Finally cracked it!
Finally cracked it!
For a very long time the OpenFrame images haven't been able to move on from the 3.16 kernel branch due to an annoying issue with ALSA that has prevented audio hot-plugging from working. Well, to be fair, it's an annoying issue with how the STAC9202 chip is wired up in the Joggler / OpenFrame 1, but changes in ALSA were making all of the recommended fixes fail miserably.
It's been a pet problem of mine, particularly as one of the main uses of the Joggler has been as an audio playback unit. With the bug present, even when a cable from the back of the unit is permanently connected to headphones or an amplifier there would be an annoying crackling interference from the internal speakers.
WELL NO MORE!
I finally found a little time to work on Debian Bullseye (though I'd originally been targeting Buster... shows how much time has gone by) and in the process compiled the 5.10 kernel. As I checked the boot output for errors I noticed that it enumerated the STAC9202 IC in an identical manner to the 3.16 kernel. Weird, I thought, I'm sure it used to do that differently in the 4.x branch.
So I modified the kernel and userspace patches to apply to kernel 5.10 and tada! It behaves precisely as it did under 3.16. THE FINAL LEVEL COMPLETE!
Well, I'm not quite done, there's something weird happening with the backlight driver, but I think it's a simple fix.
With any luck there'll be some sort of Debian Bullseye image with an up-to-date and fully working kernel available in the next week or two.
It's been a pet problem of mine, particularly as one of the main uses of the Joggler has been as an audio playback unit. With the bug present, even when a cable from the back of the unit is permanently connected to headphones or an amplifier there would be an annoying crackling interference from the internal speakers.
WELL NO MORE!
I finally found a little time to work on Debian Bullseye (though I'd originally been targeting Buster... shows how much time has gone by) and in the process compiled the 5.10 kernel. As I checked the boot output for errors I noticed that it enumerated the STAC9202 IC in an identical manner to the 3.16 kernel. Weird, I thought, I'm sure it used to do that differently in the 4.x branch.
So I modified the kernel and userspace patches to apply to kernel 5.10 and tada! It behaves precisely as it did under 3.16. THE FINAL LEVEL COMPLETE!
Well, I'm not quite done, there's something weird happening with the backlight driver, but I think it's a simple fix.
With any luck there'll be some sort of Debian Bullseye image with an up-to-date and fully working kernel available in the next week or two.
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Re: Finally cracked it!
good news, boss
ronnie
ronnie
Re: Finally cracked it!
Great news!!!!
- Pete
O2 Jogglers running EFI Ubuntu / Squeezeplayer
OpenPeak Voip Telephony / Zigbee tabletops hardware modded with Seabios / RTC / Ethernet ROM edits / SSD drives running XPe for automation screens
Auto mater
O2 Jogglers running EFI Ubuntu / Squeezeplayer
OpenPeak Voip Telephony / Zigbee tabletops hardware modded with Seabios / RTC / Ethernet ROM edits / SSD drives running XPe for automation screens
Auto mater
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Re: Finally cracked it!
That is great news. I would love to move off the ancient builds I am running, if only to give a cheap USB DAC that fails to work with the old stuff.
Re: Finally cracked it!
Thanks, everyone. Backlight driver and ambient light sensor are both working again now too.
There've been a bunch of changes that are messing up the of-* scripts at the moment, so I'll be working on those next. However, if anybody is particularly keen to have a play the version I've just compiled is here.
As the URL suggests this is just a temporary location and the "finished" image files will go in the correct place and be linked from my site in time.
With this version we essentially have software parity with the latest Raspberry Pi images. Obviously stuff custom-compiled stuff for their platform won't work for us, as we're Intel x86 and they're ARM, but general documentation and processes will be comparable.
Oh, by the way, since Debian Buster commands that require root access living in "sbin" directories are not in the user's default path. I'll try to stick to this convention and adjust locations based upon the access requirements of the scripts, but if you "tab tab" a lot for autocompletion and don't see the commands you're looking for, that may be why. Just prefix with sudo, as you would need to in order to run the script.
There've been a bunch of changes that are messing up the of-* scripts at the moment, so I'll be working on those next. However, if anybody is particularly keen to have a play the version I've just compiled is here.
As the URL suggests this is just a temporary location and the "finished" image files will go in the correct place and be linked from my site in time.
With this version we essentially have software parity with the latest Raspberry Pi images. Obviously stuff custom-compiled stuff for their platform won't work for us, as we're Intel x86 and they're ARM, but general documentation and processes will be comparable.
