Hi, I've prepared a new release of DebXO. This has a number of new features and desktops.
NEW FEATURES: - The JFFS2 images now have partition support. While this shaves a number of seconds off of the boot time, we can take better advantage of it in the future (doing things like using UBIFS). JFFS2 is well past its prime; moving away from it will help performance a lot. - EXT3 images have been added. This allows for booting off of USB and/or SD. Note that the image size I chose is 2GB, so you'll need a USB stick or SD card of at least that size. - The kernel is now almost completely modular, and includes every module under the sun. For those of you with random USB hardware that wanted to use it with DebXO.. if it's in 2.6.25, it should work with DebXO. - New desktops! DebXO 0.1 only had a Gnome desktop; this release includes KDE, LXDE, Sugar, Awesome and Gnome desktops. I personally run (and work on) the Gnome desktop. Holger Levsen is to thank for the Sugar and Awesome desktops. James Cameron did the work for the KDE and LXDE desktops. A huge thanks to both of them! As far as bootup times, nand is still pretty absymal (due to jffs2); however, SD booting takes 75 seconds from OFW to fully usable X. INSTALLATION ONTO NAND FLASH: The release can be found here (note that the URL has changed): http://lunge.mit.edu/~dilinger/debxo-0.2/images/ To install onto the XO's flash, download the debxo-$DESKTOP.jffs2.dat and debxo-$DESKTOP.jffs2.img to a USB or SD stick (where $DESKTOP is one of the various desktops - gnome, kde, lxde, sugar, or awesome). Boot into OFW (make sure your XO is unlocked!), and run update-nand disk:\debxo-$DESKTOP.jffs2.img or update-nand sd:\debxo-$DESKTOP.jffs2.img (depending upon whether you downloaded to an SD or USB disk). If your SD or USB device is using a windows filesystem, you can figure out the name of the image by running dir disk:\ If update-nand spits out any errors, make sure you're running an appropriately up-to-date version of OFW. The q2d* series do not support update-nand, and versions q2e18 and q2e19 are known to be buggy with partitions. Firmware and instructions for upgrading can be found here: http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Firmware INSTALLATION ONTO SD/USB: To install onto an SD or USB device, download the debxo-$DESKTOP.ext3.img.gz file, and run zcat debxo-$DESKTOP.ext3.img.gz > /dev/mmcblk0 or zcat debxo-$DESKTOP.ext3.img.gz > /dev/sdX (depending upon whether you're writing to an SD or USB disk). Note that this will overwrite any data that is on the SD or USB disk. USAGE: By default, a user 'olpc' is created (with no password, and sudo access). Some desktops automatically start a display manager and log you in; some do not. The root password is disabled by default. This is a stock Debian Lenny system with only a few modifications, so it can obviously be tailored. HACKING: xodist is the name of the collection of scripts that are used to produce DebXO. The git repository can be downloaded via: git clone git://lunge.mit.edu/git/xodist There's also a web interface to that: http://lunge.mit.edu/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?p=xodist;a=summary There's a TODO file in the repository, but really... just scratch whatever itch you happen to have. Patches are much appreciated. Additional desktops (XFCE, for example?), better handling of the default user/password, boot/runtime optimizations, suggestions for missing packages, etc.. CREDITS: Thanks to James Cameron and Holger Levsen for various patches/tweaks/fixes, and to the various people who tested and provided feedback. _______________________________________________ Olpc-open mailing list [email protected] http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/olpc-open

