From: Reuben S. <re...@mi...> - 2004-09-04 17:30:09
|
Hi, I think i'm missing something with my understanding... What does the buddy board do? What does the main board do? If someone wanted to run a small fileserver using gumstix would i need a waysmall? Thanks Reuben |
From: Eric B. <eri...@gm...> - 2007-10-18 18:40:06
|
Could someone please help me set the STUART port on the NetMMC pack to a non-standard baud rate? Thank you! Eric |
From: Michael C. <mi...@ca...> - 2007-10-18 18:43:12
|
stty -F /dev/ttyS2 38400 assumming you want to set it to 38400. 9600 is the default. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Eric Berryman" <eri...@gm...> To: "General mailing list for gumstix users." <gum...@li...> Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2007 2:40 PM Subject: [Gumstix-users] Help > Could someone please help me set the STUART port on the NetMMC pack to > a non-standard baud rate? > > > Thank you! > Eric > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. > Still grepping through log files to find problems? Stop. > Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser. > Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/ > _______________________________________________ > gumstix-users mailing list > gum...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users > |
From: Eric B. <eri...@gm...> - 2007-10-18 18:51:00
|
This doesn't seem to work for a non-standard baud rate (i.e. 28800). I tried using setserial, but this doesn't work on /dev/ttyS2. Any ideas? Thank you! Eric On 10/18/07, Michael Caughey <mi...@ca...> wrote: > stty -F /dev/ttyS2 38400 > > assumming you want to set it to 38400. 9600 is the default. > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Eric Berryman" <eri...@gm...> > To: "General mailing list for gumstix users." > <gum...@li...> > Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2007 2:40 PM > Subject: [Gumstix-users] Help > > > > Could someone please help me set the STUART port on the NetMMC pack to > > a non-standard baud rate? > > > > > > Thank you! > > Eric > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. > > Still grepping through log files to find problems? Stop. > > Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser. > > Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/ > > _______________________________________________ > > gumstix-users mailing list > > gum...@li... > > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. > Still grepping through log files to find problems? Stop. > Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser. > Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/ > _______________________________________________ > gumstix-users mailing list > gum...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users > |
From: Craig H. <cr...@gu...> - 2007-10-18 19:03:21
|
On Oct 18, 2007, at 11:51 AM, Eric Berryman wrote: > This doesn't seem to work for a non-standard baud rate (i.e. 28800). > I tried using setserial, but this doesn't work on /dev/ttyS2. Any > ideas? What are you doing with the serial port after setting its speed? stty ought to work in most cases, unless you're running something which is calling an ioctl to reset the speed to something else again. C |
From: Eric B. <eri...@gm...> - 2007-10-18 19:44:49
|
I get the following with stty: # stty -F /dev/ttyS2 speed 28800 9600 stty: invalid argument `28800' On 10/18/07, Craig Hughes <cr...@gu...> wrote: > On Oct 18, 2007, at 11:51 AM, Eric Berryman wrote: > > > This doesn't seem to work for a non-standard baud rate (i.e. 28800). > > I tried using setserial, but this doesn't work on /dev/ttyS2. Any > > ideas? > > What are you doing with the serial port after setting its speed? > stty ought to work in most cases, unless you're running something > which is calling an ioctl to reset the speed to something else again. > > C > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. > Still grepping through log files to find problems? Stop. > Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser. > Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/ > _______________________________________________ > gumstix-users mailing list > gum...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users > |
From: Michael K. <mfk...@gm...> - 2007-10-18 21:32:01
|
Eric, On 10/18/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > I get the following with stty: > > # stty -F /dev/ttyS2 speed 28800 > 9600 > stty: invalid argument `28800' Try using the 'spd_cust' option with setserial to set the divisor for a custom baud rate: setserial /dev/ttyS2 spd_cust divisor 4 baud_base 115200 The above values will set the custom speed to 28800. The custom speed will be substituted for 38400, i.e. when you request 38400, you will get 28800... stty -F /dev/ttyS2 speed 38400 --Mike |
