By default ConditionFirstBoot is ankered to the presence of
/etc/machine-id. However, in our case /etc/machine-id is a bind mount,
which makes the first boot condition non-working.
Since machine-id is stored by the bootloader on HAOS, use the boot
loaders knowledge and pass the information to systemd.
* Add ODROID-M1 board support
* Add Rockchip kernel config for ODROID-M1
Kernel defconfig for Rockchip is based on Armbian kernel defconfig
from config/kernel/linux-rk3568-odroid-edge.config (git hash
95c829f9e664).
* Add U-Boot/Kernel patches
* Add Rockchip blob support
Add package which provides Rockchip TPL and ATF firmware binaries.
* Use latest U-Boot for ODROID-M1
* Fix Rockchip blob support
* Update defconfig
* Use GPT by default
* Create uboot partition to support non-recovery boot
* Enable eMMC boot in U-Boot SPL
* Drop unnecessary mmc device selection
Distro boot already activates the right mmc device. The extra selection
seems to actually cause problems for eMMC boot.
* Make sure driver for eMMC is built-in
* Use odroid-m1 as Supervisor machine
* Add ODROID-M1 to CI pipeline and issue template
* Bump to Linux 6.1.16
* Support custom sized SPL/raw boot region
This is required for Rockchip which by default stores the U-Boot FIT
image at the 8MiB offset.
* Ignore shellcheck warning
The new systemd version v252 brings a new naming scheme, in particular
it seems that on device tree based systems (e.g. Raspberry Pis) the
Ethernet device name changes from eth0 to end0.
This breaks a previously made configuration.
Even worse, it seems that the default NetworkManager behavior is to only
configure a network device if there is no profile. But since profiles
are configured on a typical installation, NetworkManager doesn't bring
up any of the network interface, leaving the user stranded on an
unconnected system.
Ideally, we should have a plan how to migrate from one naming scheme to
the next. For now, just stick with the naming scheme HAOS 9.x has been
using.
* Linux: Update kernel 6.1.12
* Update generic_raw_uart to build with Linux 6.1
* Update Realtek rtl8821cu/rtl88x2bu to build with Linux 6.1
* Bump buildroot
* buildroot 43f82f01b9...90aa1a6daa (1):
> rtl8812au-aircrack-ng: bump to latest rev d98018
* Fix eq3_char_loop to build with Linux 6.1
* rtl8821cu: make sure -Werror is disabled for the kernel build
* generic_raw_uart: make sure -Werror is disabled for the kernel build
The ODROID-XU4 is largely compatible with the ODROID-HC1. It seems that
the image used to work until recently, where a stable kernel update
broke access to the S-ATA disk.
Revert the offending stable kernel patch to fix S-ATA disk on
ODROID-HC1.
The cgroup_enable parameter is a Raspberry Pi kernel specific kernel
parameter. Upstream based kernel do not have the parameter, and hence
do not do anything.
This gets rid of the following message during boot:
Unknown kernel command line parameters "cgroup_enable=memory", will be passed to user space.
* Linux: Update kernel 5.15.25
Use highest available kernel version in Buildroot 2021.08 (5.13)
* Update Hardkernel patches to Linux 5.15
* Update generic-x86-64/ova kernel config/patches for 5.15
* Drop Intel e1000e Sourceforge driver
The driver has been discontinued sometime last year. The main reason the
out-of-tree kernel has been enabled was for support for the i219-V
network chips which meanwhile are supported in mainline.
To make HDMI CEC work, we have to compile MESON_DRM as a module
(see #1717). However, this essentially reverts #1347, which fixed the
reboot problem by compiling the driver into the kernel.
Hence we need to reintroduce the earlier fix from #1345, which reverts
the offending commit causing the reboot problem.
* Remove duplicate config.txt copy statement
* Use static cmdline.txt file
Instead of dynamically creating cmdline.txt use a static version of it.
This aligns with other boot loader/firmware configuration files and makes
it easier to customize the file per board.
The bump to U-Boot 2021.10-rc5 also makes quite some patches obsolete
since they are already part of U-Boot.
