On 10/26/2014 07:56 AM, Andy Green wrote:

On 26 October 2014 19:50:26 GMT+08:00, Robert Moskowitz <[email protected]> 
wrote:
On 10/26/2014 07:33 AM, Andy Green wrote:
On 26 October 2014 18:40:55 GMT+08:00, Peter Robinson
<[email protected]> wrote:
append ro root=UUID=c078beec-18b2-44ae-aac5-e6fc275b45c5
console=ttyS0,115200 loglevel=8

Then he boots into firstboot on serial console which is nice.
Ethernet
etc seems to work fine.
Couple more findings

   - Cubietruck Ethernet onboard is broken.  His phy negotiates
the
link OK but he cannot pass traffic.  Googling around other people
get
this from non-3.4 kernel, so it's something missing upstream I
guess.
Latest rawhide kernel (3.18.0-0.rc1.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl) and
update
to latest sunxi U-Boot ( e847610a41af2b @
https://github.com/jwrdegoede/u-boot-sunxi ) did not solve it,
it's
still broken.

That uboot is no longer being updated as everything is now
upstream
in
the mainline uboot. I'd use the one shipped with Fedora or
upstream
u-boot 2014.10 GA release.
Okay... but it does not seem to be present at +16 sectors on the sd
image provided by Fedora.
Honestly I would be surprised if it was since it exactly and
incompatibly conflicts with the Cubieboard 2 uboot also required at
+16
sectors of the sd image.

No, we don't provide any default uboot on the images by design
because
the image is designed to be used on a lot more devices than just the
AllWinner devices.


https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Architectures/ARM/F21/Installation#For_AllWinner_Devices
Yeah.  I know it's difficult to do what you're doing.
Perhaps I came at it differently.  It was actually easy for me for some
ha, no.

I mean the unification work that has taken place to make the U-Boots all act 
the same.

I was even able to update my kernel using yum without the whole thing blowing 
up, and that should work on any of the supported boards.  It's a lot of work 
behind the scenes to get there.

If you look back a couple of years, when there was not even a single kernel 
binary for arm that could do this much, that is actually really surprising 
progress.

Also I don't think it's 'easy' you have just been conditioned into thinking it 
must be super difficult.

When was the last time you needed to dd some crap on to your x86 Fedora install 
to make it do something more than die?  Actually this current situation is 
still unreasonable despite the great progress.

F20 on my Lenovo x120. It was a mess, as the write of the efi cruft failed. What it took to get it to work was scary. Supposedly what we learned from my misadventure has been 'fixed' with F21. I have a Lenovo x120 just waiting here for me to test, but I first have to build a local repo, as they have elminated the full DVD with only netinstall which is a pain for those of us with DSL.

We have lived with PC Bios for a long time. I actually like this developing uboot process for right now. Does remind me of all the times I needed to book with a DOS diskette and load a new Bios file to fix some Bios bug. In fact, I had to do this just last year.

I started on PCs in '83 and ran DOS 1.0, and went from there. Linux came MUCH later.

But enough remembering how it was. Peter did point out what we have to deal with the current SOCs and this is not likely to change for some time. For them, if they can get Android working, that is enough to ship their chip.


-Andy

odd reason.  One dd step to get the right uboot.  For a while in the
pre-alpha, I needed a special uboot for the Cubieboard2 direct from
Hans; this is no longer the case though.

Just looking through your list, the u-boots all conflict badly.

This is a terrible shame when we have a single kernel binary now.

Maybe someday there will be a 'single u-boot binary'.

-Andy

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