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How to install armbian in h618?
Алексей Торопов replied to alienxz77b's topic in Allwinner CPU Boxes
Not exactly. CH341 is the connection of my printer (Klipper), and here all right: [30663.467079] usb 3-1: new full-speed USB device number 3 using ohci-platform [30663.665820] usb 3-1: New USB device found, idVendor=1a86, idProduct=7523, bcdDevice= 2.64 [30663.665867] usb 3-1: New USB device strings: Mfr=0, Product=2, SerialNumber=0 [30663.665891] usb 3-1: Product: USB Serial [30663.668223] ch341 3-1:1.0: ch341-uart converter detected [30663.680198] usb 3-1: ch341-uart converter now attached to ttyUSB0 Accelerometer board: [30617.149526] usb 4-1: new full-speed USB device number 22 using ohci-platform [30617.358206] usb 4-1: New USB device found, idVendor=1d50, idProduct=6177, bcdDevice= 1.00 [30617.358227] usb 4-1: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=3 [30617.358235] usb 4-1: Product: rp2040 [30617.358242] usb 4-1: Manufacturer: katapult [30617.358249] usb 4-1: SerialNumber: E6647C7403433637 It looks like Armbian needs a driver. When connecting this card to Windows or Mac, the device is identified as a serial port. - Today
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I'm referring to this board: https://www.vividunit.com/Main_Page tonymac32 has a branch for it on https://github.com/Tonymac32/build/tree/vivid but it hasn't gotten updated in a while and is not merged into the main repo.
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mxq pro 4k 5g allwinner h313 can't sd card boot
Sergey Lepeshkin replied to Ducdanh Nguyen's topic in Allwinner CPU Boxes
@AndroidNewbie, what kind of help do you expect to receive? @Ducdanh Nguyen, are you sure it was my modified update.zip (hint: open it with any archiver and see for file "wipedata.flag" - is it there?)? Are old settings and apps stays in place after flashing? Are update.zip located in root of sd card? If all answers is yes, then try to update using usb flash drive instead of sd card. -
That's an interesting question. The chip itself seems to communiate via spi or i2c. Since USB cannot do that they put a raspberry microcontroller (RP2040) on it to handle this. The communication then uses a simple serial connection with the ch341 chip. I assume the klipper thingies can handle this by themselves automatically while when connecting this to a different device, you have to come up with some way to communicate with this board.
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Which of these boards are you refering to? https://github.com/armbian/build/tree/main/config/boards
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I have my kernel locked to 6.1.75 but still after 25.8.2 update, I lost all USB devices on both of my Orange PI 5. Only the USB3 port is working. The only way I've been able to get access to the USB is by switching to the latest `current` kernel... Any clues on what is going on? Firmware or kernel upgrades are not doing anything... where can the issue be???? I tried downgrading to many different versions but beside the current branch, USB is gone. Thanks
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Analog Audio out not working (25.2.1 / 6.1 kernel / KDE Neon)
OttawaHacker replied to deskwizard's topic in Orange Pi 5
I had to use 6.1.75 to get the analog out working. It is the only version where the analog out works - it shows in other versions but there is no playback -
Armbian_25.8.2_Orangepi5_noble_current_6.12.49.img.xz fails to boot
OttawaHacker replied to djtecha6's topic in Orange Pi 5
/dev/serial is also gone on 25.8.2 - Yesterday
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Thanks for your post ! I have checked the source code for 1.55.4 and, indeed, it shows "nextcloud_version": "31.0.2", in etc/ncp.cfg file. That probably means, an update of nextcloud to 31.0.2 resp. 31.0.10 (the current version) would be possible. It is consistent with the update method you did. The nightly automatic backup to an external disk works fine. I have installed 1.55.4 on my nextcloud system. I'll do another backup I'll try to update nextcloud to 30.0.10 using 1.55.4 tomorrow. I'll report the result over here and mark it as solution, if successful. I simply wonder why any information of this possible update method was not mentioned anywhere - perhaps except on matrix. Joining matrix chat is on my to-do list, anyway. Thanks to eselarm for the hint for quoting a previous post 😀 Kind regards Norbert
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There's a new version of the kwiboo ffmpeg+v4l2request function https://code.ffmpeg.org/Kwiboo/FFmpeg/src/branch/v4l2request-v3 And it was shown as a work in progress in the ffmpeg community https://code.ffmpeg.org/FFmpeg/FFmpeg/pulls/20847 Then, it was noticed in the mpv community https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/pull/14690#issuecomment-3500141427 They previously said that v4l2request first needs to be integrated in ffmpeg officially, then mpv would start working on v4l2request This is needed, to have mpv+v4l2request compiling successfully and working under Debian Trixie (my experience)
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Installation of autheila package ("apt install authelia") does does end with error due to /var/log/journal beeing a symlink to /var/log.hdd/journal. Once the symlink is removed and the directory is created instead, the installation can be completed successfully. The symlink can be recreated afterwards and authelia wil steill run normally - until the next package update.
