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From: Mikko D. <m.d...@wa...> - 2004-04-12 12:34:00
|
Hello, Could someone unsubscribe me from this mailing list? Thank u much. mi...@ho... Greetz Mikko |
From: Steven L. <st...@kr...> - 2004-04-12 12:18:42
|
On Sun, Apr 11, 2004 at 09:39:06PM -0500, Adam Thornton wrote: > On Sun, 2004-04-11 at 20:27, Dana Adkins wrote: > > What hardware do I need to get started with gc-linux? I have all of the > > computer (Linux/WinXP) and network equipment. I am mostly concerned > > with the GameCube specific stuff. Here is a list of what I think I > > need. What is missing / not needed. > > 1.) GameCube system > > 2.) network adaptor > > 3.) PSO game > > 3.) PSOloader software (is this open source?) > > You need all of this. PSOLoad is free-as-in-beer, but not Open Source. > It'd be neat to figure out what it was doing and make an Open Source > equivalent, because I'd like to drive everything from the same Linux box > that's hosting the filesystem. It's possible to drive everything from a linux box for some time now. There already was a psoloadv1.1 port which also works, and a few days ago psoloadv2.0 for linux was (finally) released. > > > Also, what documentation exists? I have the easy stuff like PowerPC > > Arch Manual (Green book), O'Reilly everything Linux, etc. I am looking > > for information on the GC arch and maybe some speculation on what flavor > > PowerPC that the Gekko is closest to. I have some low level development > > experience on Mot PPC 750 and IBM 750FX. Any comments??? > > It's basically identical, I think. Have you read groepaz's doc? > http://www.gc-linux.org/down/yet_another_gamecube_doc.pdf.tar.gz > > Adam > > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > > This SF.Net email is sponsored by: IBM Linux Tutorials > > Free Linux tutorial presented by Daniel Robbins, President and CEO of > > GenToo technologies. Learn everything from fundamentals to system > > administration.http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1470&alloc_id=3638&op=click > > _______________________________________________ > > Gc-linux-devel mailing list > > Gc-...@li... > > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gc-linux-devel > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.Net email is sponsored by: IBM Linux Tutorials > Free Linux tutorial presented by Daniel Robbins, President and CEO of > GenToo technologies. Learn everything from fundamentals to system > administration.http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1470&alloc_id=3638&op=click > _______________________________________________ > Gc-linux-devel mailing list > Gc-...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gc-linux-devel > |
From: Adam T. <ad...@io...> - 2004-04-12 02:37:31
|
On Sun, 2004-04-11 at 20:27, Dana Adkins wrote: > What hardware do I need to get started with gc-linux? I have all of the > computer (Linux/WinXP) and network equipment. I am mostly concerned > with the GameCube specific stuff. Here is a list of what I think I > need. What is missing / not needed. > 1.) GameCube system > 2.) network adaptor > 3.) PSO game > 3.) PSOloader software (is this open source?) You need all of this. PSOLoad is free-as-in-beer, but not Open Source. It'd be neat to figure out what it was doing and make an Open Source equivalent, because I'd like to drive everything from the same Linux box that's hosting the filesystem. > Also, what documentation exists? I have the easy stuff like PowerPC > Arch Manual (Green book), O'Reilly everything Linux, etc. I am looking > for information on the GC arch and maybe some speculation on what flavor > PowerPC that the Gekko is closest to. I have some low level development > experience on Mot PPC 750 and IBM 750FX. Any comments??? It's basically identical, I think. Have you read groepaz's doc? http://www.gc-linux.org/down/yet_another_gamecube_doc.pdf.tar.gz Adam > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.Net email is sponsored by: IBM Linux Tutorials > Free Linux tutorial presented by Daniel Robbins, President and CEO of > GenToo technologies. Learn everything from fundamentals to system > administration.http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1470&alloc_id=3638&op=click > _______________________________________________ > Gc-linux-devel mailing list > Gc-...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gc-linux-devel |