This also removes a patch which disables framebuffer support on
Raspberry Pi: Framebuffer support seems to work fine in todays
U-Boot/Linux combination. It can help debug boot problems on Raspberry
Pi devices. Without the patch framebuffer support will be enabled by
default.
* Linux: Update kernel 5.10.61 for ODROID-N2 (#1512)
Update the kernel to 5.10.61 for ODROID-N2 and fix the update script
to update kernel for ODROID-N2 next time too.
* Move ODROID kernel patches to non-kernel version specific directory
Don't fail adding reserved memory when a memory region already has been
reserved (e.g. via memreserve). This avoids conflicting no-map setting
and makes sure memory is properly reserved.
The CRDA (Central Regulatory Domain Agent) utility has been used as a
user space helper to load regulatory information for WiFi drivers.
However, since Linux 4.15 the kernel can load the regulatory information
directly from a signed firmware file "regulatory.db".
The regulatory.db file is provided by the WIRELESS_REGDB package, which
has been already installed since its a dependency of CRDA.
Drop CRDA and select WIRELESS_REGDB package explicitly to make sure the
regulatory.db file is present.
* Add squashfs with LZ4 and LZO compression to Barebox
* Add squashfs with LZO compression to U-Boot
* Use squashfs for Linux kernel partition
Generate a squashfs image with LZO compression for the Linux kernel
partition. Adjust the boot scripts to be file system independent commands
to boot from squashfs.
The patches for ODROID-C2/C4 don't apply to Linux 5.12 used in
ODROID-N2. Move ODROID-C2/C4 patches to kernel version specific
directory so they don't get applied for ODROID-N2.
Use the latest Linux stable release 5.12 for ODROID-N2. This allows to
test if we see the random kernel crashes observed with 5.10 in latest
stable 5.12 as well.
It seems that the TPU (thermal monitoring) sometimes reports
unreasonable high temperatures, leading the kernel to trigger a thermal
shutdown. Add a patch which filters out such spurious temperature
readings.
Since the move to 5.10 multiple users experience stability issues
leading to random crashes. All reboots follow a SError Interrupt:
[48112.247242] SError Interrupt on CPU5, code 0xbf000000 -- SError
...
Revert back to Linux 5.9.16 for now.
It seems that the crash of the Meson DRM driver on shutdown can also be
fixed by compiling it in. The driver is also built-in in LibreELEC,
hence this is better tested by the upstream community.
Note the underlying issue seems to be a disabled clock: Since the
introduction of meson_drv_shutdown some registers are touched at a very
late stage. Those clock get disabled in meson_ee_pwrc_shutdown. It seems
that when the driver is built-in, meson_drv_shutdown gets called before
meson_ee_pwrc_shutdown and hence sidesteps the problem.
Note: This increases the kernel by a bit since DRM needs to be built-in
as well. Configure some less common used file systems as modules
(ext3/NFS).
In Linux 5.10.24 a regression has been introduced which broke reboot on
ODROID-N2(+). Interestingly the patch should improve reboot stability
for VIM3, which uses the same SoC. However, it seems that in the
ODROID-N2 case, this causes more problems then it fixes. Revert the
offending patch.
* Re-add patches missed with U-Boot 2021.04-rc4 upgrade
Also add patches for Raspberry Pi again.
* Regenerate patches for U-Boot 2021.04
* Update to U-Boot 2021.04
Bump to the latest U-Boot release 2021.04-rc4. This alows to drop quite
some patches which have been sent to the mailing list or picked from the
mailing list and have been merged upstream now.
* Add Ralink rt27xx/rt28xx/rt30xx firmware (#1242)
Add Ralink firmware for devices which have the driver enabled. The
firmware's are rather small at 20KiB in total.
* Remove Ralink and other WiFi drivers from Tinker Board
The board has on-board WiFi, no need for Ralink drivers to be enabled.
* Add Ralink WiFi drivers and firmware to ODROID boards
* Drop ODROID specific kernel update script
With the jump to Linux 5.10 LTS we can use the same upstream kernel for
Hardkernel ODROID boards as well. Extend the update-kernel-upstream.sh
to support the ODROID boards.
* Linux: Update kernel 5.10.13