Le 01/03/2012 12:28, Guillaume Gardet a écrit :
Le 01/03/2012 11:17, Alexander Graf a écrit :
On 29.02.2012, at 20:26, Guillaume Gardet wrote:
Le 27/02/2012 22:01, Alexander Graf a écrit :
On 27.02.2012, at 20:05, Guillaume Gardet wrote:
[...]
No. My previous trick no more works. Well, I tried another thing. I dd if=/dev/zero to erase the first sectors to be sure to have a good card to start and then dd the raw image. Then I tried to boot and get a "60" on the serial port which means no suitable MLO where found where it is ecpected! Hrm - weird. Could you please try to dd if=/dev/zero the first couple MB and then just dd MLO straight into offset 128kb? Try again for offset 0. With openSUSE MLO it boots something (since it does not try UART boot, which print 60) but nothing is printed on screen (crash?). With the openSUSE sources and patches with a code sourcery toolchain, I get a running MLO. So, it should be a problem with the toolchain or some optimisations flag (which are not supported by beagleboard?). Could you please provide the full compilation line to see what flags could lead to problems?
Or maybe did you use the pandaboard MLO instead of the beagle MLO? That could explain why it start to boot but crash. ARGH. MARCUS!
Yes, you're right. Marcus changed the kiwi description to use the panda bootloader :(((. Of course that won't work... Yes, it should be better with a beagle bootloader! ;)
Marcus, could you please fix this up so we use x-loader-omap3beagle and u-boot-omap3beagle again for the beagle description? :)
I will try it again once done.
I tried the latest raw image (beagle build 10.3) and it is booting fine. Thanks. I will test it a bit further (audio, video, etc...) when I will have some spare time. Guillaume -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-arm+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-arm+owner@opensuse.org