Hi Zivko,

While your production board may only have flash, I hope you have a
development board as well.
Anyways, I usually have an ethernet connection on the development
boards. For TV's you may have a USB connection, where you coult mount
a filesystem.

Martin

On Wed, Feb 04, 2009 at 08:32:56AM +0100, Radonjic Zivko wrote:
> Hello Marton.
> 
> Thank you for your quick response. 
> 
> First of all we are dealing with both analog and digital signals. As far as I 
> understand, LTP should be installed, in my case, on a processor where kernel 
> is also downloaded. Problem is in limited flash memory on the board. 
> 
> Do you have some advice for me how to solve this problem?
> 
> Thanks and regards
> 
> Zivko Radonjic
> TV_SW Group / Engineer
> Tel +381-(0)21-4801-108
> Fax +381-(0)21-450-721
> [email protected]
>  
> MicronasNIT LLC
> Fruskogorska 11
> 21000 Novi Sad
> Serbia
> www.micronasnit.com
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Németh Márton [mailto:[email protected]] 
> Sent: 04 February 2009 07:54
> To: Radonjic Zivko
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [LTP] TV linux testing
> 
> Radonjic Zivko wrote:
> > Hello all.
> Hi,
> 
> > We are developing kernel for TVs. As much as I understand, the only way
> 
> I understand that you are creating a product like set-top-box or a complete
> television based on digital circuits. Are you dealing with analog or digital
> broadcast receiver?
> 
> > to test kernel with LTP is while kernel is running? It could be a
> > problem for us. Is there anyone with similar problem? Maybe have some
> > advice for us?
> 
> Please tell me if I understand you wrongly. LTP contains different tests and
> testsuites, and as far as I know the tests are dynamic tests which means that
> the Linux kernel is running on a processor and LTP is also running and tries
> to find out the responses of Linux kernel in different situations/states.
> 
> For example in LTP you can find a testsuite for V4L2 under
> testcases/kernel/device-drivers/v4l/user_space which is used for "analog TV
> tuners" under Linux.
> 
> If you want to run some static tests, i.e. analyze your source code when
> it is not running, then you can use different analysis tools. The easiest
> would be to use gcc with parameters "-O2 -Wall -Wextra". This will turn on
> a lot of warning messages which might help you to find some problems as early
> as compile time.
> 
> For details you might want to read some articles:
>  - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_code_analysis
>  - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tools_for_static_code_analysis
> 
> Regards,
> 
>       Márton Németh
> 
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-- 
Martin
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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today. - Martin Habets
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