On Tue, Sep 8, 2015 at 4:13 AM, Jakub Jančo wrote:
> Is slow login still present on ssh?
> Because we had problem, that ssh login takes about 10seconds and
> telnet is instant. It is difference if we do initial bulk setup for
> more devices.
Experience with SSH breakage tells me that kind of slow
On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 00:32, Bastian Bittorf wrote:
> this is theory as must be checked.
If the GCC man page is theoretical, then I'm obviously a big fan of
fiction. Please spend an evening with 'man 1 gcc' and learn what
optimizations are turned on with what switches and what effects those
op
On Sun, Jan 16, 2011 at 10:06, Bastian Bittorf wrote:
> what is the best point to enforce an
> compilation with -O3 instead of -Os ?
Sorry to answer a question with another question, but why -O3? Are
you aware that on these size- and performance-restricted platforms -Os
is most likely to give yo
file/directory structure that's placed
in a directory called "files" at the root of your build directory gets
placed in the root of your filesystem image prior to cutting it.
RB
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On Thu, Jul 1, 2010 at 12:15, Niclas Koeser wrote:
> I wonder if there are differrent Versions of the V2 around...
Entirely plausible. Unfortunately, that job's long behind me and I
don't have any of the hardware laying around...
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On Thu, Jul 1, 2010 at 11:58, Niclas Koeser wrote:
> Please note <4c164de5.5030...@informatik.uni-kiel.de>. ;)
I understand, and gather that you're booting 2.6 on the system (which
I was able to do as well). My main question is whether the PCMCIA
works properly now or not. Fixing it was rather
que, as it's the only commercial PCMCIA on MIPS I'm aware of.
RB
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On Tue, Apr 14, 2009 at 17:43, Benjamin Henrion wrote:
> BTW, is it possible to have a ZIP copy of the full wiki, including the
> history of the pages?
That's what we (Kloschi and I) are waiting on.
> I have contributed to the wiki, and I expect that the history of pages
> will disappear.
Most
On Tue, Apr 14, 2009 at 09:44, Weedy wrote:
> N. Fresh start is good. Just look at
> gentoo-wiki.{com,info}
Take a breath... Good. :)
There's a lot of really good information in the old wiki, much of
which is still valid but poorly maintained. The intent is _not_ t
On Mon, Apr 13, 2009 at 19:22, poelzi wrote:
>> - SVN access: There has been a switch from https:// (webdav) url to
>> svn:// url.
>> Should you encounter problems with updating your local copy, the please
>> run the following command in the local directory:
>
> btw. it would be good if http://svn
> Currently I am working on the brcm 2.4 build and was hoping to move to
> the 2.6 kernel if the wifi and pcmcia support was resolved. I saw a
> post in the forums saying wifi was reasonably stable so was going to
> check out head and build and see how it goes.
I also did some work on the PCMCIA b
On Mon, Mar 23, 2009 at 18:47, Peter Lambrechtsen
wrote:
> The below link is broken:
>
> http://wiki.openwrt.org/OpenWrtDocs/Hardware/Linksys/WRT54G3G
Known issue - I broke it and have a much-updated version of the page
waiting to be inserted. Brokenness aside, I'd be interested in what
you're d
On Wed, Feb 18, 2009 at 08:54, Kövesdi György wrote:
> The "opkg upgrade" upgraded my kernel from 2.6.25.19 to 2.6.28.5.
> After reboot, the old kernel runs. What can I do to solve it?
Full re-flash. The kernel may appear to be upgraded, but is
monolithically integrated with the firmware. There
On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 00:30, Warren Turkal wrote:
> 1. What specific kernel version is the 2.6.28 kernel patch set
> designed to be applied (2.6.28 or 2.6.28.1)? How do I look this
> information up for myself?
That's set in the LINUX_VERSION variable in the target's Makefile
(target/linux/brcm4
d is
enabled by a discrete kernel option (CONFIG_IP_MULTIPLE_TABLES) which
probably isn't enabled in your kernel. The third sentence of the
documentation you should have read
(http://lartc.org/howto/lartc.rpdb.html) tells you this.
