Difference between revisions of "Talk:Sugar on a Stick/Raspberry Pi"

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:No, and do nothing.  LiveOS isn't really an appropriate context, because Raspberry Pi has no internal storage to begin with, and doesn't boot from USB like a PC can.  By writing the Fedora SoaS Raspberry Pi image to a microSD card and inserting it, loading and installation is complete.  My understanding from discussions with Thomas on IRC is that he only had to update the wireless firmware once after inserting the card, and that Sugar did not prompt again for colour and age on reboot.  Hopefully he'll confirm that.  --[[User:Quozl|Quozl]] ([[User talk:Quozl|talk]]) 00:25, 14 July 2017 (EDT).
 
:No, and do nothing.  LiveOS isn't really an appropriate context, because Raspberry Pi has no internal storage to begin with, and doesn't boot from USB like a PC can.  By writing the Fedora SoaS Raspberry Pi image to a microSD card and inserting it, loading and installation is complete.  My understanding from discussions with Thomas on IRC is that he only had to update the wireless firmware once after inserting the card, and that Sugar did not prompt again for colour and age on reboot.  Hopefully he'll confirm that.  --[[User:Quozl|Quozl]] ([[User talk:Quozl|talk]]) 00:25, 14 July 2017 (EDT).
  
:More on the image composition.  Image has four partitions.  A FAT boot partition for the Raspberry Pi firmware to load kernel and initramfs.  A swap partition.  Two other partitions, one of which is root filesystem, the other (I think) is /home.  On first boot the partitions are resized to fit the media.  This info is from IRC discussions with Rishabh, and a brief forensic examination.  --[[User:Quozl|Quozl]] ([[User talk:Quozl|talk]]) 00:49, 14 July 2017 (EDT)
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:More on the image composition.  Image has four partitions.  A FAT boot partition for the Raspberry Pi firmware (32MB).  An ext4 boot partition (512MB).  A swap partition (512MB)A root filesystem (3.3 GB).  On first boot the root partition and filesystem is resized to fit the media.  This info is from IRC discussions with Rishabh, and a brief forensic examination.  --[[User:Quozl|Quozl]] ([[User talk:Quozl|talk]]) 00:57, 14 July 2017 (EDT)

Revision as of 23:57, 13 July 2017

Is this a LiveOS image?

Please describe the image composition.

  • Is it a LiveOS image with a SquashFS root filesystem like the other SoaS images?
  • If so, how do you recommend that users achieve persistent changes in the OS?
No, and do nothing. LiveOS isn't really an appropriate context, because Raspberry Pi has no internal storage to begin with, and doesn't boot from USB like a PC can. By writing the Fedora SoaS Raspberry Pi image to a microSD card and inserting it, loading and installation is complete. My understanding from discussions with Thomas on IRC is that he only had to update the wireless firmware once after inserting the card, and that Sugar did not prompt again for colour and age on reboot. Hopefully he'll confirm that. --Quozl (talk) 00:25, 14 July 2017 (EDT).
More on the image composition. Image has four partitions. A FAT boot partition for the Raspberry Pi firmware (32MB). An ext4 boot partition (512MB). A swap partition (512MB). A root filesystem (3.3 GB). On first boot the root partition and filesystem is resized to fit the media. This info is from IRC discussions with Rishabh, and a brief forensic examination. --Quozl (talk) 00:57, 14 July 2017 (EDT)