Difference between revisions of "Odroid XU4"

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* Size : 82 x 58 x 22 mm approx.(including cooling fan)
 
* Size : 82 x 58 x 22 mm approx.(including cooling fan)
  
= Installing a LinuxMCE Core on the Odroid XU4 =
+
= Installing a LinuxMCE Core on the Odroid XU4 on a eMMC module=
 
*Connect a USB NIC to your XU4.
 
*Connect a USB NIC to your XU4.
 
*Download the latest Ubuntu 14.04 Server image for XU4/XU3 here: - http://odroid.in/ubuntu_14.04lts/
 
*Download the latest Ubuntu 14.04 Server image for XU4/XU3 here: - http://odroid.in/ubuntu_14.04lts/
 
*Install the Ubuntu 14.04 Server image onto your Odroid XU4 device.
 
*Install the Ubuntu 14.04 Server image onto your Odroid XU4 device.
*Use the odroid-utility to resize the sdcard or eMMC card you are booting from so all space is available:
+
*Use the odroid-utility to resize the eMMC card you are booting from so all space is available:
 
  odroid-utility.sh  
 
  odroid-utility.sh  
 
*Add the following linuxmce repository definitions to /etc/apt/sources.list:
 
*Add the following linuxmce repository definitions to /etc/apt/sources.list:
Line 36: Line 36:
 
*Update and upgrade to the latest:
 
*Update and upgrade to the latest:
 
  apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade
 
  apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade
*Reboot:
+
*Reboot.
*At minimum create a user, a room and choose a PVR system
+
*This will not install any graphical interfaces so initial setup will need to be done through the webadmin.
*Be very patient and have fun
+
*At minimum create:
 +
**A Master-User by pointing a browser to 192.168.80.1
 +
**A Web Orbiter 2.0 set to the room the Core is in (Otherwise you will not get all the messages).
 +
*Now you will need to add a MD to make use of any on-screen controls or media functionality.
 +
*Be very patient and have fun.
 +
 
 +
= Installing a LinuxMCE Core on the Odroid XU4 using a micro SD-Card and SSD combo in the Cloudshell=
 +
 
 +
* Install the ssd in your cloudshell.
 +
* Download the latest Ubuntu 14.04 Server image for XU4/XU3 here: - http://odroid.in/ubuntu_14.04lts/
 +
* Install the Ubuntu 14.04 Server image onto your sd-card.
 +
* Boot your XU4.
 +
* Determine the device name of your SSD with (for this example its: /dev/sda).
 +
sudo fdisk -l
 +
* Write the image from step 2, remotely, to the SSD by going to the path your image is in and give the following command:
 +
dd if=ubuntu-14.04lts-server-odroid-xu3-20150725.img | ssh root@192.168.1.75 "dd of=/dev/sda"
 +
* Reboot.
 +
* To make sure that the UUID’s of the first partitions (mmcblk0p1 and sda1) of both drives and the second partitions (mmcblk0p2 and sda2) of both drives are the same, use:
 +
blkid -o list
 +
The output should look something like the example below:
 +
 
 +
device                                          fs_type        label            mount point                                        UUID
 +
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 +
/dev/mmcblk0p1                                  vfat            boot            (not mounted)                                      1E66-94B1
 +
/dev/mmcblk0p2                                  ext4            rootfs          /                                                  e139ce78-9841-40fe-8823-96a304a09859
 +
/dev/sda1                                      vfat            boot            /media/boot                                        1E66-94B1
 +
/dev/sda2                                      ext4            rootfs          (not mounted)                                      e139ce78-9841-40fe-8823-96a304a09859
 +
 
 +
* Delete the second partition on the SD-Card by giving the following commands:
 +
sudo fdisk /dev/mmcblk0 
 +
d (delete a partition)
 +
2 (the second partition)
 +
w (write table to disk and exit)
 +
* Reboot.
 +
* Delete the first partition on the SSD by giving the following commands:
 +
sudo fdisk /dev/sda
 +
d (delete a partition)
 +
1 (the first partition)
 +
w (write table to disk and exit)
 +
* Reboot.
 +
blkid -o list
 +
should now show you something like:
 +
 
 +
device                                          fs_type        label            mount point                                        UUID
 +
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 +
/dev/mmcblk0p1                                  vfat            boot            /media/boot                                        1E66-94B1
 +
/dev/sda2                                      ext4            rootfs          /                                                  e139ce78-9841-40fe-8823-96a304a09859
 +
 
 +
This means that it boots from device /dev/mmcblk0p1 and then hands it over to device /dev/sda2 (the SSD).
 +
 
