Do you have a serial port, and access to the bootloader? First step,
generally, is to try a ramboot image. You transfer it and boot from
ram using the boot loader. Watch the serial output to get an idea of
what changes you need to support the board.

~Jonathan Bennett

On Sat, Apr 28, 2012 at 6:58 AM, Alberich de megres
<alberich...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello Guys,
>
> I'm newbie at openwrt, since now I've used allways boards with jtag.
> I have a cisco e3000 router, which I bought some time ago, and I think
> is time to give it a try with openwrt.
>
> I saw there's no official build for the router, but some promising
> test. My question is how you test/develop the kernel for this routers?
>
> Let's suppose I don't have the jtag access, and normally we don't hit
> with the first try (on a new kernel porting) a full working kernel.
> How you test those new kernels?
>
> Thanks!!!
> Alberich
> _______________________________________________
> openwrt-devel mailing list
> openwrt-devel@lists.openwrt.org
> https://lists.openwrt.org/mailman/listinfo/openwrt-devel
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