Hello all: I have a couple of ARM systems here that have a four core chip by Marvell on a System On Module or SOM made by Cogent. This SOM is then socketed into a development motherboard that has four full size USB ports, two 1Gig-E network ports, two SATA ports, and a built-in serial-to-USB console. The SOM has 2GB of memory and the Marvell MV78460 chip has hardware floating point so the architecture shows up as armv7l or armv7hl or armv7hfp depending on what OS bits are loaded. I am supposed to be receiving a third system shortly for additional testing. Right now I have Fedora-13 ARM distro bits installed on a partition on a 500GB SATA hard drive. I was able to do this with a tarball of the root filesystem provided by the Fedora project. Once I had that unpacked on the hard drive I was able to alter the u-boot environment to still use the kernel resident on the internal NAND flash but use the root filesystem on the SATA disk. Later for ease of testing new kernel images I altered the u-boot environment again to use a kernel downloaded via tftp. I had downloaded the complete group of rpms Fedora-13 for ARM so I could setup a yum repo to facilitate adding more packages to the systems as needed. Unfortunately neither Marvell or Cogent are feeding any sort of platform support patches they have developed back to the standard kernel development process so I am limited to working with the source tree they have provided for right now. That is currently based around a 3.0.6 kernel tree. What I am wondering is if the OpenSUSE-arm project has a similar root filesystem tarball available that I could use to boot strap one of these systems to the current OpenSuSE-arm bits if they are released at all. That way I could do some testing of that build on this platform. -- Steven DuChene