X10 is handily done with mochad, and works rather well. Once that is in place, MisterHouse or other mochad-enabled systems can work perfected. I have a device running pure mochad & a node.js + angular + socket.io controlling my house & lights.by WarheadsSE - Debian
It's basically as simple as extracting the debian rootfs onto a clean partition 1.by WarheadsSE - Debian
1) EFI is unneeded. GPT is all you would like 2) a 3TB rootfs would take forever to fsck at boot.by WarheadsSE - uBoot
I still haven't had any time to get things sorted/tested for it at all. If/when you make the steps known, I'll see about making a PKGBUILD for it.by WarheadsSE - Debian
The serial connection to the board is standard, 115200,n,8by WarheadsSE - Debian
I did not have time to look into the script today, but will hopefully in the coming days. Best option will be for me to translate this into a PKGBUILD. p.s. : "Arch" not "ARCH"by WarheadsSE - Debian
Get me a copy of this script, and I will see what I can do.by WarheadsSE - Debian
Have a look at the installation package for the device @ Arch Linux ARM. It should be easy enough to modify to use a Debian rootfs in it's place.by WarheadsSE - uBoot
You might want to look into the changes needed by the newer udev.by WarheadsSE - uBoot
What @bharath said. You have to add it to your ld.so.preload :) See the package install @ https://github.com/archlinuxarm/PKGBUILDs/blob/master/alarm/libaccept4/libaccept4.installby WarheadsSE - uBoot
The easiest method is a udev rule to set it for you.by WarheadsSE - Allwinner A10
In this case, that wont work because it is on the NAND.by WarheadsSE - uBoot
If you guys use the updated kernel, it has devtmpfs support, and a simple acept4 syscall hack should allow much more current udev's. See https://github.com/archlinuxarm/PKGBUILDs/tree/master/alarm/libaccept4by WarheadsSE - uBoot
more than likely, it needs the newer kernel modules :)by WarheadsSE - uBoot
Does Debian not support compressed kernel modules for some reason? I have that support built into the kernel...by WarheadsSE - uBoot
At this point, there should be little difference for you, as the existing system boots linux. I am planning on getting a more capable u-boot in use as well.by WarheadsSE - Debian
Seeing as I have not actually changed out the uboot, I can't say. I am using the stock uboot & come changes to the uboot environment to get it booting from SATA. And yes, we will be supporting the device.by WarheadsSE - Debian
Here are the patches that Arch Linux ARM added recently for 3.1.10 to bring 310/320 support w/ LEDs & arcNumber's I have an untouched NAND aside from the u-boot on my device.by WarheadsSE - Debian
Most likely: it's not powered on.by WarheadsSE - uBoot
Assuming all went well, you may have access to it via netconsole. Example of configuration for netconsoleby WarheadsSE - uBoot
sync flushes all write to disc, confirming a complete write. You can safely convert the boot partition from ext2 to ext3 if on HDD, I would suggest against it on flash media. http://archlinuxarm.org/developers/downloads has the link to the armv5te rootfs, which should be all you need.by WarheadsSE - uBoot