On 2021-06-05 15:04:45 +0300 (+0300), Andrei POPESCU wrote: [...] > For a cheap board now I'd probably go for a ROCK64 (USB3 instead > of USB2), or even a RockPro64 (better CPU, PCIe, unfortunately > limited to 4 GB RAM). > > Heating could also be an issue under load, so you should consider > getting at least a passive heat sink as well, just in case.
I have a number of the Radxa Rock Pro boards I used for years in my own makeshift netbooks and as embedded low-power servers (all running Jessie and, then-testing, Stretch/Sid), and they do work great (I didn't add any heatsinks, for what it's worth). They're aging now, but being quad-core at 1.6GHz and having 2GB of rather fast RAM made them quite performant at the time they originally shipped. Also plenty of storage if you crammed a large enough µSD card in it. The vendor seemed dedicated to trying to upstream all the relevant drivers for the RK3188 SOC in Linux, but as time went on that effort stalled and I was only ever able to use much of the onboard components with kernel patches which went unmaintained and meant being stuck on increasingly outdated kernel versions. I suppose it's worth dusting one of these off and revisiting the state of modern kernels for RK3188-based systems. These were great little boards though, and I loved that they had published schematics, parts diagrams, et cetera. They really got behind the (at the time, fledgling) OSHW movement: https://github.com/radxa/oshw/tree/master/rock_pro Definitely worth checking out. -- Jeremy Stanley
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