From: Eric B. <eri...@gm...> - 2007-10-25 12:09:19
|
Should I be able to access registers STDLL and STDLH using pxaregs? Because when I: pxaregs | grep STDLL; I get nothing. And, /opt/gumstix-buildroot/build_arm_nofpu/linux-2.6.18gum/include/asm-arm/arch-pxa/pxa-regs.h does show STDLL and STDLH. Which seems to show A LOT more then the list I get when I execute: pxaregs > file. It seems I'm missing something? Thank you! Eric On 10/23/07, Michael Kenney <mfk...@gm...> wrote: > Eric, > > On 10/22/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > > Here is some more information (does anything look wrong?): > > Those GPIO settings look right to me (this is from memory as I don't > currently have a board available to test it on). > > --Mike > > > > > # more /proc/tty/driver/PXA\ serial > > serinfo:1.0 driver revision: > > 0: uart:FFUART mmio:0x40100000 irq:15 tx:836 rx:0 RTS|CTS|DTR|DSR|CD|RI > > 1: uart:BTUART mmio:0x40200000 irq:14 tx:0 rx:0 > > 2: uart:STUART mmio:0x40700000 irq:13 tx:0 rx:0 > > 3: uart:HWUART mmio:0x41600000 irq:0 tx:0 rx:0 > > > > # cat /proc/gpio/GPIO4[6789] > > 46 AF2 in set > > 47 AF1 out set > > 48 AF2 out set > > 49 AF2 out set > > > > > > Thank you! > > Eric Berryman > > > > > > On 10/22/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > > > This seems very odd. I can use stty to set the (ttyS1, ttyS2, etc.) > > > baud rate to "standard" rates, but not 28800. And, setserial works > > > for only ttyS1. Is there an initialization I don't know about > > > (something in /etc/init.d)? > > > > > > Thank you! > > > Eric > > > > > > On 10/22/07, Michael Kenney <mfk...@gm...> wrote: > > > > Eric, > > > > > > > > On 10/22/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > > > > > Sorry for the late reply, I was away for a bit. > > > > > > > > > > I just tried this for divisors 1 through 32 and all gave me: > > > > > > > > > > # ./setserial /dev/ttyS2 spd_cust divisor 8 baud_base 230400 > > > > > Cannot set serial info: Invalid argument > > > > > > > > > > Is there a problem with setting the register? > > > > > > > > There shouldn't be (assuming you are running the command as > > > > "root"...). You might need to poke around in the source code for the > > > > pxa serial driver and see if ttyS2 is handled differently > > > > > > > > --Mike > > > > > > > > > > |
From: Eric B. <eri...@gm...> - 2007-10-26 13:51:20
|
Okay, I've added the following to pxaregs.c and recompiled: { "STDLL", 0x40700000, 0, 0xffffffff, 'x', "Divisor Latch Low Register (DLAB=1)" }, { "STDLH", 0x40700004, 0, 0xffffffff, 'x', "Divisor Latch High Register (DLAB=1)" }, { "STLCR", 0x4070000C, 0, 0xffffffff, 'x', "Line Control Register" }, First, is this correct. Second, I can now access the above registers ... but how should I set them? The documentation says, STLCR 's DLAB bit should be 1 (which says DLAB is the 7th) ... is this correct? Next, How do I set STDLL and STDLH for a divisor of 32 (or baud rate of 28800)? Thank you!!! Eric On 10/25/07, Michael Kenney <mfk...@gm...> wrote: > Eric, > > On 10/25/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > > Should I be able to access registers STDLL and STDLH using pxaregs? > > Because when I: pxaregs | grep STDLL; I get nothing. And, > > > > /opt/gumstix-buildroot/build_arm_nofpu/linux-2.6.18gum/include/asm-arm/arch-pxa/pxa-regs.h > > > > does show STDLL and STDLH. Which seems to show A LOT more then the > > list I get when I execute: pxaregs > file. > > pxaregs does not use the pxa-regs.h kernel header file, it has it's > own compiled-in list of registers to check (see the pxaregs.c source > for details). > > BTW, you appear to be using an old kernel release. Have you > considered upgrading to the latest (2.6.21gum)? Perhaps that will > solve your problem... > > --Mike > > > > > It seems I'm missing something? > > > > Thank you! > > Eric > > > > > > On 10/23/07, Michael Kenney <mfk...@gm...