Oh, by the way, since Debian Buster commands that require root access living in "sbin" directories are not in the user's default path. I'll try to stick to this convention and adjust locations based upon the access requirements of the scripts, but if you "tab tab" a lot for autocompletion and don't see the commands you're looking for, that may be why. Just prefix with sudo, as you would need to in order to run the script.
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Re: Finally cracked it!
Just tried, no luckroobarb! wrote: ↑Sat Feb 19, 2022 11:35 pm Thanks, everyone. Backlight driver and ambient light sensor are both working again now too.
There've been a bunch of changes that are messing up the of-* scripts at the moment, so I'll be working on those next. However, if anybody is particularly keen to have a play the version I've just compiled is here.
Code: Select all
Processing triggers for udev (247.3-6) ...
Processing triggers for libc-bin (2.31-13+deb11u2) ...
Configuring Xserver defaults... done.
Installation of Xserver completed.
--2022-02-20 20:59:50-- https://birdslikewires.net/download/openframe/squeezeplay/v7.8/
Resolving birdslikewires.net (birdslikewires.net)... 5.135.163.72, 2001:41d0:8:e648::1
Connecting to birdslikewires.net (birdslikewires.net)|5.135.163.72|:443... connected.
ERROR: The certificate of ‘birdslikewires.net’ is not trusted.
ERROR: The certificate of ‘birdslikewires.net’ doesn't have a known issuer.
--2022-02-20 20:59:50-- https://birdslikewires.net/download/openframe/squeezeplay/v7.8/.md5
Resolving birdslikewires.net (birdslikewires.net)... 5.135.163.72, 2001:41d0:8:e648::1
Connecting to birdslikewires.net (birdslikewires.net)|5.135.163.72|:443... connected.
ERROR: The certificate of ‘birdslikewires.net’ is not trusted.
ERROR: The certificate of ‘birdslikewires.net’ doesn't have a known issuer.
cat: /tmp/.md5: No such file or directory
md5sum: /tmp/: Is a directory
No checksums! Looks like the download failed.
of@openframe:~$ Installation of Xserver completed.
--2022-02-20 20:59:50-- https://birdslikewires.net/download/openframe/squeezeplay/v7.8/
Resolving birdslikewires.net (birdslikewires.net)... 5.135.163.72, 2001:41d0:8:e648::1
Connecting to birdslikewires.net (birdslikewires.net)|5.135.163.72|:443... connected.
ERROR: The certificate of ‘birdslikewires.net’ is not trusted.
ERROR: The certificate of ‘birdslikewires.net’ doesn't have a known issuer.
--2022-02-20 20:59:50-- https://birdslikewires.net/download/openframe/squeezeplay/v7.8/.md5
Resolving birdslikewires.net (birdslikewires.net)... 5.135.163.72, 2001:41d0:8:e648::1
Connecting to birdslikewires.net (birdslikewires.net)|5.135.163.72|:443... connected.
ERROR: The certificate of ‘birdslikewires.net’ is not trusted.
ERROR: The certificate of ‘birdslikewires.net’ doesn't have a known issuer.
cat: /tmp/.md5: No such file or directory
md5sum: /tmp/: Is a directory
No checksums! Looks like the download failed.
of@openframe:~$
ronnie
Re: Finally cracked it!
Aye, as I say, all those scripts are pretty messed up right now and I have no idea if Squeezeplay will work.Man in a van wrote: ↑Sun Feb 20, 2022 10:07 pmJust tried, no luckroobarb! wrote: ↑Sat Feb 19, 2022 11:35 pm Thanks, everyone. Backlight driver and ambient light sensor are both working again now too.
There've been a bunch of changes that are messing up the of-* scripts at the moment, so I'll be working on those next. However, if anybody is particularly keen to have a play the version I've just compiled is here.
Having said that, the errors you're seeing there are because there are no recent certificates installed for comms over HTTPS. Do this first:
Code: Select all
sudo apt update
sudo apt install ca-certificates
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Re: Finally cracked it!
roobarb! wrote: ↑Tue Feb 22, 2022 12:14 pmAye, as I say, all those scripts are pretty messed up right now and I have no idea if Squeezeplay will work.Man in a van wrote: ↑Sun Feb 20, 2022 10:07 pmJust tried, no luckroobarb! wrote: ↑Sat Feb 19, 2022 11:35 pm Thanks, everyone. Backlight driver and ambient light sensor are both working again now too.
There've been a bunch of changes that are messing up the of-* scripts at the moment, so I'll be working on those next. However, if anybody is particularly keen to have a play the version I've just compiled is here.
