Hi List
I installed openSUSE Thumbreweed image on ZYNQ Ultra96 board.
When I set up wifi with yast, the wifi works well. But after reboot, this
board can't get IP address from Wifi router.
The output of dmesg is below.
[ 44.714618] wlan0: authenticate with 94:09:37:5f:8e:d1
[ 44.717519] wlan0: send auth to 94:09:37:5f:8e:d1 (try 1/3)
[ 44.747250] wlan0: authenticated
[ 44.756050] wlan0: associate with 94:09:37:5f:8e:d1 (try 1/3)
[ 44.762421] wlan0: RX AssocResp from 94:09:37:5f:8e:d1 (capab=0x1411
status=0 aid=6)
[ 44.768563] wlcore: Association completed.
[ 44.770468] wlan0: associated
[ 44.770932] wlan0: Limiting TX power to 20 (20 - 0) dBm as advertised by
94:09:37:5f:8e:d1
[ 58.591522] wlan0: deauthenticated from 94:09:37:5f:8e:d1 (Reason:
15=4WAY_HANDSHAKE_TIMEOUT)
I can't find the reason. But I found the workaround for this. Before
shutdown this board, I delete Wifi configuration with yast.
Every time I set up the wifi with yast after booting.
Are there any workaround for this?
Best Regards.
Ryo
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Hi,
Just asking if this is only me or it's a wider problem: I recently
updated my cubox-i with zypper, pulling in kernel-default-4.4.114, and
after reboot the box boots, but several drivers are missing, so there is
no wired ethernet, no mmcblk, etc.
After booting and waiting for a while, dmesg starts to complain about
driver detection did not finish in time (sadly I don't have the
backtrace at hand, it already went out of the buffer of the serial
console).
For now I worked around the problem this way:
- download the repo-oss (ie. non-update) kernel-default-4.4.76 rpm on an
other machine, copied it to an usb stick
- install the old kernel-default from the usb stick
- copy the /boot from the root fs to the usb stick
- use the other machine to update the /boot on the mmcblk device where
u-boot reads it
So is this only me or do other cubox-i users see the same?
Thanks,
Miklos
I searched on the Internet for the answer. Did not find even the question.
Is there any support for a Raspberry Pi camera, bcm2835, on a Rasphberry Pi in
an openSUSE system?
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fr.gr.
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Freek de Kruijf
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Hi all,
do we have people still using openSUSE Tumbleweed on armv6 systems? Which is Raspberry Pi 1, as it is the only armv6 board supported.
Depending on the amount of users, we might consider to drop armv6 support from Tumbleweed in the future.
It would save build power in OBS and save some people time, as there will be no more fixes to handle for armv6.
Thanks,
Guillaume
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On Sonntag, 7. April 2019 21:40:14 CEST you wrote:
> > Le 7 avr. 2019 à 15:16, Stefan Brüns <stefan.bruens(a)rwth-aachen.de> a
> > écrit :>
> > On Sonntag, 7. April 2019 19:56:52 CEST Michel Catudal wrote:
> >> I have Funtoo, Gentoo, Arch Linux, Fedora, SuSE and Slackware working on
> >> a
> >> few arm boards. I am looking to get SuSE Linux to work on the Beagleboard
> >> X15. My plan is to have a spin like Fedora calls them.
> >>
> >> OpenSuSE Kiwi first sounded like a good starting point but as I read thru
> >> the page it appears to only support PCs and laptops.
> >
> > All board specific openSUSE images are built with kiwi, so it is
> > definitely
> > supported. Typically, the images are built in different flavors, e.g. JeOS
> > (Just enough OS), XFCE, LXQT, KDE, ...
> >
> > Have a look at the "JeOS" project in the OBS.
>
> Will that work on Fedora 29? When I updated my computer to Ryzen 7 SuSE 42
> that I had would crash on a regular basis so I tried different OS. Arch
> Linux and Fedora are the only ones that do not crash. I have not tried the
> newer SuSE yet. The behavior of SuSE was actually worst than that of
> Ubuntu, on power up it would take forever to boot.
Why don't you try a *current* openSUSE version, either Leap 15.0 (or even the
15.1 beta, which is almost finished), or Tumbleweed?
> > For the predecessor, Beagleboard xM, there is an image, see https://
> > en.opensuse.org/HCL:BeagleBoard-xM
>
> I saw that comparision on the SuSE site and was amused.
> Comparing the Beagleboard-xM with the beragleboard X15 is like comparing a
> PC XT with a PC with an AMD Rizen Processor.
Both are 32 bit ARMs, so more like comparing a pentium 3 with a pentium 4 ...
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I have Funtoo, Gentoo, Arch Linux, Fedora, SuSE and Slackware working on a few arm boards.
I am looking to get SuSE Linux to work on the Beagleboard X15. My plan is to have a spin like Fedora calls them.
OpenSuSE Kiwi first sounded like a good starting point but as I read thru the page it appears to only support PCs and laptops.
The way I worked things out in the past with the beagle board X15 and beaglebone was to start with a minimal system with my own u-boot and kernel.
For my Open SuSE spin I would have my own repository for what is not supported on OpenSuSE.
It doesn’t appear like anyone is working on that, so far I only saw work done on that by digi-key on debian.
Embedded Linux Software
http://suzielinux.com
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