> wrote: > > > Eric, > > > > > > On 10/22/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > > > > Here is some more information (does anything look wrong?): > > > > > > Those GPIO settings look right to me (this is from memory as I don't > > > currently have a board available to test it on). > > > > > > --Mike > > > > > > > > > > > # more /proc/tty/driver/PXA\ serial > > > > serinfo:1.0 driver revision: > > > > 0: uart:FFUART mmio:0x40100000 irq:15 tx:836 rx:0 RTS|CTS|DTR|DSR|CD|RI > > > > 1: uart:BTUART mmio:0x40200000 irq:14 tx:0 rx:0 > > > > 2: uart:STUART mmio:0x40700000 irq:13 tx:0 rx:0 > > > > 3: uart:HWUART mmio:0x41600000 irq:0 tx:0 rx:0 > > > > > > > > # cat /proc/gpio/GPIO4[6789] > > > > 46 AF2 in set > > > > 47 AF1 out set > > > > 48 AF2 out set > > > > 49 AF2 out set > > > > > > > > > > > > Thank you! > > > > Eric Berryman > > > > > > > > > > > > On 10/22/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > > > > > This seems very odd. I can use stty to set the (ttyS1, ttyS2, etc.) > > > > > baud rate to "standard" rates, but not 28800. And, setserial works > > > > > for only ttyS1. Is there an initialization I don't know about > > > > > (something in /etc/init.d)? > > > > > > > > > > Thank you! > > > > > Eric > > > > > > > > > > On 10/22/07, Michael Kenney <mfk...@gm...> wrote: > > > > > > Eric, > > > > > > > > > > > > On 10/22/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > > > > > > > Sorry for the late reply, I was away for a bit. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I just tried this for divisors 1 through 32 and all gave me: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > # ./setserial /dev/ttyS2 spd_cust divisor 8 baud_base 230400 > > > > > > > Cannot set serial info: Invalid argument > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Is there a problem with setting the register? > > > > > > > > > > > > There shouldn't be (assuming you are running the command as > > > > > > "root"...). You might need to poke around in the source code for the > > > > > > pxa serial driver and see if ttyS2 is handled differently > > > > > > > > > > > > --Mike > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > |
From: Dave H. <dhy...@gm...> - 2007-10-26 13:58:20
|
Hi Eric, > First, is this correct. Second, I can now access the above registers > ... but how should I set them? The documentation says, STLCR 's DLAB > bit should be 1 (which says DLAB is the 7th) ... is this correct? > Next, How do I set STDLL and STDLH for a divisor of 32 (or baud rate > of 28800)? It will wind up being something along the lines of Constant / divisor = baud rate. You can try setting to a few baud rates that work, set the DLAB bit to 1, and examine the DLL and DLH registers. Off the top of my head, I seem to recall that the formula is 921600 / divisor = baud rate. -- Dave Hylands Vancouver, BC, Canada http://www.DaveHylands.com/ |
From: Eric B. <eri...@gm...> - 2007-10-26 15:15:53
|
I'm not sure if I understand High and Low Latch Divisor. When I change DLAB to 1; STDLL=8 and STDLH=0; What would I put in these registers for a divisor of 32 (28800 baud rate)? Thank you so much! Eric On 10/26/07, Dave Hylands <dhy...@gm...> wrote: > Hi Eric, > > > First, is this correct. Second, I can now access the above registers > > ... but how should I set them? The documentation says, STLCR 's DLAB > > bit should be 1 (which says DLAB is the 7th) ... is this correct? > > Next, How do I set STDLL and STDLH for a divisor of 32 (or baud rate > > of 28800)? > > It will wind up being something along the lines of Constant / divisor > = baud rate. > > You can try setting to a few baud rates that work, set the DLAB bit to > 1, and examine the DLL and DLH registers. > > Off the top of my head, I seem to recall that the formula is 921600 / > divisor = baud rate. > > -- > Dave Hylands > Vancouver, BC, Canada > http://www.DaveHylands.com/ > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. > Still grepping through log files to find problems? Stop. > Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser. > Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/ > _______________________________________________ > gumstix-users mailing list > gum...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users > |
From: Dave H. <dhy...@gm...> - 2007-10-26 18:46:16
|
Hi Eric, On 10/26/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > I'm not sure if I understand High and Low Latch Divisor. When I > change DLAB to 1; STDLL=8 and STDLH=0; What would I put in these > registers for a divisor of 32 (28800 baud rate)? High = high byte of 16-bit divisor Low = low byte of 16-bit divisor So divisor of 32, would have STDLH=0, and STDLL=32 The high byte doesn't become non zero until baudrates from 3600 baud and lower. -- Dave Hylands Vancouver, BC, Canada http://www.DaveHylands.com/ |
From: Eric B. <eri...@gm...> - 2007-10-26 19:42:57
|