Having said that, the errors you're seeing there are because there are no recent certificates installed for comms over HTTPS. Do this first:
See what happens if you try again.Code: Select all
sudo apt update sudo apt install ca-certificates
The joggler is set up with a usb hub for the usb-stick and a usb-dac
Those commands install squeezeplay.
However, all that is displayed on the screen is
squeezeplay@openframe
If I "sudo apt install squeezelite" to /etc/default/squeezelite I can playback from the dac (also through the Joggler if I change the output path)
If I install it to /home/squeezeplay/squeezelite it plays back through the Joggler
I also installed LMS v8.2.1 but it does not start
Code: Select all
of@openframe:~$ sudo systemctl status logitechmediaserver
● logitechmediaserver.service - Logitech Media Server
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/logitechmediaserver.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled)
Active: inactive (dead) since Tue 2022-02-22 18:48:24 GMT; 1min 3s ago
Process: 2610 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/squeezeboxserver --prefsdir $PREFSDIR --logdir $LOGDIR --cachedir $CACHEDIR --charset $CHARSET $SLIMOPTIONS (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
Main PID: 2610 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
CPU: 886ms
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe squeezeboxserver[2610]: If you're running some unsupported Linux/Unix platform, please use the buildme.sh
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe squeezeboxserver[2610]: script located here:
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe squeezeboxserver[2610]: https://github.com/Logitech/slimserver-vendor/tree/public/8.2/CPAN
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe squeezeboxserver[2610]: If 8.2 is outdated by the time you read this, Replace "8.2" with the major version
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe squeezeboxserver[2610]: You should never need to do this if you're on Windows or Mac OSX. If the installers
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe squeezeboxserver[2610]: don't work for you, ask for help and/or report a bug.
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe squeezeboxserver[2610]: *******
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe squeezeboxserver[2610]:
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe squeezeboxserver[2610]: Exiting..
Feb 22 18:48:24 openframe systemd[1]: logitechmediaserver.service: Succeeded.
Code: Select all
of@openframe:~$ perl -v
This is perl 5, version 32, subversion 1 (v5.32.1) built for i686-linux-gnu-thread-multi-64int
(with 47 registered patches, see perl -V for more detail)
Copyright 1987-2021, Larry Wall
ronnie
Re: Finally cracked it!
IIRC, the latest, snazziest way of using Logitech Media Server and Squeezeplay was to run a "de-jived" version of Squeezeplay and use the UI to control the squeezelite process running in the background. Is this still The Way, or has a new method taken precedence in the meantime?
If I end up looking at it again, I may as well look at the best method. It was all to do with hi-def audio not working through the old jive player, wasn't it?
If I end up looking at it again, I may as well look at the best method. It was all to do with hi-def audio not working through the old jive player, wasn't it?
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Re: Finally cracked it!
roobarb! wrote: ↑Tue Feb 22, 2022 11:15 pm IIRC, the latest, snazziest way of using Logitech Media Server and Squeezeplay was to run a "de-jived" version of Squeezeplay and use the UI to control the squeezelite process running in the background. Is this still The Way, or has a new method taken precedence in the meantime?
If I end up looking at it again, I may as well look at the best method. It was all to do with hi-def audio not working through the old jive player, wasn't it?
Hi @roobarb!
thank you so much for keeping our little Jogglers usable!!!
And yes: Using the old 'std' Squeezeplay did not work for me reliably anymore. Squeezeplay sometimes just crashed when playing Audio, leaving me just with the command line on the screen.
I then followed the 'Dirty Hack' from @DJWillis and since then the system did not crash anymore. (I assume this is what you describe with " run a "de-jived" version of Squeezeplay and use the UI to control the squeezelite process"?)
-> So, from my perspective, this is curretnly the best known option.
FYI: Still, also with this 'hack' after roughly a month of continuous use, the UI will just vanish (blank screen) and I need to reboot the system.
But this seems to be just something w/ the UI, whereas before audio playback crashed, as stated.
Thanks again for all your time & work you put into this!
Re: Finally cracked it!
Hey, thank you, you're very welcome! Can't tell you how pleased I am to get us away from kernel 3.16 at last.
Okay, when I have more brain power (somewhat lacking this evening) I'll look to switch from "full jive" to jivelite. The squeezelite backend is available straight through apt on Debian Bullseye (though maybe it's a little old, need to check) so it's just the UI we need. I've already seen roughly how it's been slimmed down, but getting it to compile on a modern OS might be, erm, interesting. SqueezePlay was.
