Am 13.05.2012 16:46, schrieb Andreas Färber:
Am 05.01.2012 17:15, schrieb Joop Boonen:
On Thu, January 5, 2012 1:39 pm, Andreas Färber wrote:
Am 05.01.2012 12:25, schrieb Joop Boonen:
I now have two working openSUSE ARM images. For the Pandaboard and the Toshiba AC100. I wonder if we have a location where these images can be put so people who want to test or help out the openSUSE ARM project? These images can be used for a local native (osc/kiwi) build.
I'd be very interested in trying it out on my AC100. I do believe the official Ubuntu port is still based on a 2.6.32 branch though and not everything is upstream yet.
Did you port U-Boot, or did you stick with the Android Boot Image format?
I've used the Android Boot Image format for now. And I've used the kernel https://gitorious.org/~marvin24/ac100/marvin24s-kernel . The kernel can be found here: home:worldcitizen:armv7l kernel-tegra-ac100 (3.0.13). [...] Later today I'll create the latest JeOS image with osc and minimal xorg with windowmaker.
It's been a while since FOSDEM but I finally flashed a working Android Boot Image from your kernel-tegra-ac100 package (using the abootimg tool) and used it with your JeOS-ac100 image. Is this still correct?
How do I proceed towards getting a usable system like you had at FOSDEM? Did you copy individual packages over via USB stick, or do you have either 802.11 or 3G working?
Joop, We figured out that your JeOS-ac100 image is lacking the kernel-tegra-ac100 package, so no kernel modules were present, and RT2800 driver is built as module. With the rpm installed, I see wlan0 and wwan0 interfaces. Andreas -- SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5, 90409 Nürnberg, Germany GF: Jeff Hawn, Jennifer Guild, Felix Imendörffer; HRB 16746 AG Nürnberg -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-arm+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-arm+owner@opensuse.org