I'm not 100% sure of what I did, but I remember a similar problem. I
currently have:
CONFIG_SOFT_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_WD1100=m
and I only load WD1100 in /etc/modules. Reboot works by killing the
watchdog process. I'm not happy with this set-up yet because the wd1100
gets loaded too late in the
Has anyone been successful in compiling kismet (a wireless network scanner)
for uBering? Looks doable, specially a bare bones version, but I'm not that
proficient in setting such things up.
Also, I'm having problems compiling the madwifi atheros tools. The error I
get is:
I'm having difficulties with the loading of LRPs at boot time (i.e. the ones listed in
syslinux.cfg) using Bering uClibc. I have a WRAP board with a 1GB IBM microdrive. The
symptom is that about 50% of the cases everything is fine, and 50% LINUXRC shows
root.lrp (nf!) and so on for all LRPs.
Cool. Raises a couple of questions:
- what is the difference between an onboard IDE-CF system and a PCI-IDE CF system?
In particular, how can I tell which I have?
- why does one need to turn DMA off in a PCI-IDE CF system? Is that the case for all
such systems, or only specific ones?
- one
I've been working on building Bering-uClibc from scratch for a WRAP embedded board.
Here is my step-by-step cheat-sheet on how to do it. Caveat: I'm not an expert and
this may not be right and probably won't work for you anyway. I'm posting it in the
hope that it will guide others in the right
Mhh, that would be too reasonable, wouldn't it? :-)
Actually, one dev system is in a machine room at work, the other is in the crawlspace
under my house (old loud machine, this way I don't have to hear it).
Thanks for the nudge, though!
Thorsten
At 05:49 PM 10/4/2004 +0200, Erich Titl
What is the easiest way to create a boot image (on CF card) after having compiled
everything (e.g. builtool.pl build)? I'm sure it's described somewhere, but I can't
locate it. Thanks much!
Thorsten - Satnat Barbara
---
This SF.net
I'm looking for an embedded distro for single-board machines out in the field, mostly
doing wireless routing but also controlling other stuff, such as cameras. In reading
the descriptions of the various LEAF distros it seems Ogygen is the way to go in that
it claims to be very flexible and not