Some of the of- scripts are looking a little better now. Xserver install works and I have the test unit streaming a camera with mplayer for testing, plus the default wifi card (RT2770) is now working fine too.
Just messing around, I haven't figured out settings that work smoothly yet, but here's BigCliveLive streaming from YouTube.
Okay, when I have more brain power (somewhat lacking this evening) I'll look to switch from "full jive" to jivelite. The squeezelite backend is available straight through apt on Debian Bullseye (though maybe it's a little old, need to check) so it's just the UI we need. I've already seen roughly how it's been slimmed down, but getting it to compile on a modern OS might be, erm, interesting. SqueezePlay was.
Some of the of- scripts are looking a little better now. Xserver install works and I have the test unit streaming a camera with mplayer for testing, plus the default wifi card (RT2770) is now working fine too.
Just messing around, I haven't figured out settings that work smoothly yet, but here's BigCliveLive streaming from YouTube.
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Re: Finally cracked it!
The Bullseye squeezelite is an updated version (although it is always going to be behind a Ralphy's version)
On a raspberry pi I download the apt version, which gives me a configuration folder, amongst system ctl and stuff, then just run an update script
ronnie
On a raspberry pi I download the apt version, which gives me a configuration folder, amongst system ctl and stuff, then just run an update script
Code: Select all
#raspberry pi os bullseye 64 bit
sudo /etc/init.d/squeezelite stop
wget -O squeezelite.tgz https://sourceforge.net/projects/lmsclients/files/squeezelite/linux/squeezelite-1.9.9.1392-aarch64.tar.gz
sudo tar -C /usr/bin -zxvf squeezelite-1.9.9.1372-armhf.tar.gz
sudo tar -C /usr/bin -zxvf squeezelite.tgz
sudo chmod a+x /usr/bin/squeezelite
sudo /etc/init.d/squeezelite start
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Re: Finally cracked it!
just installed squeezelite, and playing through the joggler with default setting
starting it via putty from my Windows 10 Desktop
ronnie
wish I had more hair
starting it via putty from my Windows 10 Desktop
Code: Select all
sudo jivelite/bin/jivelite
wish I had more hair
Code: Select all
of@openframe:~$ sudo squeezelite -l
[sudo] password for of:
Output devices:
null - Discard all samples (playback) or generate zero samples (capture)
mixer
default
hw:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - Direct hardware device without any conversions
hw:CARD=MID,DEV=1 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Digital - Direct hardware device without any conversions
plughw:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - Hardware device with all software conversions
plughw:CARD=MID,DEV=1 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Digital - Hardware device with all software conversions
sysdefault:CARD=MID - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - Default Audio Device
front:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - Front output / input
surround21:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - 2.1 Surround output to Front and Subwoofer speakers
surround40:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - 4.0 Surround output to Front and Rear speakers
surround41:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - 4.1 Surround output to Front, Rear and Subwoofer speakers
surround50:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - 5.0 Surround output to Front, Center and Rear speakers
surround51:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - 5.1 Surround output to Front, Center, Rear and Subwoofer speakers
surround71:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - 7.1 Surround output to Front, Center, Side, Rear and Woofer speakers
iec958:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Digital - IEC958 (S/PDIF) Digital Audio Output
dmix:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - Direct sample mixing device
dmix:CARD=MID,DEV=1 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Digital - Direct sample mixing device
dsnoop:CARD=MID,DEV=0 - HDA Intel MID, STAC9202 Analog - Direct sample snooping device
of@openframe:~$ sudo /jivelite/bin/jivelite
sudo: /jivelite/bin/jivelite: command not found
of@openframe:~$ ls
jivelite luajit
of@openframe:~$ sudo jivelite/bin/jivelite
JiveLite 0.1.0
No protocol specified
No protocol specified
libpng warning: Interlace handling should be turned on when using png_read_image
libpng warning: Interlace handling should be turned on when using png_read_image
libpng warning: Interlace handling should be turned on when using png_read_image
libpng warning: Interlace handling should be turned on when using png_read_image
libpng warning: Interlace handling should be turned on when using png_read_image
libpng warning: Interlace handling should be turned on when using png_read_image
libpng warning: Interlace handling should be turned on when using png_read_image
libpng warning: Interlace handling should be turned on when using png_read_image
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Re: Finally cracked it!
Here is a little guide to install Jivelite, as things are at the moment.
Any suggestions and advice on how to better do it, please post. I'm a real numpty at this and often do stuff that is not required (or miss stuff that is required).
