My apologies; could you possibly point me to a link to one of your images? or would you recommend keep working on being able to download and compile an image myself in order to simplify staying current? I appreciate whatever time you have to point me in a direction as I understand the demands on your considerable expertise.
-Ken

On 13-11-08 08:18 PM, Robert Nelson wrote:


On Nov 8, 2013 6:26 PM, "Kenneth Martin" <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
> Robert, just for your info: after a day, I was unsuccessful with below. So I decided to go back to an image install. From
> http://www.armhf.com/index.php/getting-started-with-ubuntu-img-file/
> I dfollowed the link to
> http://www.armhf.com/index.php/download/
> and downloaded http://s3.armhf.com/debian/saucy/bone/ubuntu-saucy-13.10-armhf-3.8.13-bone28.img.xz
> which I believe is your image file. I

It's not...

installed it my sd card using xz -cd *.xz > dev/sdf
> mounted the new sd card (looked fine), copied in my old /etc/network/intefaces file > plugged it into my beagle and I am back where I was about 3 months ago with all ports closed.
>
> > nmap -A beagle
>
> Starting Nmap 6.00 ( http://nmap.org ) at 2013-11-08 16:45 EST
> Nmap scan report for beagle (192.168.1.128)
> Host is up (0.0022s latency).
> rDNS record for 192.168.1.128 <http://192.168.1.128>: beaglebone.local
> All 1000 scanned ports on beagle (192.168.1.128) are closed
>
> Service detection performed. Please report any incorrect results at http://nmap.org/submit/ .
> Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 0.20 seconds
> >
>
> If I plug in my bone20 sd card and do the same, I get
>
> > nmap -A beagle
>
> Starting Nmap 6.00 ( http://nmap.org ) at 2013-11-08 16:54 EST
> Nmap scan report for beagle (192.168.1.128)
> Host is up (0.0021s latency).
> rDNS record for 192.168.1.128 <http://192.168.1.128>: beaglebone.local
> Not shown: 999 closed ports
> PORT   STATE SERVICE VERSION
> 22/tcp open  ssh     OpenSSH 6.1p1 Debian 4 (protocol 2.0)
> | ssh-hostkey: 1024 5d:84:2e:7c:c4:1a:10:ee:1c:d3:97:76:66:b5:92:8f (DSA)
> |_2048 08:8b:d8:8e:4c:fc:d2:74:f1:46:e9:6e:b8:28:eb:ab (RSA)
> Service Info: OS: Linux; CPE: cpe:/o:linux:kernel
>
> Service detection performed. Please report any incorrect results at http://nmap.org/submit/ .
> Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 0.55 seconds
> >
>
> so I believe my network is fine.
>
> I have no idea why I can't connect with your images, but without being able to connect, I have no way of figuring out what is going wrong. Any thoughts on > uEnv.txt not being compatible. Any thoughts about the best way to try and get a serial usb link going? I will keep trying, but am totally lost on what to do. Everything seems to be going right until I try to login in over the internet. Your image seems to boot up fine, with the lights doing the right things, and booting down after 10 seconds when holding the reset key down etc., just can't get into it over the ethernet.
>
> -Ken
>
>
> On 13-11-07 06:00 PM, Robert Nelson wrote:
>>
>> On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 4:49 PM, Bit Pusher <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>
>>> I am interesting in downloading and upgrading my kernel to Linux
>>> ubuntu-armhf 3.8.13-bone28 from Linux ubuntu-armhf 3.8.13-bone20.
>>
>> If it helps, since it sounds like your starting over to "upgrading"
>> your system, this time maybe start with an image with easy kernel
>> upgrades?
>>
>> http://elinux.org/BeagleBoardUbuntu#Demo_Image
>>
>> (or if your in a none linux environment..)
>> http://elinux.org/BeagleBoardUbuntu#eMMC:_BeagleBone_Black
>>
>> as kernel upgrades are as easy as:
>>
>> wget http://rcn-ee.net/deb/raring-armhf/v3.8.13-bone28/install-me.sh
>> sudo /bin/bash install-me.sh
>>
>>
>>> I have been working in 20 for a few months and have installed quite a few
>>> applications. Are there any directions on:
>>> 1) Listing current apt-get packages that need to be re-installed (without
>>> listing dependencies).
>>
>> dpkg --get-selections > /backup/installed-software.log
>>
>> sudo aptitude install $(cat /backup/installed-software.log)
>>
>>> 2) What directories besides /etc, /home, /lib/firmware and /boot, etc should
>>> be backed up and re-copied to new system
>>
>> ignore /boot/ the new image should populate the bootloader...
>>
>>> 3) Any other considerations for the backup.
>>> This could be a good area for a tutorial; any takers? I could try, but I'm
>>> not knowledgeable enough in kernel/driver issues.
>>> Related question: how often should one be considering going through this
>>> process? Can it be scripted? Thanks.
>>
>> ah, store your application/scripts off the device and into a private
>> git/github/etc location... ;)
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>
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