After increasing the actual disk image size the capacity field in the
OVF description file still was mentioning 6GB. This seems to be
problematic for VMware hypervisor. Increase the size to 32GB as well.
VMware as well as Qemu emulate LSI53C1030 SCSI controller when choosing
a SCSI controller has host interface for disks. For VMware this seems
to be the default choice. Enable the driver by default.
* Add sound card by default using the hdaudio driver (#925)
* Use virtio-net for VirtualBox
The virtio-net driver is a paravirtualization driver which means less
overhead than virtualizing a full network card. The driver is supported
by VirtualBox since several releases by now.
* Use full OS name in product name.
The current default size of 6GB can fill up pretty quickly. Since most
disk images we offer resize dynamically its not really problem to ship
with a bigger default size. It avoids support cases when people forget
to increase the disk image size.
* Use double quote to prevent globbing and exit with error in case
directory doesn't exit in hassos-hook.sh
* echo flags are undefined in POSIX, use bash instead in
bluetooth-rtl8723
* Update azure-pipelines-release.yml for Azure Pipelines
* Update azure-pipelines-release.yml for Azure Pipelines
* Update azure-pipelines-release.yml for Azure Pipelines
* Fix double LINUX_HEADERS
* Add support for TI USB 3410 or 5052 serial devices (#542)
* Added BT support to device-support.conf file, and removed BT support from kernel.config file
* Removed BT support, as it was moved to device-support.config file
* Added new line at the end of the file
* Changed:
CONFIG_BT_HCIBTUSB from 'm' to 'y'
CONFIG_BT_HCIBTUSB_BCM from 'y' to 'm'
CONFIG_BT_HCIBTUSB_RTL from 'y' to 'm'
* Update device-support.config
Co-authored-by: Pascal Vizeli <pascal.vizeli@syshack.ch>
This adds VMXNET3 support and the paravirtualized SCSI controller along with virtual sockets for the guest additions and memory ballooning so that unused memory can be shared with other Vmware guests. Tested on ESXi 6.5 and it works great.
* NUC: Enable bluetooth support
Enable kernel support for the intel bt-wifi-combo devices and usb
bluetooth modules. This will make Bluetooth and Bluetooth LE device
trackers work.
* BUILD: Make bluetooth kernel config the same for all boards.
The defconfig for a board may include more drivers, but this
set should be enough to get device trackers working. BLE support
is also enabled.
* Revert "BUILD: Make bluetooth kernel config the same for all boards."
This reverts commit 58f9b7c651.
* Add hassos configuration for intel-nuc:
* Cloned from ova config
* Use default amd64 kernel config
* Add support for Intel IGB type nics
* Add rng-tools for better random
* Build with iwlwifi module & firmware (only newer modules with iwlmvm firmware)
* Include firmware for 915, which should improve power efficiency.
Build display and audio as a module to make it all work.
* Add intel_nuc to build script.
* Change directory structure as proposed by @pvizeli
* * Fix paths
* Remove unused patch directory
* Unduplicate barebox config.