From: Dana A. <Dan...@Co...> - 2004-04-12 01:27:08
|
What hardware do I need to get started with gc-linux? I have all of the computer (Linux/WinXP) and network equipment. I am mostly concerned with the GameCube specific stuff. Here is a list of what I think I need. What is missing / not needed. 1.) GameCube system 2.) network adaptor 3.) PSO game 3.) PSOloader software (is this open source?) Also, what documentation exists? I have the easy stuff like PowerPC Arch Manual (Green book), O'Reilly everything Linux, etc. I am looking for information on the GC arch and maybe some speculation on what flavor PowerPC that the Gekko is closest to. I have some low level development experience on Mot PPC 750 and IBM 750FX. Any comments??? |
From: JockyW <joc...@ho...> - 2004-04-12 00:29:23
|
> > I don't have a keyboard, so doing something in the NFS share is my only > option? or is cron running? (I use the woody debian distribution) > thanks to cron and google I could fix it |
From: JockyW <joc...@ho...> - 2004-04-11 20:21:35
|
since installing latest binutils I can't ssh the cube anymore :( although sshd is started, port 22 refuses connection Is there something I can edit in the NFS share such that I enable telnet access or perhaps fix the ssh problem? I don't have a keyboard, so doing something in the NFS share is my only option? or is cron running? (I use the woody debian distribution) |
From: <a.o...@bl...> - 2004-04-10 17:03:08
|
On Sat, Apr 10, 2004 at 04:59:51PM +0200, JockyW wrote: > > Thanks for your reply, but fttb it doesn't really help me. > > I have tried with this Makefile: > obj-m := gcdvd.o > module-objs := gcdvd.o cache.o > > But unfortunately cache.o isn't linked. After insmod gcdvd.o I get a unknown > symbol, tho it is defined in cache.o s/module-objs/gcdvd-objs/ > A bit strange is that insmod gcdvd.ko doesn't work at all because of a bad > format or so. Only insmod gcdvd.o is accepted. You'll need module-init-tools for that. Grab them from http://kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/module-init-tools/ See also http://lwn.net/Articles/22197/ > As alternative to above Makefile I can take: > TARGET := gcdvd > WARN := -W -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes > INCLUDE := -I/usr/src/linux/include > CFLAGS := -c -O2 -DMODULE -D__KERNEL__ -DKBUILD_MODNAME="${TARGET}" ${WARN} > ${INCLUDE} > CC := gcc-3.0 > > ${TARGET}.o: ${TARGET}.c > cache.o: cache.S > > .PHONY: clean > > clean: > rm -rf ${TARGET}.ko > rm -rf ${TARGET}.o > > But there is again the problem that I don't know how to extend it such that > it also links cache.o > > Any help is appreciated! See http://lwn.net/Articles/21823/ for how to properly compile external modules. Arthur |
From: JockyW <joc...@ho...> - 2004-04-10 15:00:00
|
> > Driver code written in assembly language is generally a Bad Idea (tm). > > > That aside, hooking your code into kbuild would look something like: > Thanks for your reply, but fttb it doesn't really help me. I have tried with this Makefile: obj-m := gcdvd.o module-objs := gcdvd.o cache.o But unfortunately cache.o isn't linked. After insmod gcdvd.o I get a unknown symbol, tho it is defined in cache.o A bit strange is that insmod gcdvd.ko doesn't work at all because of a bad format or so. Only insmod gcdvd.o is accepted. As alternative to above Makefile I can take: TARGET := gcdvd WARN := -W -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes INCLUDE := -I/usr/src/linux/include CFLAGS := -c -O2 -DMODULE -D__KERNEL__ -DKBUILD_MODNAME="${TARGET}" ${WARN} ${INCLUDE} CC := gcc-3.0 ${TARGET}.o: ${TARGET}.c cache.o: cache.S .PHONY: clean clean: rm -rf ${TARGET}.ko rm -rf ${TARGET}.o But there is again the problem that I don't know how to extend it such that it also links cache.o Any help is appreciated! |
From: <a.o...@bl...> - 2004-04-08 23:59:22
|
