On 2018-02-18, Gene Heskett wrote: > On Saturday 17 February 2018 19:22:06 Vagrant Cascadian wrote: >> On 2018-02-17, Rainer Dorsch wrote: >> > Am Sonntag, 11. Februar 2018, 22:24:51 CET schrieb Rainer Dorsch: >> >> Am Sonntag, 11. Februar 2018, 13:20:07 CET schrieb Vagrant Cascadian: >> >> > On 2018-02-11, Rainer Dorsch wrote: ... > Thank you very very much, this is probably the post, a howto, that I've > been looking for, for months.
Glad it was helpful. > Now my problem is that the db for flash-kernel is 2 or 3 years out of > date and contains no mention of either the pi-3b, Please report bugs against flash-kernel, but please first check against current versions of flash-kernel. There's support for raspberry pi 2b and and 3b in the current version of flash-kernel. You can sometimes grab the relevent stanzas from newer versions and use them on the old version of flash-kernel by adding them to /etc/flash-kernel/db: Machine: Raspberry Pi 3 Model B Kernel-Flavors: arm64 armmp armmp-lpae DTB-Id: bcm2837-rpi-3-b.dtb U-Boot-Script-Name: bootscr.uboot-generic Required-Packages: u-boot-tools Boot-Script-Path: /boot/boot.scr I am using the pi 2b with the version of linux and flash-kernel from Debian stretch. Raspbian's kernel likely has the legacy device-tree names and you might have to adjust flash-kernel configuration for that. Raspbian also doesn't typically use u-boot for a bootloader, and flash-kernel doesn't do anything to configure booting from the default boot firmware. > nor the pine offering called the rock64. There isn't support for the rock64 in mainline u-boot, and I'm not sure how good the linux kernel support is. So I'm not sure it makes sense to add a flash-kernel entry for it until it's better supported in mainline linux and u-boot; Debian doesn't usually add support that isn't present in mainline, as long-term maintenance impractical. I've got one, so I'll keep an eye on it and try to enable support in Debian as it becomes available. > And quite likely, u-boot-tools is also dated. I'm not sure what you're referring to here, but there's u-boot 2018.01 in experimental, and 2017.11 in sid/buster. There's a 2018.03-rc1 that I haven't yet uploaded. Stretch has the most recent u-boot version at the time of stretch freeze, which was in late 2016, so it only has 2016.11. But that's how stable releases work; major new versions of software does not typically get added to a stable release. > Where can I report that? In Debian, it's often good to report a bug through the Debian Bug Tracking System: https://www.debian.org/Bugs/Reporting live well, vagrant
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