Igor Posted April 16, 2020 Share Posted April 16, 2020 45 minutes ago, bwims said: I'm not running Armbian Than you are not our "customer" we can help. Download Armbian. Its in any case much better than what you run now. One of the biggest difference is support. For Armbian you can count to get it, for the other whatever thing you are using, you are on your own. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
goathunter Posted May 27, 2020 Share Posted May 27, 2020 It's now May 26. None of my Pine systems has time-jumped since going to 5.3.9 and patched 4.19.83 as described in my March 25 post. I still have not retried 5.4 or higher. FWIW. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
langerma Posted May 27, 2020 Share Posted May 27, 2020 so 5.3.9 is that kernel i get from pkg mgmt ? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
goathunter Posted June 16, 2020 Share Posted June 16, 2020 I attempted to upgrade one of my Pines running 4.19 to 20.04 LTS. It didn't complain, but I discovered when it rebooted that the installation had wiped out several files in my /boot directory. No idea why, but I couldn't recover from it. I ended up just starting from scratch with the Armbian Focal distribution. I'm now running that on two of my three Pines (I finally gave up on the fourth one, as it kept having various hardware issues). It's only been a couple of days, but there've been no time jumps yet with the new kernel (5.4-43). 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
goathunter Posted July 2, 2020 Share Posted July 2, 2020 Update: It's been a little over two weeks now, and all three of my Pines are running Ubuntu 20.04 LTS with the 5.4-43 kernel, and all have been running without problem. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
langerma Posted July 23, 2020 Share Posted July 23, 2020 On 7/2/2020 at 8:48 PM, goathunter said: Update: It's been a little over two weeks now, and all three of my Pines are running Ubuntu 20.04 LTS with the 5.4-43 kernel, and all have been running without problem. are these pines on clusterboard 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
goathunter Posted August 11, 2020 Share Posted August 11, 2020 On 7/23/2020 at 6:20 AM, langerma said: are these pines on clusterboard No, they're not. Three separate systems: two Pine A64+ systems and one Pine A64-LTS. And they've now been running for over 54 days. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
langerma Posted October 19, 2020 Share Posted October 19, 2020 how does it look like now? everything okay? i am thinking of reflashing my old sopines :-) so i can get a modern kernel 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
goathunter Posted January 29, 2021 Share Posted January 29, 2021 All has been fine with my Pines for months now. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chaseadam Posted June 1, 2021 Share Posted June 1, 2021 just experienced this issue again in fedora which uses an upstream kernel. Is armbian using any special patches for this issue? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TRS-80 Posted June 1, 2021 Share Posted June 1, 2021 5 minutes ago, chaseadam said: just experienced this issue again in fedora which uses an upstream kernel. Is armbian using any special patches for this issue? Armbian is doing many things to get stuff to work, fix bugs, etc. In fact that is one of the primary raisons d'être for Armbian in the first place, as well as one of the main differences between Armbian and Debian/Ubuntu. Insofar as running GNU/Linux on SBCs goes, Armbian is likely your best bet, unless you really want to start digging deep into kernel patches and other stuff like that. Sorry if you are a Fedora guy, but other distros (including upstream mainline Debian themselves) are no where close to us in this regard, on SBCs anyway, due to all the various hardware and other peculiarities of these otherwise fascinating little boards... 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bwims Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 Hi, I understand that Armbian now provide the kernel for the Dietpi distribution for the Pine A64. What I need to know is whether this patch is now incorporated in 5.15.25-sunxi64 . I've read every post and I can't quite figure out whether it still needs a line in /boot/config-5.15.25-sunxi64, whether it is part of the standard kernel, or whether I would need to compile it and patch it (I hope not because I have no idea how to do that!) Any information would be very much appreciated! I have two Pine A64s, one of them has this bug but the other doesn't - though that one takes it into its head to simply die after a few hours.... sigh! Thanks! Brian 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Werner Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 5 minutes ago, bwims said: Dietpi If you are using Dietpi you should ask at their place. We cannot afford to provide support for 3rd party software. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bwims Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 Hi Werner, I don't think I made myself clear. They use your kernel that you develop. They say this: Quote Just to avoid a misunderstanding. DietPi is not doing any kernel development. We simple use the kernel as they are provided by the base image we use to run DietPi scripts on. Therefore we are not really able to answer what has been included into 5.15.25-sunxi64. This would be more a question to Armbian guys. So all I am asking is whether your current kernel contains the patch discussed in this topic, not anything about Dietpi. Say for example I had installed Armbian with this kernel on a Pine A64. Would the patch be incorporated in it? Thanks! Brian 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Werner Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 Well if for example you had an issue with Debian kernel and ask directly at kernel.org they would point back to Debian even if they would state to not do any adjustments/development Anyway I do not know about this particular patch but feel free to the patches, that are applied on top of 5.15.y-sunxi here: https://github.com/armbian/build/tree/master/patch/kernel/archive/sunxi-5.15 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bwims Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 I'm perfectly willing to install Armbian if needed. I simply need to get a reply from someone who knows a lot more about kernels than I do! 🙂 I thought one of the reasons for forums like this was to enable the less gifted to get help from the more gifted, not just RTFM. 🙂 (I wouldn't have the first clue how to investigate a kernel tree.) Surely there must be someone who contributed to the above discussion who was a kernel maintainer? I get it that you don't know, maybe better to let someone else reply? Thanks again Brian 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Werner Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 46 minutes ago, bwims said: I thought one of the reasons for forums like this was to enable the less gifted to get help from the more gifted It is. Everyone who reads this can freely volunteer to answer your question. I just wanted to point out that it may not receive any attention from Armbian developers themselves. https://docs.armbian.com/User-Guide_FAQ/#support-time 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bwims Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 I understand and would not expect any special help. My point is that this problem in this thread has been thoroughly discussed, and a solution found. I wouldn't think it a huge overhead just to say, yes it is the production kernel or no, you have to patch it yourself. I'm sure someone with more Armbian experience than me could read this thread and work it out. It's only a shame that the discussion ended on the terms of "Yay, it works for me" rather than "it will now go into the production kernel". Maybe it did. I just don't know enough about it. Thanks anyway. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
goathunter Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 It did make it in. I've been running fine with the stock kernels since 5.4-43. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
goathunter Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 In fact, everything has been rock solid for me since I got rid of a couple of boards that obviously had hardware issues (those were different problems that had nothing to do with Armbian). My point is that the Armbian distributions for my Pine A64s and RockPro64s has been problem-free since late 2020. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bwims Posted April 11, 2022 Share Posted April 11, 2022 From Decus Hero to Armbian Hero! Thanks so much! B. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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