and do the same with uname -r, but without the trailing -v7+ (eg 4.4.43+ if uname -r is 4.4.43-v7+)Ĭheck that a correct. Ln -s /usr/src/linux-headers-$(uname -r) /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/source Ln -s /usr/src/linux-headers-$(uname -r) /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/build Ln -s /somewhere/that/has/free/space/linux /usr/src/linux-headers-$(uname -r) # This is not needed anymore (since mid-2017? Was it even needed at some point?) # Older versions might need to have linux-headers installed into /usr/src and symlinks everywhere in /lib/modules rpi-source -dest /somewhere/that/has/free/space In case it does not download the right kernel version headers (there may be a mismatch between uname -r and the folder names in /lib/modules), you can grab the raspi sources by running: the headers corresponding to your exact current kernel build) into /lib/modules//. Run apt-get install raspberrypi-kernel-headers to get the correct headers (i.e. It should be pretty similar on other distros and/or with other kernels. The following procedure works (at least) on a Raspberry Pi running 4.4.43-v7+ or 4.9.30-v7+ kernel (but does not seem to work with the 4.9.24-v7+ kernel). To be confirmed: it looks like this device is better integrated into LibreElec system (see here how to use the Crazycat-CC driver pack). Usb 1-1.3.3: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=3 Usb 1-1.3.3: New USB device found, idVendor=0572, idProduct=c689 The following data is related to the past "Craz圜at solution". Obviously the vanilla driver is nowadays inherently "in the tree" and builds as part of the kernel, and will eventually make it into distro kernels. The rest of this paragraph and the whole chapter on Building the driver, contain data that may still be useful, but is starting to feel dated, now with the suport in vanilla. Vanilla driver dvb_usb_dvbsky as of kernel 5.4 goes like this:Ġx0572 0xc688 "MyGica Mini DVB-T2 USB Stick T230"Ġx0572 0xc689 "MyGica Mini DVB-T2 USB Stick T230C"Ġx0572 0xc68a "MyGica Mini DVB-T2 USB Stick T230C v2"Ġx0572 0xc699 "MyGica Mini DVB-T2 USB Stick T230C Lite" (no IR remote sensor) The list of T230 flavours supported by the For years, Craz圜at has done a patient job of keeping the T230C hardware supported in dvb_usb_cxusb in his own build of the "media" driver subsystem. Kernel 5.4 vanilla has moved some code about, the T230C and T230C v2 are now supported by driver dvb_usb_dvbsky, rather than the previously responsible dvb_usb_cxusb. Kernel 4.14 (included in Raspbian 9 in 2019) ships with the correct driver to support the T230C. Kernel 4.9.24 included in Raspbian 8 (installed when upgrading packages through apt-get) does not ship the driver either. USB interface: Cypress CY7C68013A-56LTXCĪs of kernel 4.4, drivers are not shipped with the kernel (at least not in Raspbian 8). The following components are used on the device On Windows, drivers (shipped with some devices in 2018, probably ones with updated "T230C2" EEPROM) are required to prevent frequent blue screens in nearly all apps. That app supports H.265, but the phone must be fast enough. The device can be used with the PadTV HD app on Android if connected via a USB OTG adapter. (There is also a bulky eyeTV hybrid, which lacks the "T2" in its name but supports DVB-T2 nonetheless unlike its predecessor of the same name. The T2 lite has a white case (and different EEPROM), the other two have a case that is silver with a transparent cap. These three share the same conic case, while MyGica and GeniaTech devices get wider only around the IEC connector. Targetting a Mac OS audience, they are 5 to 6 times as expensive as the MyGica T230C which does feature IR support (and comes with a 28-button remote control). There is a version without IR called eyeTV T2, eyeTV T2 hybrid and eyeTV T2 lite (three names for the same hardware). The MyGica-branded device can be found on websites that ship hardware directly from China. Support for "T230C v2" has made it to the vanilla kernel in the fall of 2019. Although it has the same external appearence, it uses different hardware. The Geniatech T230C (also branded as MyGica T230C with a black case instead of a white one) is an evolution of Geniatech T230. EyeTV T2, eyeTV T2 hybrid or eyeTV T2 lite PCB (bottom)
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |