Myself and a colleague are developing a new Cortex-A9-based router. I
would like to use OpenBSD as the O.S. for reasons of the security
credentials that OpenBSD has.
I have made a start in getting OpenBSD running on the hardware but at
the moment, the only tool I can use for debugging is a JTAG
On Mon, Jul 04, 2016 at 09:49:57AM +0100, David Barrass wrote:
> Myself and a colleague are developing a new Cortex-A9-based router. I would
> like to use OpenBSD as the O.S. for reasons of the security credentials that
> OpenBSD has.
> I have made a start in getting OpenBSD running on the hardware
On 04/07/16 10:12, Jonathan Gray wrote:
On Mon, Jul 04, 2016 at 09:49:57AM +0100, David Barrass wrote:
Myself and a colleague are developing a new Cortex-A9-based router. I would
like to use OpenBSD as the O.S. for reasons of the security credentials that
OpenBSD has.
I have made a start in gett
On 6/30/16, Daniel Bolgheroni wrote:
> For those who are always looking for SBCs to build routers, Banana Pi R1
> is cheap and easily available
FWIW, this was for a laboratory application. It would be nice to use
OpenBSD in those settings because the project goals are a good fit
(solid basic func
On Tue, Jun 28, 2016 at 11:44 PM, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> The focus is on the cubox i4pro and to a lesser extent the beaglebone
what are the outstanding issues with the cubox? recent install
indicates MD sdmmc driver is working properly now & i can't seem to
find any egregious issues
On Mon, Jul 04, 2016 at 07:53:23PM -0500, Ian Sutton wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 28, 2016 at 11:44 PM, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> > The focus is on the cubox i4pro and to a lesser extent the beaglebone
>
> what are the outstanding issues with the cubox? recent install
> indicates MD sdmmc driver is working