On Fri, Apr 09, 2004 at 01:24:46AM +0200, JockyW wrote: > I'm currently developing a kernelmodule to access the dvd. I have a .c and a > .S file. The .S contains a few cache invalidate and flush routines and the > .c has all the init, read and ioctl code. My problem is that I have no idea > how my Makefile should look, such that both files are compiled and linked > into a working module.o Driver code written in assembly language is generally a Bad Idea (tm). > When I build a module out of just the .c it compiles fine and with insmod I > can make it run. But to make it work 100% my module needs both files. > > Can anyone help me out? > > Thx and Happy Easter! That aside, hooking your code into kbuild would look something like: --- a/drivers/cdrom/Kconfig 2004-03-25 22:08:47.000000000 +0100 +++ b/drivers/cdrom/Kconfig 2003-10-18 20:31:17.000000000 +0200 @@ -256,4 +256,13 @@ To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module will be called sonycd535. +config GCDVD + tristate "Nintendo GameCube DVD-ROM support" + depends on CD_NO_IDESCSI && GAMECUBE + ---help--- + Support for the Nintendo GameCube DVD-ROM. + + To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the + module will be called gcdvd. + endmenu --- a/drivers/cdrom/Makefile 2004-03-26 00:10:19.000000000 +0100 +++ b/drivers/cdrom/Makefile 2004-03-15 11:26:08.000000000 +0100 @@ -20,3 +20,4 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_SBPCD) += sbpcd.o cdrom.o obj-$(CONFIG_SJCD) += sjcd.o obj-$(CONFIG_CDU535) += sonycd535.o +obj-$(CONFIG_GCDVD) += gcdvd.o cdrom.o |
From: JockyW <joc...@ho...> - 2004-04-08 23:24:55
|
I'm currently developing a kernelmodule to access the dvd. I have a .c and a .S file. The .S contains a few cache invalidate and flush routines and the .c has all the init, read and ioctl code. My problem is that I have no idea how my Makefile should look, such that both files are compiled and linked into a working module.o When I build a module out of just the .c it compiles fine and with insmod I can make it run. But to make it work 100% my module needs both files. Can anyone help me out? Thx and Happy Easter! |
From: Nicolas T. <nic...@en...> - 2004-03-17 10:10:20
|
Ouch! Sorry I messed up with my mail and news accounts... Awfully sorry :( Nicolas Nicolas Torneri wrote: > b.o...@ap... > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.Net email is sponsored by: IBM Linux Tutorials > Free Linux tutorial presented by Daniel Robbins, President and CEO of > GenToo technologies. Learn everything from fundamentals to system > administration.http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1470&alloc_id=3638&op=click |
From: Nicolas T. <nic...@en...> - 2004-03-17 10:02:03
|
b.o...@ap... |
From: Mathieu <mma...@ny...> - 2004-03-15 03:58:22
|
> i testet psoload v2 using my own named and it worked fine for me...(i > dont like wine running as root even for a short test). you might need > to disable the builtin dns server on the commandline. gpz, Alexandre, I appreciate your help. But it still doesn't work here. Don't know what is goind wrong. So I now use my laptop with cygwin for PSOload and I have another desktop running linux for the nfs. Now I am having some more troubles. I did read: http://www.gc-linux.org/down/debian_woody-unconfigured_base.guide.txt But I can't find the zImage.dol that correspond to this. Could the personn who wrote the guide send me the dol image he used. I found two zImage: http://www.gc-linux.org/down/zImage.dol http://www.gc-linux.org/down/zImage-nfs.dol *BUT* they all hardcode complete different IP adress and nfs filepath as the guide describe. Anyway I move all my stuff to /home/mist/mdk91ppc-root/ and change IP: 192.168.0.47 for gc 192.168.0.1 for my linux (=nfs) I wait long time until ssh service is on. But then nothing, I can ssh but the console does not respond... Could someone that has a zImage.dol working send it to me, or update the one on the website ? Thanks Mathieu |
From: Groepaz <gr...@gm...> - 2004-03-14 13:39:09
|
On Sunday 14 March 2004 14:31, Alexandre Boeglin wrote: > Le samedi 13 mars 2004 =E0 23:01, Mathieu Malaterre a =E9crit : > Hello, > > > DNS Server Error > Can't bind socket <--- this line > > normal users can't bind sockets with port number lesser that 1024. > > you have at least 4 or 5 choices : > > -run wine as root > -give wine suid bit > -use native psoload1.1 as root > -give native psoload1.1 suid bit > -use bind to resolve pso's server name i testet psoload v2 using my own named and it worked fine for me...(i dont like wine running as root even for a short test). you might need to disable the builtin dns server on the commandline. gpz |
From: Alexandre B. <al...@bo...> - 2004-03-14 13:31:23