Okay, So far, this what I have done. set DLAB to 1 set STDLL to 32 set STDLH to 0 then ? stty -F /dev/ttyS2 (what value)? (right now, if I try to read from /dev/ttyS2, STLCR changes from 141 to 23) Thank you!! Eric On 10/26/07, Dave Hylands <dhy...@gm...> wrote: > Hi Eric, > > On 10/26/07, Eric Berryman <eri...@gm...> wrote: > > I'm not sure if I understand High and Low Latch Divisor. When I > > change DLAB to 1; STDLL=8 and STDLH=0; What would I put in these > > registers for a divisor of 32 (28800 baud rate)? > > High = high byte of 16-bit divisor > Low = low byte of 16-bit divisor > > So divisor of 32, would have STDLH=0, and STDLL=32 > > The high byte doesn't become non zero until baudrates from 3600 baud and lower. > > -- > Dave Hylands > Vancouver, BC, Canada > http://www.DaveHylands.com/ > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. > Still grepping through log files to find problems? Stop. > Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser. > Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/ > _______________________________________________ > gumstix-users mailing list > gum...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users > |
From: Dave H. <dhy...@gm...> - 2007-10-26 19:48:42
|
HI Eric, > So far, this what I have done. > > set DLAB to 1 > set STDLL to 32 > set STDLH to 0 > > then ? > stty -F /dev/ttyS2 (what value)? No value - you probably don't need to call stty at all. > (right now, if I try to read from /dev/ttyS2, STLCR changes from 141 to 23) That's expected. It's just changing the DLAB bit back to zero and changing some other bits. the divisor stays in effect even though DLAB is zero, it's just that you can only access the STDLL and STDLH when DLAB is 1. If you do an echo to /dev/ttyS2 then the bits should be coming out at 28800. -- Dave Hylands Vancouver, BC, Canada http://www.DaveHylands.com/ |
From: Eric B. <eri...@gm...> - 2007-10-31 13:19:10
|
Yes!! Everything works great!! To sum up for those reading the archive (you might need to add STLCR, STDLL, and STDLH to pxaregs source code and recompile): ## For PXA arch to set 28800 baud rate ## Set DLAB bit to 1 to access DLL and DLH bits pxaregs STLCR 0x87 ## Set Divisor to 32 for 28800 baud rate pxaregs STDLL 0x20 pxaregs STDLH 0 ## Set DLAB bit to 0 with 8 bit, no parity, 2 stop bit pxaregs STLCR 0x07 On 10/26/07, Dave Hylands <dhy...@gm...> wrote: > HI Eric, > > > So far, this what I have done. > > > > set DLAB to 1 > > set STDLL to 32 > > set STDLH to 0 > > > > then ? > > stty -F /dev/ttyS2 (what value)? > > No value - you probably don't need to call stty at all. > > > (right now, if I try to read from /dev/ttyS2, STLCR changes from 141 to 23) > > That's expected. It's just changing the DLAB bit back to zero and > changing some other bits. > > the divisor stays in effect even though DLAB is zero, it's just that > you can only access the STDLL and STDLH when DLAB is 1. > > If you do an echo to /dev/ttyS2 then the bits should be coming out at 28800. > > -- > Dave Hylands > Vancouver, BC, Canada > http://www.DaveHylands.com/ > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. > Still grepping through log files to find problems? Stop. > Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser. > Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/ > _______________________________________________ > gumstix-users mailing list > gum...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users > |
From: Liem L. <lie...@go...> - 2010-10-22 16:15:05
|
Hi, Can someone please help me how to include Java or openjdk in the omap3-desktop-image? I can see the openjdk directory in the openembedded recipe but when I tried to bitbake openjdk or copy the openjdkXXX.bb into the images directory it won't build. I know java is not included in the omap3-desktop-image because when I type java -version, the sh said it not found. Thanks. -- ======================= Liem Leong |
From: Ash C. <ash...@gm...> - 2010-10-22 16:28:48
|
Hi Liem, On Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 9:14 AM, Liem Leong <lie...@go...> wrote: > I can see the openjdk directory in the openembedded recipe but when I tried > to bitbake openjdk or copy the openjdkXXX.bb into the images directory it > won't build. > > I know java is not included in the omap3-desktop-image because when I type > java -version, the sh said it not found You could include the packages using opkg (further to your other email, *dont't* try to use opkg on your host system, only on the overo itself). You may find these wiki pages interesting: http://www.gumstix.net/wiki/index.php?title=Category:How_to_-_JAVA http://www.gumstix.net/wiki/index.php?title=Eclipse_on_Gumstix_for_new_users#Debug_a_Java_Application In short, try opkg on classpath and jamvm -Ash |
From: Liem L. <lie...@go...> - 2010-10-22 16:58:12
|