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I saw some initial work on supporting uugear's vivid unit (rk3399 based). I was wondering in what state that is, what is required to complete that work and if there are plans to add that support to the mainline? Thanks in advance, Markus
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Looking for help getting mine running I have a very basic understanding of this device and am learning Linux on my own if someone could message me so we can work through this I would love to get this running
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OK, where would we find the images that need testing?
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You have to change the fancontrol.service file and set the option PrivateDevices to no. Do systemctl edit fancontrol and insert [Service] PrivateDevices=no
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Hello, I will soon be selling a working Helios64 from Kobol (with 2.5G fix done from factory). I also have 3x 6TB hard drive that could come with it if needed. Based in France, I'm able to send within EU. Please DM me if interested.
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Hi Nobi, I'm in a hurry therfore short hints for your investigation. Most info you get on matrix channel. https://matrix.to/#/!AT6qaz1QxylX2sw2mzjLElHbLKVll3kAgeIQd16e7J0/$dLsP9mV-fEjbokwdo-WqcJvg5CqsUaArfNKWWdUNPp0 Listen to the podcasts mentioned in this discussion. Yes, I have ny servers upodated to 31 and did the offered 1.55.4. update before, it is offered to running instances only (ssh boot prompt).
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@NOBL You can select text of someones post and then a small popup appears; If you click that, a reply/edit field is provided. It also took me some time before I discovered, maybe it was a browser issue or webblocker before I don't know. Related to it, I also don't know how to create 'hidden' text files so no endless logs or so. Anyway, on the topic: I see indeed VM is only x86-64 focused and also no Linux default build-in virtualizer, only external/commercial stuff like VMware and Windows/Mac. So for nextcloud, it is worse then for HAOS as I see it now. For HAOS, there is some Aarch64 VM image hidden somewhere on github, no documentation, but it works, does update well. It is same principle as for x86-64 VM images, so for me, having used standard Linux virt-manager (libvirtd/QEMU/KVM) for several years after VirtualBox and after VMware, it was easy to get running and as HA has a good backup-restore option, you get perfectly the same In a Aarch64 VM hosted on my ROCK5B for example as something running on old Intel Atom computer (also as VM by the way). So I would consider the easy 'nextcloudpi' and ready made images gone; You have to dig deeper and do more yourself, so looking at all the lower level components like PHP versions etc that fit a certain version. That is independent of which ARM SBC. Nextcloud is high-level software, there is no dependency on HW pins or GPIO or videocodecs etc. If there are Aarch64 images, you have to look at how they are created. I see from other post that there is ncp command, so what does that do? If you stick to 'images', you will indeed have a problem. The only relevant difference between Odroid and Raspberry or other Aarch64 SBC is the bootloader and kernel. Raspberry is the worst as they also do many changes to Debian userspace which for example from bookworm to trixie ruined my networking setup, so I blocked specific things (netplan stuff) and went back to Debian versions. Also RPi5 still cannot run standard Debian. If you want standards, make sure your HW supports UEFI, same as every PC/MAC does. See https://github.com/edk2-porting/edk2-rk3588?tab=readme-ov-file#supported-platforms I have this on ROCK5B and NanoPi-R6C and it is like a PC. You have to install it yourself of course, it is not pre-installed like is the case on a PC. But after installed, it is like a PC. Both those boards I have bought with metal case/heatsink, so no fans. Faster than a RPi5 and M.2 M-key slot on-board, so can use standard Samsung NVME or so. Also, the current/edge Armbian rockchip64 kernel runs in/as a VM, which makes it super flexible for tests but also for 24/7 doing real things. I installed grub-efi and then it boots as VM (assumuing 2 partition scheme). For Odroid (Amlogic SoC) I would expect the same. If not, install linux-image-arm64 in addition and use that kernel.
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Same/similar issue. Armbian Bookworm v25.8.1 on BTT Pi. wlan0/wlan1 devices are visible, but after first reboot, do not connect anymore. Even after stopping any networking-related services/processes, "iw wlan0 scan" just returns "device or resource busy". Changing the netplan renderer to network-manager as recommended did not work for me either. I also experienced the sunxi64-mmc kernel error messages when trying to reload the rt8189fs module. After switching kernel from 6.12.47-current to 6.16.8-edge, WLAN worked right away. But in exchange the wired eth0 device is now gone completely... you can't have it all (Maybe related to this?)