RB
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s targeted at, integrated HD or not. Does the
700gE not have any flash at all? What do you hope to gain by
propagating yet another edge case?
RB
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> Took me a few hours
>
> I *REALLY* I wish I were as smart as most of you !!
Notice I put "port" in quotes - all the groundwork was laid, I just
had to set the version magic, poke around a little to make sure things
were compatible, and flash. Hardly anythin
On Tue, Oct 28, 2008 at 09:50, Tripp Lilley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I read "close" here as "working closely together," not as a typo for "closed."
:) Thanks for the typo/homonym help! That would certainly make more sense.
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project would directly conflict with that licensing.
That said, unless they have some exotic setup or hardware, how hard
will it be since there are already IXP and ar7xxx ports in trunk?
Took me a few hours to "port" the AR7 build to the AG310...
RB
_
>From what I see it is VERY hard to determine what RAM is really needed
> by the kernel??!!
Not sure what you're talking about - one link from the landing page
("Size" -> http://elinux.org/System_Size) indicates you need at least
384k RAM for a 32-bit 2.6 kernel running TCP. Seems pretty clea
> 50kB of RAM is *far* from sufficient. OpenWRT runs in 8MB of RAM, and
> might even do something useful in 4MB, but muh below that doesn't sound
> promising at all.
Under 1MB doesn't even sound promising for an utterly minimal 2.4
kernel. OWRT may be pretty tiny, fitting into 2-3MB of flash
som
> Seems like you sent the binary image instead of the patch if I am not
> mistaking ?
Far from being mistaken - that was utter fail on my part. Deepest
apologies for the 3.4M attachment!
wrt54g3g-st-vermagic.patch
Description: Binary data
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> I wanted to add this to the NP25G page on the wiki, but when I try to
> make an account it says "500 Internal Server Error (sorry - we're
> updating)" :-(
Welcome to the party. They've been reportedly setting up a new server
and migrating stuff over to that for over a year now. Keep trying,
pa
t joining such entities is that
the POC on both sides is usually restricted to a 1:1 relationship.
Enter hit-by-a-bus discussion.
What is OpenWrt's current relationship with private business
interests? How will that play into a transition?
RB
I'm only just starting to work with Asterisk, but integrating its
configuration into UCI will be a great start in that direction. Looks
nice!
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> do we want bugs to be reported in trac or on the mailing list.
> I personally find it difficult to keep track of which patches on the
> mailing list have been applied and which have not.
I'm perfectly fine with whatever mechanism is easiest for the
developers actually applying the patches. It's
> 2) On another note: is there a possibility to immediately set the root
> password and not start up the telnet daemon at first boot?
Disable telnetd in your busybox configuration and either place a
prepared passwd file in ${BUILDROOT}/files/etc/passwd (copied from
packages/base-files/files/etc/pa
r the 3g interface to show up. It also fixes
apparent bugs in the rest of setup_interface_3g where config_get is
called against $cfg (which isn't declared in that scope) as opposed to
$config.
Signed-off-by: RB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
004-add_maxwait_config_fix.patch
Descript
Removes the generic support for the AirCard 875 from usbserial.c in
the generic-2.4 profile
Signed-off-by: RB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
001-drop_generic_sierra.patch
Description: Binary data
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Enable sierra.c to be configured/built for 2.4 as well.
Signed-off-by: RB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
003-enable_usb-serial-sierrawireless_2.4.patch
Description: Binary data
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> The default SVN build is 1.9M in size. IIRC the micro build of whiterussion
> was like 1.3M, so I wonder what I need to remove to get it back to that
> size.
Whiterussian's build process was completely different, and I don't see
much attention being paid to the systems with under 2MB of flash any
On Tue, Jul 15, 2008 at 6:21 AM, Steven Van Ingelgem
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What packages are minimally needed to make an OpenWRT run?
The below list is, for all intents and purposes, the minimal list.
Notes below on removal.
> The packages getting compiled are:
> - base-files
> - bridge-ut
On Tue, Jul 15, 2008 at 7:13 AM, Steven Van Ingelgem
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What is switch? I thought that was the "switch/case" command in the basic
> "sh"?