|
Le samedi 13 mars 2004 =E0 23:01, Mathieu Malaterre a =E9crit : Hello, > DNS Server Error > Can't bind socket <--- this line normal users can't bind sockets with port number lesser that 1024. you have at least 4 or 5 choices : -run wine as root -give wine suid bit -use native psoload1.1 as root -give native psoload1.1 suid bit -use bind to resolve pso's server name Regards, --=20 Alexandre Boeglin e. mail : al...@bo... | Jabber : bo...@ja... ICQ UIN : 38852646 | Website : http://www.boeglin.org/ GPG fingerprint : 6B02 86CA A79E FA83 2FF0 3B83 14DE 4187 39C1 2786 |
From: Mathieu M. <ma...@ma...> - 2004-03-14 04:40:41
|
Hello, I guess I am the only one that did not manage to get PSOLoad wok on linux... Anyway do you guys get this message on your linux box ? $ wine ./PSOload.exe testdemo4.dol ~/GameCube GameCube PSO Program Loader V2.0 by Costis! Using DOL loader to boot GC program. DNS Server Error > Can't bind socket <--- this line Automatic PSO version detection enabled! I have my gc as 192.168.0.47 Mask 255.255.255.0 gateway/dns 192.168.0.10 (my linux box) I found dll from http://www.dll-files.com since http://www.drd.dyndns.org/search.html seems to be down. $ ls -al *.dll *.DLL /usr/lib/wine -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 41472 Mar 19 1999 ADVAPI32.DLL -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 98816 Jul 6 2003 DHCPCSVC.DLL -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 28672 Dec 6 15:34 ipcfgdll.dll -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 82944 Oct 3 13:20 iphlpapi.dll -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 310034 Dec 9 2002 netapi32.dll -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 20480 Aug 11 2002 NTDLL.DLL Does the file size correspond ? And finally I am using wine wine-0.20040213-1.i386.rpm Mathieu |
From: Rob R. <ro...@re...> - 2004-03-10 21:12:14
|
First of all, thanks for your cooperation >Now, I'd say the AR and Nintendo are locked and the others unlocked ? That is really strange. According to tmbinc(http://debugmo.de/gc/gc.html) the AR does not contain any locking. It seems obvious that the Nintendo ones do. >Btw: that is a nice milling machine :) :-) >Cheers, JockyW Regards, Rob |
From: JockyW <joc...@ho...> - 2004-03-10 19:25:46
|
Hi Rob, I have a bunch of memcards. I boot PSO with a 8Mb Big Ben card in slot A. Here are my findings: 1. after booting 00 00 00 08 2. when no card in slot A always FF FF FF FF 3. after reinserting the Big Ben 00 00 00 00 4. with any of my two Thrustmasters 59 blocks 00 00 00 00 5. with a 2043 blocks (128Mb) no name 00 00 00 00 6. with an Action Replay FF FF FF FF 7. with a original Nintendo 59 blocks FF FF FF FF Now, I'd say the AR and Nintendo are locked and the others unlocked ? Btw: that is a nice milling machine :) Cheers, JockyW |
From: Rob R. <ro...@re...> - 2004-03-07 12:13:10
|
Hello, I'm working on ROM/IPL replacement (for linux o/c, NOT for games), something like tmbinc has done. I think I will try to develop a little circuit with flash rom on board, but for now I'd like to use tmbinc's solution: a memory card with the code. I know Nintendo cards are locked, and it is not yet known (in public) how to unlock them. I don't have a Datel Action Replay card, which does not need unlocking, but a cheap = =889 Piranha card, and I would like to investigate whether this one is locked on boot. I wrote a little program which reads the ID from the mem card, and prints to screen. When I use it, it prints 00 00 00 10 (251 blocks card). When I remove the card, it reads ff ff ff ff, and when I reinsert it, it reads 00 00 00 00. Since this is different from 00 00 00 10, I would say: this card does have a locking mechanism. Now, would someone who has a Action Replay spent 5 minutes to repeat this experiment? The dol file can be found at home.student.utwente.nl/r.reilink/files/main.dol Rob |
From: Adam T. <ad...@io...> - 2004-03-07 06:17:46
|
On Sat, 2004-03-06 at 13:24, Steven Looman wrote: > Did you enable NBD support in the kernel? Er, it already is, in the zImage.dol dated 27 Feb on gc-linux.org. That's the kernel I'm using, although I've patched the local IP and NFS server addresses into the boot parameters, Is there a different prebuilt kernel I should be using instead? Adam |
From: Steven L. <st...@kr...> - 2004-03-06 19:32:00
|