Hi Ash, opkg update opkg install jamvm works. Many thanks. Liem On 22 October 2010 17:28, Ash Charles <ash...@gm...> wrote: > Hi Liem, > > On Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 9:14 AM, Liem Leong <lie...@go...> > wrote: > > I can see the openjdk directory in the openembedded recipe but when I > tried > > to bitbake openjdk or copy the openjdkXXX.bb into the images directory it > > won't build. > > > > I know java is not included in the omap3-desktop-image because when I > type > > java -version, the sh said it not found > > You could include the packages using opkg (further to your other > email, *dont't* try to use opkg on your host system, only on the overo > itself). You may find these wiki pages interesting: > http://www.gumstix.net/wiki/index.php?title=Category:How_to_-_JAVA > > http://www.gumstix.net/wiki/index.php?title=Eclipse_on_Gumstix_for_new_users#Debug_a_Java_Application > > In short, try opkg on classpath and jamvm > -Ash > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Nokia and AT&T present the 2010 Calling All Innovators-North America > contest > Create new apps & games for the Nokia N8 for consumers in U.S. and Canada > $10 million total in prizes - $4M cash, 500 devices, nearly $6M in > marketing > Develop with Nokia Qt SDK, Web Runtime, or Java and Publish to Ovi Store > http://p.sf.net/sfu/nokia-dev2dev > _______________________________________________ > gumstix-users mailing list > gum...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users > -- ======================= Liem Leong |
From: Liem L. <lie...@go...> - 2010-10-22 16:39:26
|
Hi Ash, I did at the serial console, it said sh: not found. I even try ipkg as in your website, someone responded it a typo error, which should be opkg?? It is very common, I am sure someone did it before. Thanks. That recompile omap3-desktop-image took me 24 hours and I have to restart it twice due to libsamplerate checksum error and one of the server hung up momentarily. On 22 October 2010 17:28, Ash Charles <ash...@gm...> wrote: > Hi Liem, > > On Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 9:14 AM, Liem Leong <lie...@go...> > wrote: > > I can see the openjdk directory in the openembedded recipe but when I > tried > > to bitbake openjdk or copy the openjdkXXX.bb into the images directory it > > won't build. > > > > I know java is not included in the omap3-desktop-image because when I > type > > java -version, the sh said it not found > > You could include the packages using opkg (further to your other > email, *dont't* try to use opkg on your host system, only on the overo > itself). You may find these wiki pages interesting: > http://www.gumstix.net/wiki/index.php?title=Category:How_to_-_JAVA > > http://www.gumstix.net/wiki/index.php?title=Eclipse_on_Gumstix_for_new_users#Debug_a_Java_Application > > In short, try opkg on classpath and jamvm > -Ash > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Nokia and AT&T present the 2010 Calling All Innovators-North America > contest > Create new apps & games for the Nokia N8 for consumers in U.S. and Canada > $10 million total in prizes - $4M cash, 500 devices, nearly $6M in > marketing > Develop with Nokia Qt SDK, Web Runtime, or Java and Publish to Ovi Store > http://p.sf.net/sfu/nokia-dev2dev > _______________________________________________ > gumstix-users mailing list > gum...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users > -- ======================= Liem Leong |
From: Liem L. <lie...@go...> - 2010-10-22 16:48:08
|
I can run opkg now I tried opkg install jdk I tried opkg install openjdk I tried opkg install openjdk-6_6b18-1.8 saying cannot find the package What should I entered on the roo@overo prompt? Thanks. On 22 October 2010 17:39, Liem Leong <lie...@go...> wrote: > Hi Ash, > > I did at the serial console, it said sh: not found. I even try ipkg as in > your website, someone responded it a typo error, which should be opkg?? > > It is very common, I am sure someone did it before. > > Thanks. > > That recompile omap3-desktop-image took me 24 hours and I have to restart > it twice due to libsamplerate checksum error and one of the server hung up > momentarily. > > > > On 22 October 2010 17:28, Ash Charles <ash...@gm...> wrote: > >> Hi Liem, >> >> On Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 9:14 AM, Liem Leong <lie...@go...