Switch, as in the tiny (11.4k on my mipsel) utility used to configure
your switch ports and VLANs. You could write your own suite of
s
> For reference, "bricked" is a term I use when there is absolutely nothing
> that can be done to recover a router -- it should not be applied to
> cases of nihilistic ignorance or apathy.
I think most of us here refer to that as a system that isn't even
recoverable via serial terminal - the bootl
On 7/13/08, Michael Geddes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Update to asterisk 1.4.21 (yes there's a 1.4.21.1 but I haven't tested it)
Not sure why, but this hit GMail's spam filter for me. Just an FYI -
hope it made it to everyone else.
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ete it really would be best to submit them as
separate patches. If you'll watch the SVN checkin activity, every
delta is incremental, if not discrete; if your changes aren't the same
it's unlikely that one of the devs will take the time to split your
patch apart, individually t
updates for at least part of the tree. I've not investigated
how make handles non-ASCII characters, but it'll be at least something
to consider when setting non-Anglo names.
RB
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> The original thought behind the present model for submission of patches
> was based on the existing procedure for kernel patch submission - it
> looked like a model which worked, and by implementing it OpenWrt would
> "teach" people a skill which could be needed later on.
I don't disagree, bu
> about this), and the developer-group would be really happy to listen to
> ideas, suggestions and practical solutions.
Although we can make suggestions we think might work, it really comes
down to what works best for the core developers (other than ignoring
input... ;) ).
Off the top of my head I
> picking my nose, waiting on a patch from you, so i can ignore it and
> then get back to picking my nose.
I doubt any of we who have submitted ignored updates feel that way,
and I'm sorry you think we do. The question I have is whether you
core devs would prefer patches submitted in a different
This patch enables sierra.o to be configured and compiled for the
brcm-2.4 platform.
Signed-off-by: RB<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
sierra-allow-2.4.patch
Description: Binary data
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This patchset adds support for the Sierra Wireless 3G modem series to
the brcm-2.4 platform. It is focused on the Linksys WRT54G3G, but
should work for any brcm-2.4 system with USB or PCMCIA/Cardbus.
What has changed since the patch was last issued is that we add the
vendor/product ID table from
> I couldn't find any notes about the card I was using in TRAC, so my
> apologies if this patch is superfluous.
> Mark Deneen
I'm going to incorporate this patch into mine and make the whole thing
more atomic (breaking up the actual patch to 2.4.35 more) and
re-submit. On a side note, your patc
participate in discussions, please subscribe to the full
daily flow and respond to the actual messages you want to. Otherwise,
your message has completely different headers (in particular
Message-ID and In-Reply-To) that most mail parsers use to associate
threads. Pine should do just fine ke
Some questions that popped up but may not be answerable yet...
> Not
> truely a multi-cpu system, it's actually a multi-threaded core (sort of
> like
> Intel's hyperthreading architecture) that appears as a 7 CPU SMP system.
So more along the lines of Sun's Niagra et. al. (not cores but thread
> to the workspace. I've added a patched-2.6.20 directory to
> target/linux/generic-2.6 and this allows me to control exactly which
> patches are applied against my kernel, but it seems wrong to have to
> modify the generic-2.6 folder to get what I want. If there is a way to
> accomplish thi
has
been obsoleted by the author in favor of paxctl, so I added a bit of
logic to prefer paxctl over chpax.
signed-off by: RB<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
x86-gen_image-paxctl.patch
Description: Binary data
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To fully re-package the Linksys userspace/web interface with complete OpenWRT
compatibility and functionality is a pretty monumental task. I don't have a
524 to test it with (only a hw rev 1), but say "let it stand"; notwithstanding
I don't have much say in the matter.
He's done a lot of hard
> i'm not sure what that even means. thoughts?
Standard Template Library... if OpenWRT doesn't have one it's likely
due to a mucked-up C++ implementation (only having covered it briefly
in a course 8 years ago myself).
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o work on project X, and not typically to
troubleshoot interactions with the toolchain.
RB
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ace.