Did you enable NBD support in the kernel? If so, i don't know how to fix it, sorry. Steven Looman (Steve_-) On Sat, Mar 06, 2004 at 01:14:34PM -0600, Adam Thornton wrote: > On Sat, 2004-03-06 at 12:08, Steven Looman wrote: > > Hi, > > > > Can you give the exact error message nbd-client gives? > > > > Maybe you started it the wrong way. This is how i started it: > > server: nbd-server 33221 /usr/diskless/cube.swap > > client: nbd-client 192.168.2.1 33221 /dev/swap > > Here's how I'm starting the server: > <adam> dev-linux:~/nbd-2.6 $ dd if=/dev/zero of=64MB.swap bs=1M count=64 > 64+0 records in > 64+0 records out > <adam> dev-linux:~/nbd-2.6 $ ./nbd-server 33221 > /home/adam/nbd-2.6/64MB.swap > > Then, on the cube: > > cube:~# ls -l /dev/swap > brw-r--r-- 1 root uucp 43, 0 Mar 1 12:04 /dev/swap > cube:~# ./nbd-client 192.168.1.4 33221 /dev/swap > Error: Can not open NBD: No such device or address > > If I hit a machine that doesn't exist, as expected, the command hangs. > > If I hit a machine that isn't running NBD, as expected, I get > "Connection refused": > cube:~# ./nbd-client 192.168.1.1 33221 /dev/swap > Error: Connect: Connection refused > > So clearly I'm hitting something on port 33221 of the appropriate > machine...but it isn't acting right. > > OK, so, u32 and u64 aren't defined, so that the configure check for > nbd.h fails because the types are undefined and therefore the test > compilation for usability of nbd.h fails. > > But cliserv.h *does* that. And other than a comparison between signed > and unsigned I get warned about, compilation and running appear OK. > > cube:~# ./nbd-client 192.168.1.13 33221 /dev/swap > Error: Can not open NBD: No such device or address > > I get the same thing if I run nbd-server I've apt-gotten for Debian > Sarge. > > Adam > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.Net email is sponsored by: IBM Linux Tutorials > Free Linux tutorial presented by Daniel Robbins, President and CEO of > GenToo technologies. Learn everything from fundamentals to system > administration.http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1470&alloc_id=3638&op=click > _______________________________________________ > Gc-linux-devel mailing list > Gc-...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gc-linux-devel > |
From: Adam T. <ad...@io...> - 2004-03-06 19:21:13
|
On Sat, 2004-03-06 at 12:08, Steven Looman wrote: > Hi, > > Can you give the exact error message nbd-client gives? > > Maybe you started it the wrong way. This is how i started it: > server: nbd-server 33221 /usr/diskless/cube.swap > client: nbd-client 192.168.2.1 33221 /dev/swap Here's how I'm starting the server: <adam> dev-linux:~/nbd-2.6 $ dd if=/dev/zero of=64MB.swap bs=1M count=64 64+0 records in 64+0 records out <adam> dev-linux:~/nbd-2.6 $ ./nbd-server 33221 /home/adam/nbd-2.6/64MB.swap Then, on the cube: cube:~# ls -l /dev/swap brw-r--r-- 1 root uucp 43, 0 Mar 1 12:04 /dev/swap cube:~# ./nbd-client 192.168.1.4 33221 /dev/swap Error: Can not open NBD: No such device or address If I hit a machine that doesn't exist, as expected, the command hangs. If I hit a machine that isn't running NBD, as expected, I get "Connection refused": cube:~# ./nbd-client 192.168.1.1 33221 /dev/swap Error: Connect: Connection refused So clearly I'm hitting something on port 33221 of the appropriate machine...but it isn't acting right. OK, so, u32 and u64 aren't defined, so that the configure check for nbd.h fails because the types are undefined and therefore the test compilation for usability of nbd.h fails. But cliserv.h *does* that. And other than a comparison between signed and unsigned I get warned about, compilation and running appear OK. cube:~# ./nbd-client 192.168.1.13 33221 /dev/swap Error: Can not open NBD: No such device or address I get the same thing if I run nbd-server I've apt-gotten for Debian Sarge. Adam |
From: Steven L. <st...@kr...> - 2004-03-06 18:15:48
|
