I might be wrong, but is it u-boot already configured for nvidia tegra k1 soc?
System chip NVIDIA Tegra K1 (28 nm) Processor Dual-core, 2300 MHz, Denver GPU Kepler RAM 2GB (DDR3) Internal storage 32GB https://www.phonearena.com/phones/Google-Nexus-9_id8926 https://github.com/OE4T/u-boot-tegra On Thu, May 15, 2025, 21:17 mayor84 <mayo...@gmail.com> wrote: > I just googled it. Here's getting started, I think I followed this one > when played with it, some time ago. > > Also, there was examples of so-called standalone apps which you can just > upload to your dev, without updating u-boot itself. > > And I vaguely remember that it could generate u-boot.elf for host machine > and run it in userspace for testing purposes. But right now I can't google > anything useful about it. So qemu is the best option to start, indeed. > > https://krinkinmu.github.io/2023/08/12/getting-started-with-u-boot.html > > > https://github.com/u-boot/u-boot/blob/master/examples/standalone/hello_world.c > > On Thu, May 15, 2025, 20:07 András Páhi <picolisp@software-lab.de> wrote: > >> Nope. I’ve searched the web for the Nexus series tablets and U-Boot >> images, but all I’ve found just found a similar question on a FreeBSD >> forum. >> >> pahihu >> >> > On 2025. May 15., at 16:16, Alexander Burger <picolisp@software-lab.de> >> wrote: >> > >> > On Thu, May 15, 2025 at 03:42:42PM +0200, András Páhi wrote: >> >> The easy way: >> >> Check for up-to-date U-Boot images with TCP support for the Nexus 9, >> then update the U-Boot firmware. >> >> You can compile and package apps for U-Boot to execute from Flash, but >> beware the load address is >> >> system/firmware specific. >> >> >> >> Then if you provide a script for U-Boot to execute on power-up, it can >> automatically execute your app. >> > >> > Do you have any links to such images and documentation? >> > >> > ☺/ A!ex >> > >> > -- >> > UNSUBSCRIBE: mailto:picolisp@software-lab.de?subject=Unsubscribe >> >> >> -- >> UNSUBSCRIBE: mailto:picolisp@software-lab.de?subjectUnsubscribe >> >