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An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - Printable Version +- PINE64 (https://forum.pine64.org) +-- Forum: Pinebook Pro (https://forum.pine64.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=111) +--- Forum: Linux on Pinebook Pro (https://forum.pine64.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=114) +--- Thread: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro (/showthread.php?tid=8487) |
RE: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - wasgurd - 01-12-2020 (01-10-2020, 04:48 AM)danielt Wrote: Thanks @schanzen ! Might be make a .deb with the firmware and put it in your repository? RE: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - danielt - 01-13-2020 (01-12-2020, 05:24 AM)wasgurd Wrote: Might be make a .deb with the firmware and put it in your repository? Actually I think I might be remembering why I didn't add this in the first place. It is already packaged for Debian (linux-firmware-nonfree) but it is separated off into the non-free repos that are not usually included in sources.list by default. RE: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - e-minguez - 01-13-2020 Maybe this is something to explore https://forum.pine64.org/showthread.php?tid=8752 If it works, the numcpu hack can be removed... I would try it by myself but I don't have a serial cable to debug it just in case something happens. Any brave soul out there? ![]() RE: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - wasgurd - 01-13-2020 (01-13-2020, 03:47 AM)danielt Wrote:(01-12-2020, 05:24 AM)wasgurd Wrote: Might be make a .deb with the firmware and put it in your repository? Code: apt-cache policy firmware-misc-nonfree An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - e-minguez - 01-13-2020 Something has happened with firefox-esr in Debian bullseye, it fails to start with an 'illegal instruction' message Edit: I've just seen this https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=948708 RE: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - wasgurd - 01-13-2020 (01-13-2020, 12:31 PM)e-minguez Wrote: Something has happened with firefox-esr in Debian bullseye, it fails to start with an 'illegal instruction' message I've gotten the same, to resolve I've installed the firefox-esr from the buster-backports. It works fine for me. RE: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - ThatGeoGuy - 01-14-2020 Hey there! I just got my ANSI Pinebook Pro. I'm interested in this Debian image because it seems pretty similar to the stock image, but has LUKS / crypt support. What's the best way to install this on the eMMC module, with full crypt support? Is it possible to get an eMMC adapter, and install this via another linux machine (even if that machine is x86_64?). RE: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - danielt - 01-14-2020 (01-14-2020, 01:13 AM)ThatGeoGuy Wrote: Hey there! I just got my ANSI Pinebook Pro. I'd recommend to start by installing unencrypted it to a fast SD card. As an aside modern A1 or A2 cards designed for Android now mean you can get some clues about controller quality and how fast your card will be running a complex filesystem. My A1 cards are much better than the U1 cards of the same brand I bought two years ago although others have reported less obvious differences so it might be depend how old or how awesome your U1 cards are. Installing to SD card has a couple of benefits. The first if you can tell if you like it before you nuke the stock distro. Personally I'm not sure I agree it is similar to the stock image... I expect both to have different rough edges so IMHO it comes down to personal preference so testing first is good even if it is slightly slower than when installed to eMMC. Secondly you don't have to take the machine apart. Sure its easy to take apart but there will be wear and tear each time you do it. Finally you can use the SD card installation to install an encrypted version back to the eMMC. This step is probably necessary anyway since the stock kernel doesn't have the crypto support needed to do an encrypted install. RE: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - ThatGeoGuy - 01-14-2020 (01-14-2020, 03:45 AM)danielt Wrote:(01-14-2020, 01:13 AM)ThatGeoGuy Wrote: Hey there! I just got my ANSI Pinebook Pro. Awesome, thanks! Do firmware and other updates get backported to this release (or do they just hope to get mainlined?)? I'm trying to figure out what the rough edges would be, but not having encryption support on a laptop is a pretty big one for me.I assume by default most of the inputs work, and WiFi / Bluetooth is in good shape? If so, it doesn't seem too limited in comparison to default debian, so I'll take your word for it. My plan is to avoid most DEs anyways, and probably stick to awesomewm/sway/i3 anyways. So assuming the basics are working, I don't think my needs are too complex :) My apologies here as I would have read the whole thread to see others' opinions, but I've barely even gotten to turning the laptop on yet. I'll give both the default distro and this a fair try, but I suspect I'll end up installing this one long term if encryption is working well. Thanks again for taking the time to reply! RE: An unofficial Debian Installer for Pinebook Pro - ab1jx - 01-14-2020 This is fun, I like it because it uses debootstrap and you potentially end up with a cutting-edge system. But I wonder if it's possible to toughen it so it drops breadcrumbs and checks for those as it goes along. For those of us with unreliable networks where everything isn't likely to get done at once. I got up to choosing software, lxde, web server, etc, then everything went dead. Restarted and it went back and partitioned the SD again, got up to about the same place and died again. My new SD boots to a very basic system with no network. Since I think I can muddle through by doing dpkg -i downloaded debs on usb devices until I get network I'll probably continue. But if it could recognize waypoints from a partial install like make does it would save time for those of us with imperfect networks. Could these use make? I decided to give it one more shot and it got through the downloads without stopping, now it's installing. A newer than I've ever seen Debian on my first ever new laptop, always bought fixer-uppers before. 50% done, unpacking. Finished, works better than most of the messes I get into. At least I'm not sinking time into trying to improve Stretch which accomplishes nothing. Highly recommended. |