapi and HDD shockprotection is fine.

Anurag, Monday 04 of August, 2008 [10:31:44]

I tried FC9 Live CD it works like breeze, everything work out of the box. Wifi, sound and graphics too was decent. So go ahead with newer distro versions, that shd work.

Marco, Saturday 17 of May, 2008 [07:35:35]

Second Ubuntu 7.10

I have Ubuntu on my new t61. Sound and graphics work perfectly. Thinkfinger for the scanner works well also. I have not been able to get Skype working, a mic issue that I hear is common. Installing the Nvidia drivers allows compiz to work very well. I will attempt 64 bit Ubuntu soon and see how that goes. Overall, I'm quite happy with both Ubuntu and the laptop.

thebulbguy, Saturday 19 of January, 2008 [06:59:24]

openSUSE 10.3 also includes support for the sound and wireless cards out of the box, as well as the bluetooth adapter. Add the nvidia repository for openSUSE 10.3 to the list of software repositories and perform a system update to install the graphics driver, then run nvidia-xconfig and restart x to use it.

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ibm-lenovo+thinkpad+t61.txt · Last modified: Sunday 25 of January, 2009 [06:52:13] (external edit)
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