RE: OSCAR v1.3.1 is released
(02-16-2022, 08:41 PM)pholynyk Wrote: My Chromebook is an Intel CPU, and it has v 98, and when I cat /etc/debian_version I get 10.11 which is Buster..
None of us devs has an Arm64 Chromebook, so we build on a Raspberry Pi running Debian. I deliberately left it on Buster because that was what my Chromebook uses.
If you bought your Chromebook just to produce Oscar, then that was a poor chice, you produce the Debian builds on amd64 anyway, so it would have been more effective for you to have bought an arm64 Chromebook. Still that;s all done now. But if you are going to continue to say you support Chromebooks, you or one of your devs should have an arm Chromebook. Best Buy is running one of it's many sales and you can get an arm Chromebook for $109. See ACER Chromebook 311
Surely an efficient use of the donations people make to this site, given that this seems like a very suitable machine for someone who needs a system solely to run Oscar.
Currently Chrome can make a Linux VM that installs either Buster or Bullseye, so you can have both on the same system, and actually test on the environment that you support.
RE: OSCAR v1.3.1 is released
(02-18-2022, 11:25 PM)mjphyi Wrote: you or one of your devs should have an arm Chromebook. Best Buy is running one of it's many sales and you can get an arm Chromebook for $109.
I'm sure they'd happily accept a donated device from someone really concerned about support for that family.
Otherwise, they use what they have. I doubt any dev bought a specific device to test OSCAR on. My experience with open source devs is that they don't, and if someone wants support/fixes they have to be willing to test/debug/report often provide hardware.
02-20-2022, 11:50 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-20-2022, 11:51 AM by GuyScharf.)
RE: OSCAR v1.3.1 is released
ST Dog: you are exactly right! We have SleepStyle support in OSCAR because an interested sleep tech was able to loan us a machine for evaluation. We have had similar support with the DS2.
There are also learning curve/cross-training issues. It would take a while for a person who knows one OS well to become equally adept at another. And how strong is the motivation to do that?
fwiw, I am in the process of setting up an Arm Chromebook (the very one mentioned on sale at BestBuy). But use with OSCAR was only incidental to my motivation--I was motivated more by providing a light-weight portable machine for personal use.
I am fortunate that I know a little about Linux -- but it's been more than 40 years since I developed software for a Unix system so my skills are hardly current! If it weren't for the web and Google search, I would be stuck.
02-22-2022, 12:06 PM
RE: OSCAR v1.3.1 is released
(02-16-2022, 08:41 PM)pholynyk Wrote: My Chromebook is an Intel CPU, and it has v 98, and when I cat /etc/debian_version I get 10.11 which is Buster..
None of us devs has an Arm64 Chromebook, so we build on a Raspberry Pi running Debian. I deliberately left it on Buster because that was what my Chromebook uses.
I got the Debian and Ubuntu builds working on OBS.
After reading your post, I enabled the aarch64 builds for Debian 10 and 11. Is that what you need?
They should be published in a few minutes, could you test them?
02-22-2022, 12:49 PM
(This post was last modified: 02-22-2022, 12:50 PM by GuyScharf.)
RE: OSCAR 1.3.1 on ARM Chromebook
I just installed OSCAR on an ARM Chromebook. I followed the instructions in the Chome OS Wiki and it generally went well.
Sequence of events was:
- Bought a $109 Acer Arm Chromebook 311.
- Went through setup process, connected to internet, etc.
- Installed Linux beta
- Later, machine auto-updated Chrome OS
- Linux identifies itself as Debian 10 Buster
Installed OSCAR from 1.3.1 download page for Arm Chromebook and all went well without any error messages. OSCAR runs, though I don't have any data available yet.
Now, I have to figure out:
- How to get my Kingston USB SD card reader to work
- How to get Chromebook to see shares in a Windows network
02-22-2022, 02:25 PM
(This post was last modified: 02-22-2022, 02:29 PM by GuyScharf.)
RE: OSCAR 1.3.1 on ARM Chromebook
OK, got the SD card associated with Linux. Create a profile, imported data, all worked smoothly. Data looks as expected.
02-22-2022, 03:42 PM
RE: OSCAR v1.3.1 is released
(02-16-2022, 04:18 PM)ST Dog Wrote: Not a dev, but the Chromebook ARM release says Debian 10.
Since the Debian release has separate packages for 10 and 11, I would assume the Chromebook releases is only for 10.
I've added Debian 10/11 aarch64 and amd64 builds to OBS: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/...scar/oscar
Could you try these?
RE: OSCAR 1.3.1 on ARM Chromebook
I downloaded the Debian 11 Arm package and it installs and seems to work fine with Debian 11 on an Arm Chromebook. Thanks for putting that together.
02-23-2022, 01:52 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-23-2022, 01:55 AM by ST Dog.)
RE: OSCAR v1.3.1 is released
(02-20-2022, 11:50 AM)GuyScharf Wrote: I am fortunate that I know a little about Linux -- but it's been more than 40 years since I developed software for a Unix system so my skills are hardly current! If it weren't for the web and Google search, I would be stuck.
I know the feeling, though not 40 yrs.
In the early 2000s I was active on Linux kernel and RedHat development lists testing new kernels/drivers and new packages. (Ever build XFree86?) Occasionally finding/reporting bugs and even a fix once or twice.
But then work took too much time and a job change where I don't have my machine with me and it's been 15+ years since any of that. I haven't ran make or written a line of C in 12 years.
RE: OSCAR v1.3.1 is released
(02-22-2022, 03:42 PM)docca Wrote: I've added Debian 10/11 aarch64 and amd64 builds to OBS: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/...scar/oscar
Could you try these?
Hopefully the OP will.
I don't have a Chromebook. I was just pointing out why I wouldn't expect the v10 build to work on v11 (comparing to the Debian releases)
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