raspberry-pi-pcie-devices
meta-raspberrypi
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raspberry-pi-pcie-devices
- Raspberry Pi PCIe Database
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The Orange Pi 5
Generally yes. M.2 wifi cards are just PCI-E (except for Intel CNVio). Jeff Geerling tried a bunch of different PCI-E cards with the Raspberry Pi 4 Compute Module which does expose the PCI-E interface: https://pipci.jeffgeerling.com/
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AMD's 22-year-old GPUs still getting driver updates thanks to the FOSS community
We're also trying to preserve the utility of older cards by getting at least portions of the drivers working on alternate platforms (like arm64), so they can be repurposed for Plex/Jellyfin transcoding, retro gaming, GPU compute, etc.: https://github.com/geerlingguy/raspberry-pi-pcie-devices/iss...
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Double Standards
The current answer is maybe: https://github.com/geerlingguy/raspberry-pi-pcie-devices/iss...
The PCIe implementation on the 5 is supposedly more complete/less broken than on the CM4, but so far the only person crazy/inspired enough to test hasn't gotten back to this card with their Pi 5 setup.
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Still no love for WPA3 on the Raspberry Pi 5
Just a note that if you're _serious_ about WiFi on the Raspberry Pi... you should use an external WiFi adapter—either PCIe or USB.
With the Compute Module 4, I've successfully tested a variety of adapters [1], from WiFi 6E to older mini PCIe and M.2 cards. There's even a board made for the purpose of multi-WiFi testing, the Seaberry [2].
The Raspberry Pi 5 works with all the PCIe WiFi chips I've tested (haven't had time to summarize testing on pipci database site yet, including a mt7921u-based WiFi 6E USB adapter (haven't written that up, but check out [3]).
[1] https://pipci.jeffgeerling.com/#network-cards-nics-and-wifi-...
[2] https://pipci.jeffgeerling.com/boards_cm/seaberry.html
[3] https://github.com/morrownr/USB-WiFi/issues/137#issuecomment...
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Raspberry Pi 5 drops codec hardware acceleration except for HEVC decode
https://pipci.jeffgeerling.com honestly I'd get a home server and run HA through docker, it's gotten me into home servers.
- Recommended mPCI Wifi card for DYI router - Debian
- KVM QEMU rpios
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Graphics card integration
The simplest access you can get would be by using a CM board (as that has PCI Express available on its connectors) but driver issues galore exist. AMD have been more open the the "greenies" but the closest result I have seen is documented by Jeff Geerling
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Bought 2 Raspberry Pi 4 accidentally!
Are you familiar with a YouTuber named Jeff Geerling? He does some pretty far out stuff with pi’s like connecting video cards to them, etc. here’s a videoabout stuff you could do, I haven’t watched it myself. He’s got this website that has a list of accessories he’s tried with the pi. While I was looking for his channel I saw a ton of videos on YouTube for stuff to do with the pi. Curious to see what you end up doing… I guess I’m kinda hoping you do something that utilizes the full potential of the 4 😁
meta-raspberrypi
- Damn Small Linux 2024
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Still no love for WPA3 on the Raspberry Pi 5
How do you figure Pis have bad integration with Yocto?
https://github.com/agherzan/meta-raspberrypi
For what it's worth, the entire Pi lineup is also well supported by Buildroot. In-tree, no less.
- Ask HN: Are there any lean operating systems left?
- It's not an embedded Linux distribution – it creates a custom one for you
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Most smartphones run Linux (modified kernel) as well as most servers in the world and some consoles but what other major things run a Linux kernel?
Embedded linux exactly. Major OEMs are using yocto. Check https://www.yoctoproject.org/
- Fazer uma distribuição Linux
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Creating a minimal Debian system
Been there. You don't want alpine or debian. Good gpos, but what you want is Yocto, which will let you build exactly and only what you need piece by piece including only the kernel modules for your hardware, the exact applications you use and no extras, and with a little extra tweaking, you can wire in Mender for ota updates and the ability to push custom images to clients that need specialization, or even fully unlocked images for customers that need it, plus if you're using an SD card, you can send users recovery drives instead of shipping full devices or let them build their own images without your proprietary code
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Distro that is only terminal, but still has the packages to install stuff?
I second Yocto. It's the kernel in use by the OpenBMC project
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How to make your own distro?
One last "option" is yocto but tis is not good for desktop, but it can be a fun project.
- Como creo un SO?
What are some alternatives?
rust-raspberrypi-OS-tutorials - :books: Learn to write an embedded OS in Rust :crab:
hubris - A lightweight, memory-protected, message-passing kernel for deeply embedded systems.
Volumio - Volumio 2 - Audiophile Music Player
Arduino - Arduino IDE 1.x
Signal-Desktop-Mobian - Signal Desktop Builder for Mobian Bookworm
ArduinoCore-avr - The Official Arduino AVR core
docker-homebridge - Homebridge Docker. HomeKit support for the impatient using Docker on x86_64, Raspberry Pi (armhf) and ARM64. Includes ffmpeg + libfdk-aac.
box64 - Box64 - Linux Userspace x86_64 Emulator with a twist, targeted at ARM64 Linux devices
docker-cloudflare-ddns - A small amd64/ARM/ARM64 Docker image that allows you to use CloudFlare as a DDNS / DynDNS Provider.
yoe-distro - Embedded Linux distribution optimized for product development (based on OE/Yocto)
Debian-Pi-Aarch64 - This is the first 64-bit system in the world to support all Raspberry Pi 64-bit hardware!!! (Include: PI400,4B,3B+,3B,3A+,Zero2W)
stm32f4xx-hal - A Rust embedded-hal HAL for all MCUs in the STM32 F4 family