Asus Tinker Board
Asus Tinker Board
Can I use an Asus Tinker Board instead of a Rpi 3 or Rpi Zero W with Pi-Star and a Zumspot?
Re: Asus Tinker Board
Most likely not. The supported computers are listed on the Pi-Star downloads page: http://www.pistar.uk/downloads/
73, Toshen, KE0FHS
Playing with Pi-Star (unofficial notes about setting up and using Pi-Star):
https://amateurradionotes.com/pi-star.htm
Playing with Pi-Star (unofficial notes about setting up and using Pi-Star):
https://amateurradionotes.com/pi-star.htm
Re: Asus Tinker Board
The current kernel doesn’t boot it. I wouldn’t mind seeing it as well. Bit of overkill though unless you’re going to add more stuff.
Re: Asus Tinker Board
As KE0FHS has already stated, the only platforms that Pi-Star is available for is found on the download page
http://www.pistar.uk/download/
http://www.pistar.uk/download/
Re: Asus Tinker Board
I know I'm dragging this post up from the dead, but in case anyone is wondering, yes, you can make it work - manually. It would totally not be supported in any way I'm certain and you need to know linux pretty well to do it.
I'm not going to post exact directions, because if you can't make it work with what I'm posting, you'll need to learn more about linux and how pi-star works before trying it.
The nice thing about using the Tinkerboard is that the UART on pins 8,10 are tied to ttyS1 and don't overlap bluetooth. So you can technically use both bluetooth instead of wifi for things like phone tethering.
Hints:
1. Start with Tinkerboard Debian.
2. Disable the serial console running on ttyS1
linaro@tinkerboard:/boot$ cat extlinux/extlinux.conf
label kernel-4.4
kernel /zImage
fdt /rk3288-miniarm.dtb
append earlyprintk quiet splash rw init=/sbin/init
3. Disable any unused hardware, just to make life easier.
linaro@tinkerboard:/boot$ cat hw_intf.conf
#Hardware Interface Config
intf:spi0=off
intf:uart2=off
intf:uart3=off
intf:uart4=off
intf:pcm_i2s=on
intf:i2c1=on
intf:i2c4=on
intf:spi2=on
intf:pwm2=off
intf:pwm3=off
intf:uart1=on
#DTS Overlay Config
# 1. check the name.dtbo in /boot/overlays
# 2. add intf:dtoverlay=name as below
#intf:dtoverlay=i2c
If you have pins 38/40 connected, you may not be able to latch onto the board because it locks up on boot.
to fix:
4. Set GPIO pin 38 to mode OUT
5. Set GPIO pin 40 to mode IN
From there, pull the files from the GitHub repo for bin/sbin/dash. Install and setup nginx. Setup the systemd files. Update sudousers to allow www-data to run commands as root w/o password.
I think that's about all I did. Runs nice and smooth with the extra horsepower of the Tinkerboard, although that doesn't matter as much now with the Pi4.
I'm not going to post exact directions, because if you can't make it work with what I'm posting, you'll need to learn more about linux and how pi-star works before trying it.
The nice thing about using the Tinkerboard is that the UART on pins 8,10 are tied to ttyS1 and don't overlap bluetooth. So you can technically use both bluetooth instead of wifi for things like phone tethering.
Hints:
1. Start with Tinkerboard Debian.
2. Disable the serial console running on ttyS1
linaro@tinkerboard:/boot$ cat extlinux/extlinux.conf
label kernel-4.4
kernel /zImage
fdt /rk3288-miniarm.dtb
append earlyprintk quiet splash rw init=/sbin/init
3. Disable any unused hardware, just to make life easier.
linaro@tinkerboard:/boot$ cat hw_intf.conf
#Hardware Interface Config
intf:spi0=off
intf:uart2=off
intf:uart3=off
intf:uart4=off
intf:pcm_i2s=on
intf:i2c1=on
intf:i2c4=on
intf:spi2=on
intf:pwm2=off
intf:pwm3=off
intf:uart1=on
#DTS Overlay Config
# 1. check the name.dtbo in /boot/overlays
# 2. add intf:dtoverlay=name as below
#intf:dtoverlay=i2c
If you have pins 38/40 connected, you may not be able to latch onto the board because it locks up on boot.
to fix:
4. Set GPIO pin 38 to mode OUT
5. Set GPIO pin 40 to mode IN
From there, pull the files from the GitHub repo for bin/sbin/dash. Install and setup nginx. Setup the systemd files. Update sudousers to allow www-data to run commands as root w/o password.
I think that's about all I did. Runs nice and smooth with the extra horsepower of the Tinkerboard, although that doesn't matter as much now with the Pi4.