Thanks for the feedback. @Andrew - removing ‘quiet’ didn’t provide any further diagnostics.
I upgraded to the latest APU2 BIOS / firmware to see if that helped. Since that supports iPXE boot I was able to pull in the BuC x86_64 kernel and initrd, initmod. That worked fine so there’s no compatibility issue, but it still doesn’t want to boot from the SD. @kp - which device are you using to boot from - an mSATA drive, USB or the SD slot? Maybe I need to invest in a small mSATA drive. Thanks, David > On 12 Aug 2016, at 23:17, kp kirchdoerfer <kap...@users.sourceforge.net> > wrote: > > Hi David; > > Am Freitag, 12. August 2016, 12:02:56 schrieb Andrew: >> Hi. >> >> Try to remove 'quiet' option from kernel line. Maybe it'll say you some >> more info. >> >> On 12.08.2016 00:17, David M Brooke wrote: >>> Hi Leaf Users, >>> >>> Does anybody have experience of using the PC Engines APU2 boards with BuC >>> 5.2.x ? >>> >>> I have a brand new apu2c4 board with the 20160307 BIOS. >>> I know the board is good because it works OK with PC Engines’ TinyCore >>> Linux. >>> >>> I've tried using the Bering-uClibc_5.2.6_i686_syslinux_serial115200.tar.gz >>> image extracted onto an SD card with a 2GB FAT32 partition, mounted in >>> the on-board SD slot. It boots into SYSLINUX (v6.03) OK and I see the LP >>> shield logo via the serial console> >>> but it hangs after: >>> Loading /syslinux/linux… ok >>> Loading /initrd.lrp… ok >>> Loading /initmod.lrp… ok >>> >>> That implies it’s loading the files OK but it’s not able to boot the >>> kernel, right? >>> >>> I’ve tried a few other BuC versions (5.1.7, 5.2.7-rc1) and also the x86_64 >>> variant but with the same result. I’ve also tried using the SD card in a >>> USB adaptor (so the APU sees it as USB) but again the same result. >>> >>> On the Hardware Specific Guides page for the APU board I see evidence the >>> APU is working but maybe the APU2 needs different drivers or something? > > > I'm running 5.2 on a APU2. I use the x86_64 version and boot from ext4 > partition. Other than that it should be the stock image. > > kp > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity planning reports. http://sdm.link/zohodev2dev ------------------------------------------------------------------------ leaf-user mailing list: leaf-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/leaf-user Support Request -- http://leaf-project.org/