 +
At the moment the partition sda2 is not using the entire disk space, to use the entire disk space we have to expand that partition.
 +
To do so we first delete it and create a new one at the starting point of the old one, by doing so no data will be lost.
 +
* Delete and recreate the partition sda2 on device /dev/sda with the following commands/entry’s:
 +
fdisk /dev/sda
 +
p (print the partition table) to find out the Startpoint (208896 in this example)
 +
d (delete a partition)
 +
n (add a new partition)
 +
p (primary)
 +
2 (Partition number (1-4, default 1)) - we want to recreate the sda2 partition.
 +
208896 (First sector (2048-234441631, default 2048)) - this is the earlier noted start point.
 +
use default value for the Last sector entry (the max) to use the entire disk space.
 +
w (write table to disk and exit).
 +
* Reboot.
 +
* Resize the filesystem to the entire partition.
 +
resize2fs /dev/sda2
 +
* Upgrade to the latest.
 +
apt-get update
 +
apt-get dist-upgrade
 +
 
 +
The Cloudshell USB 3.0 to SATA3 uses a Genesys Logic chip that is not supported on Ubuntu 14.04 or 15.04 smartmontools package.
 +
You need smartmoontools 6.5 revision 4132 or greater. To install it do the following:
 +
sudo -s
 +
apt-get install libcap-ng0 (needed otherwise when you install the smartmontools package you get: „dependency problems prevent configuration of smartmontools”)
 +
wget http://deb.odroid.in/manual/5422/smartmontools/14.04/smartmontools_6.5%2bsvn4132-1_armhf.deb
 +
dpkg -i smartmontools_6.5+svn4132-1_armhf.deb
 +
* Reboot.
 +
*Add the following linuxmce repository definitions to /etc/apt/sources.list:
 +
deb http://deb.linuxmce.org/ubuntu/ trusty  main
 +
deb http://deb.linuxmce.org/ trusty  main
 +
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty  main restricted universe multiverse
 +
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty-updates  main restricted universe multiverse
 +
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty-backports  main restricted universe multiverse
 +
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty-security  main restricted universe multiverse
 +
*Retrieve the updated package lists:
 +
apt-get update
 +
*Install LinuxMCE as a Core only:
 +
DEBIAN_FRONTEND=non-interactive apt-get install lmce-core -y --allow-unauthenticated
 +
*Reboot to allow setup and firstboot to occur.
 +
*Update and upgrade to the latest:
 +
apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade
 +
*Reboot.
 +
*This will not install any graphical interfaces so initial setup will need to be done through the webadmin.
 +
*At minimum create:
 +
**A Master-User by pointing a browser to 192.168.80.1
 +
**A Web Orbiter 2.0 set to the room the Core is in (Otherwise you will not get all the messages).
 +
*Now you will need to add a MD to make use of any on-screen controls or media functionality.
 +
*Be very patient and have fun.

Latest revision as of 21:43, 15 February 2016

General

The ODROID-XU4 is powered by ARM® big.LITTLE™ technology, the Heterogeneous Multi-Processing (HMP) solution. It offers open source support, the board can run various flavors of Linux, including the latest Ubuntu 15.04 and Android 4.4 KitKat and 5.0 Lollipop. The XU4 is fully software compatible with XU3.

Hardware

  • Samsung Exynos5422 Cortex™-A15 2Ghz and Cortex™-A7 Octa core CPUs
  • Mali-T628 MP6(OpenGL ES 3.0/2.0/1.1 and OpenCL 1.1 Full profile)
  • 2Gbyte LPDDR3 RAM PoP stacked
  • eMMC5.0 HS400 Flash Storage
  • 2 x USB 3.0 Host, 1 x USB 2.0 Host
  • Gigabit Ethernet port
  • HDMI 1.4a for display
  • Size : 82 x 58 x 22 mm approx.(including cooling fan)

Installing a LinuxMCE Core on the Odroid XU4 on a eMMC module

  • Connect a USB NIC to your XU4.
  • Download the latest Ubuntu 14.04 Server image for XU4/XU3 here: - http://odroid.in/ubuntu_14.04lts/
  • Install the Ubuntu 14.04 Server image onto your Odroid XU4 device.
  • Use the odroid-utility to resize the eMMC card you are booting from so all space is available:
odroid-utility.sh 
  • Add the following linuxmce repository definitions to /etc/apt/sources.list:
deb http://deb.linuxmce.org/ubuntu/ trusty  main
deb http://deb.linuxmce.org/ trusty  main
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty  main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty-updates  main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty-backports  main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty-security  main restricted universe multiverse
  • Retrieve the updated package lists:
apt-get update
  • Install LinuxMCE as a Core only:
DEBIAN_FRONTEND=non-interactive apt-get install lmce-core -y --allow-unauthenticated
  • Reboot to allow setup and firstboot to occur.
  • Update and upgrade to the latest:
apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade
  • Reboot.
  • This will not install any graphical interfaces so initial setup will need to be done through the webadmin.
  • At minimum create:
    • A Master-User by pointing a browser to 192.168.80.1
    • A Web Orbiter 2.0 set to the room the Core is in (Otherwise you will not get all the messages).
  • Now you will need to add a MD to make use of any on-screen controls or media functionality.
  • Be very patient and have fun.