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Hi eselarm Thank you for your post. I can't still find a button to answer directly to your post in this forum. If I replace the HW - and I could afford it - then the question of migration to the new platform arises. Nextcloudpi worked fine on armbian releases, there is no point in changing the OS. Obviously it is close enough to debian so the "port" from debian to armbian is not very difficult. As long as the same base version (bookworm, trixie) is used. Even debian 12 did not support the required PHP version 8.1 at the time, nextcloud required it. But nextcloudpi still did the update to that nextcloud version with the result of nextcloud not running. I host nextcloud at home and I don't want a fan running at full speed in my living room. The "generic x86-64" (or amd64) is really no choice. Once I bought a WLAN router with built-in room for a disk but even with no disk installed the fan did run and couldn't be stopped. Returned it. I heared about proxmox, docker. LXC and LXD. For the latter there are images for x86-64 HW with nextcloudpi provided. But choosing the right HW and do the migration to it seems difficult to me. Regards Norbert
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Yes the WTL-40110175 3.8v 10.000mAh battery has 3x red (PB+) and 3x black (PB- GND) and 1x yellow (Overvoltage?) or Temperature) Here in Turkey I do only find a 3.7v 10.000mAh Cell, but without the yellow cable (only red and black): https://www.n11.com/urun/1260110-37v-10000mah-li-polymer-pil-devreli15a-87767963 The battery PDF gives me very less clues Pinebook-WTL40110175-3_8V-10000mAh-14inch.pdf
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Hi geoW Couldn't find any button to reply to your answer to my question in this forum 😐 . But here it goes: I know well how to do updates of armbian, nextcloud and nextcloudpi and how to use ncp-config. I configured it even to do the updates automatically but was burned twice - once with Armbian OS (didn't boot because of compressed kernel modules) and once with nextcloudpi updates to nextcloud without prior checking the required PHP version (8.1). So, no automatic updates any more, but manual checks, of course. I have configured an RSS feed to the nextcloudpi github page. That didn't include the never officially released version 1.55.4 of nextcloudpi, of course. In the release notes for nextcloudpi (v1.55.3) it mentions support for nextcloud 30. See the github page: Nextcloud 30.0.1 (can be automatically updated to latest minor version) PHP 8.3 Debian bookworm Armbian v24.08 Fine. There are no release notes for version v1.55.4 nor where this one officially released, at all, just tagged. So, where do you get the information that an update to nextcloud version 31 is supported by this version of nextcloudpi (v.1.55.4) ? Did you successfully update nextcloud to version 31.x with this version v1.55.4 of nextcloudpi ? Where do you get the information about someone working to allow updates to nextcloud version 32 via nextcloudpi ? Unless there is an official report about this, I won't simply update my installation. So, my original question is: what to do after the end of support for version 30.0.x ? Added: OK, I see: you are running one of the provided images for your Raspi5. I don't have a Raspi 4 or 5, That's why I posted my problem in this forum. So the story is: There is no support for any HW except for the images provided. I agree, that Nextcloud GmbH is overflowed with european requests for offers and work due to the politics of the orange head in the US. This is favourable in my opinion. So, my impression is that, obviously, nobody cares about the few nextcloudpi users not running nextcloud on HW other than on the images provided. Regards Norbert
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In the end, I couldn’t recover the device and ended up purchasing a new one. It was also a V5.1 board, but fortunately, it booted from the SD card without any extra steps and installed successfully. It seems we should keep in mind that even boards with the same version may not always work the same way.
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There are schematics available for this device, so one could get a hint from those, but depends if you have electronics background or not. To me it seems that higher level software in Debian/Linux enables power management handling all the way using info it gets from the power management chip/circuitry. You can guess that for this device, same as smartphone, battery operation is considered primary/essential, so decision is 'low-batt' and shutdown. I have a BananaPi M1 that also has LiPo charging, but that is DIY soldereing, so no OS component bothers with not-connected cell, but if a cell is connected/soldered which I did, is charges and runs on that cell if microUSB PSU (they call it 'AC' in the chip signal names) is disconnected, although its SATA port is unpowered then. Runs Armbian Trixie CLI only (eth + serial console). An old business HP 2-core laptop that I got without battery and HDD runs fine on just the original HP power adaptor (has 3rd wire for some genuine HP charger purposes). For USB-C powered devices, there might be many things to deal with, e.g. my ROCK5B after un-boxing goes in a bootloop with a RPI5 PSU, was/is know, so I feed it with own 12V USB-C pig-tail. For the Pinebook, it might be that the 5V is perfectly 5.000V but drops to 4.900V or so in spikes under load, so the typical 5V SBC powering issue well-known from RPi and other cheap SBCs that cannot handle >5V USB PD voltages. The Pinebook might do well if you fake the battery, so look at colored wire/connector. I have used that several times in the past decades. The yellow wire might be for temperature so besides a proper voltage on black and red, you also need to do something with the yellow wire I guess. It also might be that is you skip/disable the parts of software that do power management handling, that it runs fine. So I would boot/run the 'image' of the pinebook in a systemd-nspawn container or libvirt VM (at least the user space) and see what is what. Maybe it is something like purge 'laptop-tools' package or so, or blacklist the kernel module for power management.
