07-03-2016, 02:46 AM
(This post was last modified: 07-03-2016, 02:59 AM by UnixOutlaw.)
Shame you didn't mention the MAC address is fudged and hard-coded on /boot/uEnv.txt file...
36:C9:E3:F1:B8:05
I've got two pine64+ - was trying to watch my router for a DHCP ack - couldn't see my 2nd Pine till I shut it down - updated the file with a different MAC address...
Why is this necessary?
Shouldn't we be relying on the actual "real" MAC address of the on-board NIC on 64+ models?
Also - I've tried HDMI out on 2 different monitors :
1680x1050 Dell
800x480 (noname brand)
I've edited the uEnv.txt file tried 1050p_60 on the Dell, and 480p_60 on the no-name brand - both over HDMI
Get nothing on either screen...
The Dell is capable of switching to 720p if necessary or requested...
Anyway - not too bothered about GUI - so I've stopped lightdm - "systemctl stop lightdm", "systemctl disable lightdm" - but there are still some X and lightdm processes...
Just rebooting after trying :
systemctl set-default multi-user.target
I also disabled bluetooth - because it was filling up dmesg with logs about bluetooth...
36:C9:E3:F1:B8:05
I've got two pine64+ - was trying to watch my router for a DHCP ack - couldn't see my 2nd Pine till I shut it down - updated the file with a different MAC address...
Why is this necessary?
Shouldn't we be relying on the actual "real" MAC address of the on-board NIC on 64+ models?
Also - I've tried HDMI out on 2 different monitors :
1680x1050 Dell
800x480 (noname brand)
I've edited the uEnv.txt file tried 1050p_60 on the Dell, and 480p_60 on the no-name brand - both over HDMI
Get nothing on either screen...
The Dell is capable of switching to 720p if necessary or requested...
Anyway - not too bothered about GUI - so I've stopped lightdm - "systemctl stop lightdm", "systemctl disable lightdm" - but there are still some X and lightdm processes...
Just rebooting after trying :
systemctl set-default multi-user.target
I also disabled bluetooth - because it was filling up dmesg with logs about bluetooth...