-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
After spending *far* too long playing over the weekend, I've finally managed to get Familiar Linux up and running on the E3.
The good news: it actually seems to work, as far as I've managed (Familiar really doesn't like running on the 2.6 kernel; it relies heavily on devfs, which is now deprecated, and all sorts of things require foul hacking to make run at all).
The bad news: at idle it seems to eat nearly all the available memory (with under a megabyte utilised in buffers, too, so most of that is actual real code). Bootup is very, very slow, too (several minutes); but I'm not yet sure whether this is intrinsic or due to the USB 1 storage device crippling it. Once the shell has actually started up, it seems to be reasonably usable. Oh, yeah, as expected the screen doesn't play nice with the mouse pointer, which pretty much vanishes completely while moving.
Things I need to try: another look to see if there are any device nodes missing, in an attempt to get the rest of the applications going (a lot of them fail to start with 'Unable to find entropy collection module' - --- missing /dev/random, perhaps?); seeing if I can backport the E3 patches to the last 2.6 kernel with devfs (dammit, why did they deprecate devfs? It's so *useful*); joining the Familiar mailing list and asking about udev support...
Incidentally, I also got full Debian running. The ARM etch netinst images basically Just Work (you need to use etch because of the 2.6 kernel). The installer runs reasonably happily, despite complaining about low RAM, but is very, very slow. A number of times while validating packages I thought it had hung, but it came back to life again a few minutes later. Once installed, shell access is reasonably snappy and it idles with a reasonable amount of free memory. Aptitude in full-on graphical mode is only just usable. I'll try this again once I get an ethernet adaptor --- the most difficult bit was trying to shoehorn the CD image onto the same CF card as the installation filesystem.
...what's the current status of compressed writable filesystems on Linux? Do I have to resort to such aberrations as jffs2 over blkmtd, or is there anything better? Even with the E3's slow number-crunching abilities, I suspect that may still be faster than pushing uncompressed data of the USB link.
- -- +- David Given --McQ-+ | dg@cowlark.com | "Those that repeat truisms, are also forced to | (dg@tao-group.com) | repeat them." --- Anonymous from Slashdot +- www.cowlark.com --+