Open as much topics as you need. That is what forums are for. I don't like those multiple pages long mega-threads anyways but for some reason some users seem to be fine with them. As for me at least I don't see how value information can be found within when there is a need to read page by page by page while with multiple topics you immediately see what's going on inside
There should be as minimal adjustments needed as possible since this tool is undergoing major rewrite anyways so besides having it as a working proof-of-concept for the new version it would be a waste of time.
Haha, true story.
Anyway as bad as some rants (not only Igors ) read there is always some truth within and the truth often is either misunderstood or hurts or both.
Therefore no further action is taken here besides asking everyone to calm down if necessary and keep it more constructive, alright? ->
Oh boy, that was a lot of off-topic
So when UART works you can use
code {
font-family: Consolas,"courier new";
color: crimson;
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.2);
padding: 2px;
font-size: 105%;
}
armbianmonitor -U to print debug output to serial and then use a pastebin service of your choice to share the whole output.
I don't know. You can check by yourself (something like
code {
font-family: Consolas,"courier new";
color: crimson;
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.2);
padding: 2px;
font-size: 105%;
}
apt-cache search linux*current-rockchip64)
Well that would rather be a downgrade than an upgrade
Anyway while switching kernel again would work the module you want to build and need the headers for will not.
You need the kernel headers matching your kernel version. Older headers will not work.
However we had (have?) some issues with the repository so you may need to switch to a different kernel version which also has the matching headers in the repo.
1. Not using CP2102 as it cannot handle 1.5mbaud. CP2104 for example does.
2. not using random UART you find on the GPIO but using the actual debug UART connectors: https://wiki.friendlyelec.com/wiki/images/7/7c/NanoPi_NEO3-layout.jpg
3. @lpirl can be right too. I used to own a Neo3 just like yours but it died on me.
Oddly there are no bcm2712 packages whatsoever in stable repo. At least not on my mirror. However there are current and edge packages in beta including headers.
13236 ./pool/main/l/linux-headers-current-bcm2712/linux-headers-current-bcm2712_24.2.0-trunk.480_arm64__6.6.13-S374f-D719f-P0000-Cb2aaH4168-HK01ba-Vc222-B4d80-R448a.deb
25531 ./pool/main/l/linux-6.6.13/linux-image-current-bcm2712_24.2.0-trunk.480_arm64__6.6.13-S374f-D719f-P0000-Cb2aaH4168-HK01ba-Vc222-B4d80-R448a.deb
120 ./pool/main/l/linux-dtb-current-bcm2712/linux-dtb-current-bcm2712_24.2.0-trunk.480_arm64__6.6.13-S374f-D719f-P0000-Cb2aaH4168-HK01ba-Vc222-B4d80-R448a.deb
Yes, it is relevant. Without an sdcard with operating instructions (boot loader and OS to say) the board simply does absolutely nothing since there is no other storage on.
SSH is always enabled by default.
However I remember there is a rare case where sshd cannot start properly for some reason.
serial console is the best way to debug this (and restart sshd)
Buy a few extra. They are dirt cheap