Talk:DebXO
I'm having some issues with debxo 0.3.
1) I wanted to have a login name of quixote, but when I changed it, using "usermod -L quixote olpc", the shutdown gui ceased working again. Could this be related to the earlier issue, in 0.2, that prevented shutdown from working? I've switched it back to "olpc" but shutdown still doesn't work. Hibernate generates error messages and aborts back to regular "on" mode.
2) Trying to establish a new user resulted in lots of things not being set up, such as wireless networking. Is there a simple way to set up another user just like the "olpc" user?
3) I gather "zcat" does a raw write, because my 16GB SD HC became a 2GB SD with lots of unallocated space. Maybe it would be good to let people know they'll have unallocated space with a card or thumbdrive larger than 2GB. I set it up as my new /home partition and am enjoying all the oceans of space!
Other than those issues, I'm finding debxo to be stable. It boots up quite quickly. And the install, with that nice little zcat command I'd never seen before, couldn't be simpler.
Thanks!
DebOX USB Not Readable
I followed the instruction zcat debxo-awesome.ext3.img.gz > /dev/sdc1 where /dev/sdc1 is a 4 GB USB disk. My olpc can't read it and wont boot from it. At startup I press Esc and get the ok prompt. The boot command and the dir u:\ command say the usb disk is unreadable.
I can mount the usb disk on my Lenny box with mount -o loop,offset=16384 -t ext3 /dev/sdc1 /media/linuxkey and have added a directory security and copied my developer key there. While mounted df - h shows only 740 M of the 1.9 G partition is used.
cfdisk /dev/sdc1 shows the partition is bootable and has the label DebXO but will not allow me to maximize it although it shows 2039.42 M free space. I could make a new partition to use the free space but it seems more logical to have a single 4 G partition.
At any rate, what is wrong?
My bad - just realized that should be /dev/sdc not /dev/sdc1. Awesome boots but to gray screen with no keyboard response. I'm trying gnome next.
OK, gnome is awesome. Many thanks for all the work that went into these images, its great keep olpc and also have debox.
Can DebX0 Use XO Wireless Adapter?
I have booted debxo-gnome from a usb drive, opened a root terminal and tried setting iwconfig parameters - our LAN uses static ip addresses. Signal strength is good but no connection. Have others had success? If so, how?
(0.5)DebXO-awesome.ext3.img --> clues for getting started
When you first start the (0.5) DebXO-awesome.ext3.img on the XO-1, you get the blank wm screen. To open a terminal press the "hand" button and the enter key. The fonts in the terminal will be tiny and barely readable for someone with good eyesight. As this is an xterm you can change the fontsize by holding the ctrl button while pressing the right-click button of the mouse which will give you a menu that you can use to change the font size in the terminal to something useable.
man awesome will give you most of the commands you need to use the awesome wm.
To get on the network there is ifconfig, dhclient, etc. Use the whereis command to find if the program you want is there and its location. "whereis dhclient" gives you /sbin/dhclient. As /sbin is not yet in $PATH you need to either add it or type it.
(0.5)DebXO-awesome uses awesome v2.3.3 which uses the "libconfuse" configuration library (http://www.nongnu.org/confuse/). (It is much different from v3 which writes the configuration file in the Lua programming language, or v1 which used the libconfig library from dwm.)
My vote for the most useful window manager concept for an adult geek's XO-1 is the awesome wm. Given that the mouse pad on the XO-1s is still only semi useable, the rodent-free approach of the awesume wm fits the XO and its 1200x900 display quite well. If I were bored and had time I would be interested in creating an even more vi-like interface for the wm where a single keypress, (much as vi uses "esc") puts the windowmanager into command mode, waiting for a single keypress command to manipulate the wm or move the mouse curser. This would be more flexible and easier to use with the small keyboard than trying to press two or three keys at a time on the tiny keyboard to input a wm command.