Building on ARM isn't that horrible. On a BeagleBoard-X15, I can build GNU Radio from source in 2 hours, 12 minutes. That's with 2 GB of RAM and 2 GB of swap on SD card.

Ron

On 4/24/19 01:05, lists wrote:
I built it on a beagle board black, which is not as powerful as a RPI these 
days. This isn't all that fresh in my memory.

I don't recall having to set up VM beyond stock. Slow compilation...well yeah!

It might just be me, but the only signal processng I ever found useful on those 
SBCs was ADSB decoding. Rtlsdr and some flavor of dump1090.



          Original Message



From: muel...@kit.edu
Sent: April 24, 2019 12:51 AM
To: discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org; li...@lazygranch.com; pc...@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] Installing GNURadio On Raspberry Pi


Hi,

On Tue, 2019-04-23 at 19:31 -0700, lists wrote:
https://wiki.gnuradio.org/index.php/Download
uhhh that wiki page is ... dated. It also doesn't solve the issue of
not being able to import gr-osmosdr, which isn't part of GNU Radio
itself!

Also, clearly *not* the way I'd recommend on a raspberry Pi:

What lazygranch recommends is a source build, which takes roughly
forever on a raspberry Pi, and requires use of copious amount of swap
memory, due to the limited amount of RAM of a Raspberry Pi.

So, if you can, get a binary installation of GNU Radio. It seems you
already have one!

Then, you'll need to make sure you've got a working gr-osmosdr
installation on your Pi. How did you install GNU Radio and gr-osmosdr
on your Raspberry Pi so far?

Best regards,
Marcus

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