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Re: [Ltib] Re: Startup problem


From: Vadim Lebedev
Subject: Re: [Ltib] Re: Startup problem
Date: Wed, 13 Aug 2008 15:28:29 +0200
User-agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.16 (X11/20080724)

Mark

I vaguely remember you wrote that you simply cp -R ltib/root  to the SD card....
Maybe you should try to use mkfs.ext2 to create a filesystem image and then dd it to the SD card...


Thanks
Vadim
Stuart Hughes wrote:
Hi Mark,

Please ignore, I mistakenly thought you were using jffs2.

Are you using the same toolchain to build the rootfs that works as the
one you're using for LTIB.  Also, are the CFLAGS the same?

Regards, Stuart

On Wed, 2008-08-13 at 09:55 +0100, Stuart Hughes wrote:
  
Hi Mark,

If it only happens with LTIB build rootfs, then maybe suspect either the
version of mkfs.jffs2 that ltib uses, or the command line it is using to
build the image.

The version can be found from:

/opt/ltib/usr/bin/rpm -q mtd-utils  (Savannah version)
/opt/freescale/ltib/usr/bin/rpm -q mtd-utils (FSL version)

To figure out the command line, run (you'll get a lot of output so
script it):

$ ./ltib -D -v

You can alter the command line by editing bin/Ltibutils.pm, look for
mkfs.jffs2

I'd be interested if you find anything.

Regards, Stuart

On Tue, 2008-08-12 at 14:13 -0700, Mr Junk wrote:
    
Vadim,

Thanks for the idea.

I had already checked that to make sure, and [ was where it was  
supposed to be and operational.

After that, just to make sure, I had LTIB rebuild the rootfs from  
scratch to make sure everything was virgin.

No good news yet.

I tried copying a rootfs from another dev board onto the sd card and  
that one worked perfectly with my kernel and everything else.

It seems this is only happening with the rootfs generated by LTIB.

Never seen anything like this before.

Still diggin.
ml

On Aug 12, 2008, at 10:14 AM, Vadim Lebedev wrote:

      
Mark,

Please check that you have /usr/bin/[    installed

Thanks
Vadim

Mr Junk wrote:
        
Stuart,
  It is vanilla ext3 and can be be read and written fine by both  
the dev board and the host system when moving files to it.

Very weird that the kernel can call /sbin/init to get busy box  
working but then can't span the fs to get other stuff.

It does find and run rcS, the failure is finding and running [.

If I comment out the line using [ the script run to the next level.

Weird.

Hoped for some silver bullet.  I'll keep digging.

Thanks for the response with all you email load.

I hope you had a great time in the Alps, very beautiful and  
wonderful place to be.

I miss them.

Best,
ml

          

        
On Aug 12, 2008, at 1:29 AM, Stuart Hughes wrote:

          
Hi Mark,

The only educated guess I can give is that there's some kind of  
problem
with the SD card driver related to the filesystem.

Regards, Stuart


On Tue, 2008-08-12 at 00:20 -0700, Mr Junk wrote:
            
Hello,

My kernel compiles and runs fine.

My rootfs compiles and builds fine

My kernel starts up, finds the rootfs and starts init (busybox)  
fine,
but then these errors occur in rcS:

It seems that the "test" [ is not being found in /usr/bin. . .I  
added
a path statement in rcS with no change.

aiting 5sec before mounting root device...
mmc0: new SD card on SPI
mmcblk0: mmc0:0000 SA01G 995328KiB
mmcblk0: p1
kjournald starting.  Commit interval 5 seconds
EXT3 FS on mmcblk0p1, internal journal
EXT3-fs: mounted filesystem with ordered data mode.
VFS: Mounted root (ext3 filesystem).
Freeing init memory: 104K
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 14: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 24: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 29: [: not found
/etc/rc.d/rcS: /etc/rc.d/rcS: 37: [: not found

Has anyone ever seen this before?

Any clues?

Thanks,
ml

              
            

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