> >> wrote: >> > I can see the openjdk directory in the openembedded recipe but when I >> tried >> > to bitbake openjdk or copy the openjdkXXX.bb into the images directory >> it >> > won't build. >> > >> > I know java is not included in the omap3-desktop-image because when I >> type >> > java -version, the sh said it not found >> >> You could include the packages using opkg (further to your other >> email, *dont't* try to use opkg on your host system, only on the overo >> itself). You may find these wiki pages interesting: >> http://www.gumstix.net/wiki/index.php?title=Category:How_to_-_JAVA >> >> http://www.gumstix.net/wiki/index.php?title=Eclipse_on_Gumstix_for_new_users#Debug_a_Java_Application >> >> In short, try opkg on classpath and jamvm >> -Ash >> >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> Nokia and AT&T present the 2010 Calling All Innovators-North America >> contest >> Create new apps & games for the Nokia N8 for consumers in U.S. and Canada >> $10 million total in prizes - $4M cash, 500 devices, nearly $6M in >> marketing >> Develop with Nokia Qt SDK, Web Runtime, or Java and Publish to Ovi Store >> http://p.sf.net/sfu/nokia-dev2dev >> _______________________________________________ >> gumstix-users mailing list >> gum...@li... >> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users >> > > > > -- > > ======================= > Liem Leong > > -- ======================= Liem Leong |
From: Gordon K. <go...@gu...> - 2004-09-04 18:26:50
|
Reuben, The gumstix board (=main board) has all the processing, memory and flash, as well as a bluetooth antenna, MMC card slot, and the power circuitry. The buddy board is a daughtercard that brings out the I/O and also has a power connector on it. To do a fileserver you would need I/O and power. If you wanted to use bluetooth the I/O would be the antenna on the gumstix board, but you would still need power that would come from the buddy board in the waysmall. Which brings up an important question for me: would people be interested in a gumstix with 2 leads on it for power, just for connection to your own battery/power source and relying on the bluetooth connection? Gordon -----Original Message----- From: gum...@li... [mailto:gum...@li...] On Behalf Of Reuben Sutton Sent: Saturday, September 04, 2004 10:29 AM To: gum...@li... Subject: [Gumstix-users] Help Hi, I think i'm missing something with my understanding... What does the buddy board do? What does the main board do? If someone wanted to run a small fileserver using gumstix would i need a waysmall? Thanks Reuben ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by BEA Weblogic Workshop FREE Java Enterprise J2EE developer tools! Get your free copy of BEA WebLogic Workshop 8.1 today. http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=5047&alloc_id=10808&op=click _______________________________________________ gumstix-users mailing list gum...@li... https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gumstix-users |
From: Benjamin H. <be...@ho...> - 2004-09-05 00:11:03
|
Does anyone know how the gumstix performs with Familiar, or any of the other 'embedded' linux distros? |
From: Craig H. <cr...@hu...> - 2004-09-05 16:19:02
|
You will need some hardware defs that aren't probably in any of the standard linux distros, but you can probably get them working by using the patches we provide through our SVN server at http://svn.rungie.com/svn/gumstix-buildroot/trunk -- Alternatively, you can build a kernel using our buildroot, and drop it into the distro you want to try out. No reason I can think of that whatever ARM distro you choose shouldn't behave OK if you have a working kernel... C On Sep 4, 2004, at 5:10 PM, Benjamin Hodgens wrote: > Does anyone know how the gumstix performs with Familiar, or any of the > other 'embedded' linux distros? |
From: Chris L. <ke...@ha...> - 2004-09-07 02:32:24
|
* Craig Hughes (cr...@hu...) wrote: > >Does anyone know how the gumstix performs with Familiar, or any of the > >other 'embedded' linux distros? > > You will need some hardware defs that aren't probably in any of the > standard linux distros, but you can probably get them working by using > the patches we provide through our SVN server at > http://svn.rungie.com/svn/gumstix-buildroot/trunk -- Alternatively, you > can build a kernel using our buildroot, and drop it into the distro you > want to try out. No reason I can think of that whatever ARM distro you > choose shouldn't behave OK if you have a working kernel... The openembedded build tools can target the gumstix, though I doubt it's being actively maintained. OE is being used to produce the distributions for the next OpenZaurus release, the next Familiar release, the next OpenSimpad release, and numerous others. I would recommend taking a look. The primary upstream package metadata repository includes over 1,000 buildable packages. http://openembedded.org/ -> wiki -> GettingStarted -- Chris Larson - kergoth at handhelds dot org Linux Software Systems Engineer - clarson at ti dot com OpenZaurus Project Maintainer - http://openzaurus.org/ |