Hi, Can you give the exact error message nbd-client gives? Maybe you started it the wrong way. This is how i started it: server: nbd-server 33221 /usr/diskless/cube.swap client: nbd-client 192.168.2.1 33221 /dev/swap Also make you /dev/swap exists. You create it this way: mknod /dev/swap b 43 0 It is possible you have a new version of the guide and an old version of the nfsroot. The new version of the nfsroot contains a pre-make /dev/swap. Yesterday I also uploaded a debian/unstable(sid) nfsroot. The same guide should apply, I haven't tested it. This is for the people who claim they don't have enough bandwidth or think upgrading from stable(woody) to unstable is hard. About ntpdate, this is a known issue. Use rdate instead. Steven Looman (Steve_-) On Sat, Mar 06, 2004 at 09:58:33AM -0600, Adam Thornton wrote: > On Sat, 2004-03-06 at 08:13, Matt Melling wrote: > > I have been looking at the GC-Linux project for a little while now, and I > > have not got round to buying the Broadband Adapter and PSO yet (Waiting > > for them on eBay :-P), but I was wondering, how do you enter data straight > > to the cube, like is there a keyboard you can get or something? > > There is a keyboard produced (for PSO), and there is also a PS/2-to-GC > keyboard adapter. I don't have either yet, but network access works > quite well. > > Has anyone else had trouble with nbd? I can't get it to work; I can get > nbd-server running on any number of machines and architectures here > (cygwin, Linux/x86, Linux/PPC, OS/X), and clearly *some* communication > is happening, since instead of "Connection Refused" I get "NBD: So such > device or address" (I think; I'm not near my cube at the moment). NBD > does appear to be compiled into the kernel. > > I'm using the Debian root FS from 2/29 or so (btw: a neat little trick: > if you install ntpdate and then modify the start script to manually set > the date to 1/1/2004 before running ntpdate, you have a clock at > startup, (I don't know how well it tracks real time, though). > If you don't manually set the clock to the right ballpark, Linux decides > that some time in 1936 is closer to 1/1/1970 than some time in 2004 is, > so you end up with a Depression-era Gamecube). > > Adam > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.Net email is sponsored by: IBM Linux Tutorials > Free Linux tutorial presented by Daniel Robbins, President and CEO of > GenToo technologies. Learn everything from fundamentals to system > administration.http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1470&alloc_id=3638&op=click > _______________________________________________ > Gc-linux-devel mailing list > Gc-...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gc-linux-devel > |
From: Adam T. <ad...@io...> - 2004-03-06 16:05:07
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On Sat, 2004-03-06 at 08:13, Matt Melling wrote: > I have been looking at the GC-Linux project for a little while now, and I > have not got round to buying the Broadband Adapter and PSO yet (Waiting > for them on eBay :-P), but I was wondering, how do you enter data straight > to the cube, like is there a keyboard you can get or something? There is a keyboard produced (for PSO), and there is also a PS/2-to-GC keyboard adapter. I don't have either yet, but network access works quite well. Has anyone else had trouble with nbd? I can't get it to work; I can get nbd-server running on any number of machines and architectures here (cygwin, Linux/x86, Linux/PPC, OS/X), and clearly *some* communication is happening, since instead of "Connection Refused" I get "NBD: So such device or address" (I think; I'm not near my cube at the moment). NBD does appear to be compiled into the kernel. I'm using the Debian root FS from 2/29 or so (btw: a neat little trick: if you install ntpdate and then modify the start script to manually set the date to 1/1/2004 before running ntpdate, you have a clock at startup, (I don't know how well it tracks real time, though). If you don't manually set the clock to the right ballpark, Linux decides that some time in 1936 is closer to 1/1/1970 than some time in 2004 is, so you end up with a Depression-era Gamecube). Adam |
From: Matt M. <ma...@tk...> - 2004-03-06 14:21:00
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Hey there, I have been looking at the GC-Linux project for a little while now, and I have not got round to buying the Broadband Adapter and PSO yet (Waiting for them on eBay :-P), but I was wondering, how do you enter data straigh= t to the cube, like is there a keyboard you can get or something? Thanks, Matt --=20 Matt Melling [Student/Programmer] ma...@tk... / http://www.tkcentral.net/ msn: ma...@tk... .:. icq: 192032230 |