This kinda eliminates the need for /etc/ppp/3g.connect - I think I've
replaced that functionality, but in a slightly more standardized
method, using the 'connect' variable understood by PPP.
Signed-off-by: RB<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
comgt-evdo.patch
Description: Binary data
What a trip. I still haven't gotten PCMCIA working on 2.6, but have
found something else very much interesting.
I had a stroke of something and snagged drivers/usb/serial/sierra.c
for 2.4.20 out of the GPL tarball from Linksys. It has the
appropriate vendor/device IDs in it, and compiled cleanly
Bleeding-edge 10219 still exhibits the same behaviour - crash on
writing CB_SOCKET_MASK or reading I365_INTCTL. I'm going to try to
take it up with the yenta_socket.c owners.
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> I don't know much about that interrupt thing that you mentioned, but for
> improved stability, you should switch to trunk when playing with Linux 2.6
> on Broadcom. There are some cache coherency / memory management issues in
> 7.09, which are almost completely fixed in trunk.
I'll do that. I h
ng on this [probably broken] TI implementation?
RB
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Going at it today.
One issue seems to be disabling interrupts by writing 0x0 to
CB_SOCKET_MASK in yenta_probe. I don't know enough about driver
development to know why that blows up, but the same thing is done
(with the same comment) in the 2.4 series' initialization (yenta_open)
as well. Preven
One last bit and I'll quiet down for a bit. It's absolutely
consistent that the first time yenta_socket is loaded, the system
resets (goes to CFE with zero warning). The second time produces the
above oops consistently.
RB
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KALLSYMS_ALL didn't produce any different output than the one above.
If you would like, I can start stripping those parts out until it'll
produce a crash with yenta_socket. In the meantime, here is the oops
from crashing on yenta_socket, run through ksymoops.
##
Ugh. Disregard that post - I'll post using KALLSYMS_ALL shortly.
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It didn't fail at the same point, rather (seemingly) when switch_robo
was loading. If you want, I can run it through ksymoops but I haven't
done anything funny.
Kernel bug detected[#1]:
Cpu 0
$ 0 : 1000a800 0001 00024000
$ 4 : 812a9000 80258a74 80258a3c
$ 8 : 80001000
On a laptop, it comes up as a USB hub with three UARTS on it - general
driver stack is as follows:
sierra
usbserial
ohci-hcd
yenta-socket
pcmcia
AFACT from Sierra's site, all of their new cards follow this model
regardless of connection media.
RB
On 1/15/08, Felix Fietkau <[EMAIL P
Hopefully this will catch someone in a helpful mood.
Right now, there is no way for anyone to use Sierra Wireless (standard
handout from Verizon/Sprint) cellular cards with OpenWRT on the
Broadcom 47xx platform. Although it seems Linksys ported sierra.c
over from the linux-2.6 (as evidenced by si
me where to re-enable PCMCIA for
brcm47xx with the 2.6 tree? Driver/tool breakage I can deal with, but
figuring out your build system is giving me new headaches.
RB
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> why does the 2.4-based build select PCMCIA support, but not the 2.6?
> i would have thought that those two builds should be functionally
> equivalent, at least in terms of features.
Same here - I see bits hinting that there are memory resource issues
on the one Linksys brcm47xx with PCMCIA (WR
> You will have to offer more information, there are to many 'boards'
I absolutely agree, and fully intend to. I just want to poke around a
bit before wasting any of the developers' time. Hence the request for
pointers toward serial resources - I've done just enough poking at
embedded systems tha
Can anyone point me to a decent resource to start mucking about with
serial headers on an unknown motherboard? I have before me what looks
like a typical embedded board with a custom-branded processor I
suspect is running Linux. It has a 14-pin header (#3 missing) that
seems right, but since I'm
_ADDR to 0x1 got past that, and the
driver enumerates the expected number of VLANs (16) and one more port
than I expected (6), but accessing anything generated on the fly
generates 'timeout in robo_reg' errors.
Think it's just a lack of magical numbers for this specific switch, o
other comes up with a 'corrupted' EEPROM, but one can
still specify a MAC for it and press on.
RB
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to
the code yet to see if it's MIPS-specific.
Any input?
RB
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