Installing a LinuxMCE Core on the Odroid XU4 using a micro SD-Card and SSD combo in the Cloudshell

  • Install the ssd in your cloudshell.
  • Download the latest Ubuntu 14.04 Server image for XU4/XU3 here: - http://odroid.in/ubuntu_14.04lts/
  • Install the Ubuntu 14.04 Server image onto your sd-card.
  • Boot your XU4.
  • Determine the device name of your SSD with (for this example its: /dev/sda).
sudo fdisk -l 
  • Write the image from step 2, remotely, to the SSD by going to the path your image is in and give the following command:
dd if=ubuntu-14.04lts-server-odroid-xu3-20150725.img | ssh root@192.168.1.75 "dd of=/dev/sda"
  • Reboot.
  • To make sure that the UUID’s of the first partitions (mmcblk0p1 and sda1) of both drives and the second partitions (mmcblk0p2 and sda2) of both drives are the same, use:
blkid -o list 

The output should look something like the example below:

device                                          fs_type         label            mount point                                         UUID
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/dev/mmcblk0p1                                  vfat            boot             (not mounted)                                       1E66-94B1
/dev/mmcblk0p2                                  ext4            rootfs           /                                                   e139ce78-9841-40fe-8823-96a304a09859
/dev/sda1                                       vfat            boot             /media/boot                                         1E66-94B1
/dev/sda2                                       ext4            rootfs           (not mounted)                                       e139ce78-9841-40fe-8823-96a304a09859
  • Delete the second partition on the SD-Card by giving the following commands:
sudo fdisk /dev/mmcblk0  
d (delete a partition) 
2 (the second partition)
w (write table to disk and exit)
  • Reboot.
  • Delete the first partition on the SSD by giving the following commands:
sudo fdisk /dev/sda 
d (delete a partition) 
1 (the first partition)
w (write table to disk and exit)
  • Reboot.
blkid -o list 

should now show you something like:

device                                          fs_type         label            mount point                                         UUID
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/dev/mmcblk0p1                                  vfat            boot             /media/boot                                         1E66-94B1
/dev/sda2                                       ext4            rootfs           /                                                   e139ce78-9841-40fe-8823-96a304a09859

This means that it boots from device /dev/mmcblk0p1 and then hands it over to device /dev/sda2 (the SSD).

At the moment the partition sda2 is not using the entire disk space, to use the entire disk space we have to expand that partition. To do so we first delete it and create a new one at the starting point of the old one, by doing so no data will be lost.

  • Delete and recreate the partition sda2 on device /dev/sda with the following commands/entry’s:
fdisk /dev/sda 
p (print the partition table) to find out the Startpoint (208896 in this example)
d (delete a partition)
n (add a new partition)
p (primary)
2 (Partition number (1-4, default 1)) - we want to recreate the sda2 partition.
208896 (First sector (2048-234441631, default 2048)) - this is the earlier noted start point.
use default value for the Last sector entry (the max) to use the entire disk space.
w (write table to disk and exit).
  • Reboot.
  • Resize the filesystem to the entire partition.
resize2fs /dev/sda2
  • Upgrade to the latest.
apt-get update
apt-get dist-upgrade

The Cloudshell USB 3.0 to SATA3 uses a Genesys Logic chip that is not supported on Ubuntu 14.04 or 15.04 smartmontools package. You need smartmoontools 6.5 revision 4132 or greater. To install it do the following:

sudo -s
apt-get install libcap-ng0 (needed otherwise when you install the smartmontools package you get: „dependency problems prevent configuration of smartmontools”)
wget http://deb.odroid.in/manual/5422/smartmontools/14.04/smartmontools_6.5%2bsvn4132-1_armhf.deb
dpkg -i smartmontools_6.5+svn4132-1_armhf.deb
  • Reboot.
  • Add the following linuxmce repository definitions to /etc/apt/sources.list:
deb http://deb.linuxmce.org/ubuntu/ trusty  main
deb http://deb.linuxmce.org/ trusty  main
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty  main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty-updates  main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty-backports  main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ trusty-security  main restricted universe multiverse
  • Retrieve the updated package lists:
apt-get update
  • Install LinuxMCE as a Core only:
DEBIAN_FRONTEND=non-interactive apt-get install lmce-core -y --allow-unauthenticated
  • Reboot to allow setup and firstboot to occur.
  • Update and upgrade to the latest:
apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade
  • Reboot.
  • This will not install any graphical interfaces so initial setup will need to be done through the webadmin.
  • At minimum create:
    • A Master-User by pointing a browser to 192.168.80.1
    • A Web Orbiter 2.0 set to the room the Core is in (Otherwise you will not get all the messages).
  • Now you will need to add a MD to make use of any on-screen controls or media functionality.
  • Be very patient and have fun.