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Full Discussion: Linux on a RK3368 eReader
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Linux on a RK3368 eReader Post 303024342 by eReader fan on Saturday 6th of October 2018 04:31:23 PM
Old 10-06-2018
Linux on a RK3368 eReader

Hello! There is a new eReader on the market called Boyue Likebook Mars. It has the processor RK3368, so its a Octa-core with 2 Gb of RAM, and it seems very promising, but Boyue did a mess with the firmware, making it so limited. So maybe there is the oportunity to install linux there.

I searched and I found a project on github talking about this, but not on an eReader. Aparently there are some Android TV Boxes with the same specs, and they can install linux there. I can imagine it should not be so easy as to just install it on the eReader, but maybe more than the half of the work is done with this github project. (I can't write the adress because I am new here, but it's easy to find if you google "linux rk3368")

Can anyone who understand all this world better than me (not so hard to happen) explain me a little about this possibility? I think maybe the more problematic thing it would be the eInk display.

Thanks in advance to everyone
 

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yhsm-linux-add-entropy(1)				      General Commands Manual					 yhsm-linux-add-entropy(1)

NAME
yhsm-linux-add-entropy - Seed the Linux entropy pool with data from YubiHSM TRNG SYNOPSIS
yhsm-linux-add-entropy [options] DESCRIPTION
The YubiHSM uses "Avalanche Noise" TRNG together with USB SOF jitter sampling to feed a DRBG_CTR algorithm (NIST publication SP800-90). The result has been verified as being random data of good quality by at least one third party cryptographer. <http://sartryck.idg.se/Art/ Yubihsm_1_TW072011.html> Use this program to add random data from the YubiHSM to the entropy pool of your Linux operating system. This is useful whenever lots of random data is needed, such as when generating chryptographic keys (GPG-keys), on a server terminating SSL sessions etc. You may run this script from cron, or in a while-loop. Make sure it does not run at the same time as something else accessing the YubiHSM though, or the two tasks may interrupt each other - probably making both fail. OPTIONS
-D, --device device file name (default: /dev/ttyACM0). -v, --verbose enable verbose operation. -c, --count number of iterations to run (default: 100). -r, --ratio bits per byte read to use. 8 is probably fine, but as a conservative default 2 is used. --debug enable debug printout, including all data sent to/from YubiHSM. EXIT STATUS
0 Entropy added successfully 1 Failure BUGS
Report python-pyhsm/yhsm-linux-add-entropy bugs in the issue tracker <https://github.com/Yubico/python-pyhsm/issues/> SEE ALSO
The python-pyhsm home page <https://github.com/Yubico/python-pyhsm/> YubiHSMs can be obtained from Yubico <http://www.yubico.com/>. python-pyhsm December 2011 yhsm-linux-add-entropy(1)
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