Is a new user required
Anyway, proceed at your own risk
I'm using an Ethernet connection to the Joggler
Download the files from here
https://birdslikewires.net/download/ope ... lseye/tmp/
I used rpi-imager to make the image on a usb stick (8gb is enough at the moment)
https://www.raspberrypi.com/software/
I used gParted on a raspberry pi desktop to expand the file system on the stick
start up joggler with usb hub, mouse, keyboard and image stick attatched
Using the guide here, I created a user ronnie
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/ ... quickstart
shutdown/reboot
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ssh into joggler as new user
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
sudo reboot
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ssh into joggler as new user
add the following text (replace ronnie with new user name)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#!/bin/bash
export JIVE_NOCURSOR=1
sudo -E xinit /home/ronnie/jivelite/bin/jivelite
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
save and exit ( ctrl-x > y > enter)
---------------------------------------------------------
add at the botttom
@reboot /home/ronnie/jivelite.sh (replace ronnie with new user name)
save and exit ( ctrl-x > y > enter)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
I hope that is correct
ronnie
I'm thinking that for regular LMS users it might be possible (when the dev is more complete) to install a desktop with browser and use the Material Skin Plugin as an alternative to either Squeezeplay or Jivelite.
Squeezelite is a given
LMS on the Joggler 32 bit requires a rebuild Perl (I tried this last night but kept getting the error message
Any suggestions and advice on how to better do it, please post. I'm a real numpty at this and often do stuff that is not required (or miss stuff that is required).
Is a new user required
Anyway, proceed at your own risk
I'm using an Ethernet connection to the Joggler
Download the files from here
https://birdslikewires.net/download/ope ... lseye/tmp/
I used rpi-imager to make the image on a usb stick (8gb is enough at the moment)
https://www.raspberrypi.com/software/
I used gParted on a raspberry pi desktop to expand the file system on the stick
start up joggler with usb hub, mouse, keyboard and image stick attatched
Using the guide here, I created a user ronnie
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/ ... quickstart
shutdown/reboot
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ssh into joggler as new user
Code: Select all
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt install ca-certificates build-essential git libluajit-5.1-dev libsdl1.2-dev libsdl-ttf2.0-dev libsdl-gfx1.2-dev libsdl-image1.2-dev libexpat1-dev
Code: Select all
cd
mkdir luajit
cd luajit
git clone http://luajit.org/git/luajit-2.0.git
cd luajit-2.0
make
sudo make install
sudo ldconfig
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cd
git clone https://github.com/ralph-irving/jivelite.git
cd jivelite
sudo make PREFIX=/usr/local
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cd
sudo apt install xinit xorg
sudo reboot
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ssh into joggler as new user
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sudo nano jivelite.sh
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#!/bin/bash
export JIVE_NOCURSOR=1
sudo -E xinit /home/ronnie/jivelite/bin/jivelite
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
save and exit ( ctrl-x > y > enter)
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sudo chmod u+x jivelite.sh
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sudo crontab -e
@reboot /home/ronnie/jivelite.sh (replace ronnie with new user name)
save and exit ( ctrl-x > y > enter)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Code: Select all
sudo reboot
I hope that is correct
ronnie
I'm thinking that for regular LMS users it might be possible (when the dev is more complete) to install a desktop with browser and use the Material Skin Plugin as an alternative to either Squeezeplay or Jivelite.
Squeezelite is a given
LMS on the Joggler 32 bit requires a rebuild Perl (I tried this last night but kept getting the error message
but however I tried I could not install the package./buildme.sh: line 253: ldconfig: command not found
libz not found - please install it
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Re: Finally cracked it!
Hi Roobarb,
does the latest openframe ubuntu image downloadable from your site (dated 06-Feb-2022) include the fix to the annoying crackling sound coming from the speaker?
Thank you so much for what you do for our community.
Alekos
does the latest openframe ubuntu image downloadable from your site (dated 06-Feb-2022) include the fix to the annoying crackling sound coming from the speaker?
Thank you so much for what you do for our community.
Alekos
Re: Finally cracked it!
Dumb user question - is this heading towards being an updated replacement for the old SqueezeOS 3.03 image that could be installed on the internal flash?
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Re: Finally cracked it!
I may have misunderstood the subject of this thread...however, I was referring to this image available on birdslikewires.net:
bio-ext2-1028-43-bionic-5.4.177op.img.gz
It is compiled with kernel 5.4 and is meant to be installed on an external USB drive.
bio-ext2-1028-43-bionic-5.4.177op.img.gz
It is compiled with kernel 5.4 and is meant to be installed on an external USB drive.