Hi, Hi Andreas,
Am 09.09.2014 um 13:49 schrieb Josua Mayer:
Am 09.09.2014 12:07, schrieb christophe:
To install, what is the procedure ? Copy a dowloaded iso on an usb key and boot and install like on classic pc ? On arm, you do a lot manually. build kernel, perform some magic, like signing or checksum adding if required by the specific device in use. Then you copy a filesystem image of an already installed OS on your memory, e.g. sdcard and hope it will boot.
Josua, you're making this sound worse than it is. You can actually download the root filesystem from the openSUSE website, you don't have to take it from another installation. You are right. it is better as it sounds. What I expressed here was
Am 11.09.2014 um 15:02 schrieb Andreas Färber: mainly my mood about locked bootloaders(they can and are beeing worked around) and graphics drivers. Those suse tarballs exist and make for a good starting point.
For some devices you can just download an SD card image and boot it. So far there's a few netbooks, like AC100 and Chromebooks, known working in addition to development boards, but no tablet. Doesn't mean it's impossible, just that no one has both done and contributed it back yet. If you search the Web you will also find blog posts of people trying to run openSUSE on phones, but only rarely they document that in our Wiki or actually update our JeOS packages for others to reuse.
One issue I see is whether you can attach an external keyboard to the tablet device for debugging before X11 is up. Assuming you do get that far. Usually they don't have accessible serial ports for debugging the bootloader.
Another thing to check is whether the U-Boot bootloader has support for the device, otherwise the boot process will require some more manual fiddling. A few Allwinner based tablets are upstreamed, for instance.
But that's not specific to openSUSE, obviously. You should search sites like linux-sunxi.org, linux-exynos.org, linux-rockchip.org, etc. for info on the support status of and how-tos for Linux on specific tablets, and then as a rule of thumb, if you can boot any self-compiled 3.x Linux kernel on it, you will be able to boot openSUSE as well.
Will there be all the same packages than on x86 opensuse ? Like packman, google-earth, etc...?
x86 openSUSE does not ship all those proprietary software either...
Statically built ARMv7-A "hardfp" binaries should just work; if you have sources, you can build packages in OBS just like for x86. I haven't seen a single binary arm rpm download yet, but then again I haven't searched for any either.
How is the support ? Its do-it-yourself as far as I know, though some devices are beeing cared for by opensuse staff.
We're not openSUSE "staff", and there is no commercial "support" for openSUSE from SUSE. Okay, it is the most amazing of volunteers that take care of boards such as beaglebones, let me say thank you about the black one, I am happily using it! Some ISVs may be contracted for supporting a specific commercial project beyond the openSUSE maintenance cycle. Most work on ARMv7 is volunteer work by people, SUSE or not, with those boards/devices though. Thus testers are always welcome here, especially with 13.2 coming up (cf. "JeOS image status" thread).
Cheers, Andreas
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