Talk:Release notes/11.2.0: Difference between revisions
(Asking about installing 874 on XO-1 SD card) |
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[[User:Rmyers|Rmyers]] 22:55, 3 August 2011 (UTC) |
[[User:Rmyers|Rmyers]] 22:55, 3 August 2011 (UTC) |
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:I had no trouble with the extraction of the lzma archive, but the filesystem was not bootable. From memory, to olpc-update from 767 to 874 you must first olpc-update to 802, then 860, then 874. After doing that it is likely you'll have the same filesystem configuration as I did when I extracted the lzma archive, and so I expect it will not boot. Perhaps you might instead use the built-in flash memory for the operating system and your SD card as home directory? --[[User:Quozl|Quozl]] 02:14, 4 August 2011 (UTC). |
Latest revision as of 02:14, 4 August 2011
874 on sd card on XO-1
The new F14 versions of the OS are space hogs on t he XO-1. So, I had the bright idea of trying to install on an SD card, so that there was more work space and space to add a swap.
I tried several paths with no luck.
1) I tried downloading the lzma from /xo-1/os/official/latest and expand this to a 4GB card. I figured that this would be the nearest equivalent to the instructions in 'OS images for USB disks'. I ran into multiple errors in trying to extract this archive.
2) I then tried to load the SD card with an earlier bz2 image archive that supports ext3. The most recent one I found was 767. This extracted successfully, and the XO will boot into it.
3) With this installed I then tried to do a olpc-update to update from 767 to 874. The script dies because the SD ext3 image does not have a /versions/running directory. This behavior occurs either with online or from a usb image.
It would seem that the idea of putting a modern image on a SD card would be a good way to extend the usability the original XOs. Documenting a way of doing it would be a good idea.
Rmyers 22:55, 3 August 2011 (UTC)
- I had no trouble with the extraction of the lzma archive, but the filesystem was not bootable. From memory, to olpc-update from 767 to 874 you must first olpc-update to 802, then 860, then 874. After doing that it is likely you'll have the same filesystem configuration as I did when I extracted the lzma archive, and so I expect it will not boot. Perhaps you might instead use the built-in flash memory for the operating system and your SD card as home directory? --Quozl 02:14, 4 August 2011 (UTC).