Tizen uses the hciattach_bcm43xx tool from BlueZ to load firmware to the Bluetooth dongle, but I can't find this utility in Alpine's bluez or bluez-deprecated package. It seems Bluetooth is connected via H4 UART at /dev/ttyHS0.
See for an explanation of the difference between Android and Linux audio, and see for a different SD810 device's ALSA config. Currently ALSA recognizes the sound card but fails with an error when playing audio: the Android audio configuration files would need to be converted to Linux format by xml2ucm. Then, opening /dev/subsys_adsp will boot the sound card. The audio requires the blobs from Android's /vendor/adsp.* to be present in /lib/firmware/postmarketos. Doing the same on postmarketOS (after linking all the firmware in /firmware/images to /lib/firmware/postmarketos) causes any `dmesg` call to freeze (?!), and the device would kernel panic with a "modem crashed" error in a few seconds. A relatively recent 64-bit computer (Linux, macOS, or Windows) with a reasonable amount of RAM and about 200 GB of free storage (more if you enable ccache or build for multiple devices). (The mainlining team's members can be found at )Īndroid boots the modem by mounting the modem partition to /firmware, then opening /dev/subsys_modem. Thus, this port doesn't use a mainline kernel.
However, currently there's only support for serial output and input, no screen or USB. There is a project to port the mainline kernel to Nexus 6P: as a result there's now some support for Nexus 6P in mainline. Run wlroots with fbdev: relies on a custom fbdev backend for wlroots which has been declined for upstream inclusion.
Recommended: running wlroots based compositors using wlroots native x11/fbdev + pixman support: relies purely on existing upstream behavior with a minor bug fix patch against wlroots.The Nexus 6P running on downstream kernel does not have DRM support, which means most accelerated interfaces (such as phosh and sway) are unsupported. The aluminum-bodied phone is powered by an 8-core, 64-bit processor running Android 6.0 Marshmallow, and has a 5.7 inch 2560 x 1440 AMOLED display. Let go of Volume Down when a picture of a green Android mascot shows up on the screen. Google Nexus 6P With both the hardware and software coming from the same company, the Google Nexus 6P is as close as you can come to an iPhone-like experience without actually using an iPhone. The Nexus 6P had a very active sub-forum at XDA, and it wasn’t long before complaints about bootlooping phones led to investigations and.
To enter Fastboot mode, hold Volume Down while powering on the device. XDA-Developers is a forum where Android enthusiasts and developers go to offer up their experiments, troubleshoot devices, and do amazing feats to extend the end of a phone’s useful life with software. The Nexus 6P, like all Google Nexus devices, uses Fastboot as the flashing protocol.
Various NFS client configs: CONFIG_NFS_V4_1=y.Configs changed from stock Lineage kernel: