9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
this is worked "ANDROID NOUGAT" how can i use it for "ANDROID OREO"
-plz help me...
-------------------------------------------
echo " Ã-~-DEVICE ID CHANGINGÃ-~-"
sleep 2
echo "
"
COUNT=1
while
do
;
echo "settings put secure android_id " | tr -d '\n' > X1... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: f4is4l
4 Replies
2. Android
Hi,
I have a program that logs serial port data. In order to do so it requires the full device name in linux (e.g. /dev/ttyUSB0) and a baudrate.
Does anyone know how I can find out the device name in the terminal? I am trying to port this application to Android and cant figure it out.
... (22 Replies)
Discussion started by: fedora18
22 Replies
3. Red Hat
Hi,
I want to use android Apps like whats up with my linux pc.
Can any one give some steps or way how to do the same ? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Priy
1 Replies
4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi all!
I am trying to register a device in an existing device class, but I am
having trouble getting the pointer to an existing class.
I can create a class in a module, get the pointer to it and then use
it to register the device with:
*cl = class_create(THIS_MODULE, className);... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: hdaniel@ualg.pt
0 Replies
5. Fedora
I have been reading prep questions for my second unix academy exam, and there's a nuance, I'm not sure I understand it correctly.
I've been under impression from my readings of book by Evi Nemeth and from unix academy DVDs I've been watching, that kernel's modules are drivers. I think of it, as... (25 Replies)
Discussion started by: newlinuxuser1
25 Replies
6. Android
In case you did not know, Android 2.1, Éclair, runs on the 2.6.29 Linux kernel. However, the user space it is built atop Dalvik, a Google-designed custom JVM (Java virtual machine).
This is pretty interesting, when you think about it. The core of Android is the linux kernel, and the standard... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
5 Replies
7. Linux
I recently started working with Linux and wrote my first device driver for a hardware chip controlled by a host CPU running Linux 2.6.x kernel.
1. The user space process makes an IOCTL call with pointer to a user memory buffer.
2. The kernel device driver in the big switch-case of IOCTL,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: agaurav
1 Replies
8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
my Querry is
if i build a software on a specific linux kernel
and then try to run it on another linux kernel
....what can be the possible problems
or what errors can most probably appear while running the binary in an updated version of linux. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mobydick
1 Replies
9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I am looking for a guide on how to program for either the Linux or FreeBSD (includes 4.4BSD, NetBSD or OpenBSD) kernel. I would prefer to learn how to write device drivers, but anything would help.
If you know, please email me at *removed* or leave a post here
Regards,
Farhan (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Farhan
0 Replies
ABOOTIMG(1) General Commands Manual ABOOTIMG(1)
NAME
abootimg - manipulate Android Boot Images.
DESCRIPTION
Tool to read/write/update android boot images
SYNOPSIS
abootimg
-i <bootimg>
abootimg
-x <bootimg> [<bootimg.cfg> [<kernel> [<ramdisk> [<secondstage>]]]]
abootimg
-u <bootimg> [-c "param=value"] [-f <bootimg.cfg>] [-k <kernel>] [-r <ramdisk>] [-s <secondstage>]
abootimg
--create <bootimg> [-c "param=value"] [-f <bootimg.cfg>] -k <kernel> -r <ramdisk> [-s <secondstage>]
OPTIONS
-i print boot imgage informations
-x Extract a boot image
-u Update a boot image
--create
Create a boot image
Options for extracting boot images
bootimg
Existing bootimage to use
bootimg.cfg
Name for the bootimg.cfg file, defaults to bootimg.cfg
kernel Name for the kernel image, defaults to zImage
ramdisk
Name for the ramdisk image, defaults to initrd.img
secondstage
Name for the second-stage image, defaults to stage2.img
Options for updating and creating boot images
bootimg
Existing bootimage to use
-c param=value
Existing bootimage to use
-f <bootimg.cfg>
Update bootimg.cfg with the named file
-k <kernel>
Update kernel with the named file
-r <ramdisk>
Update ramdisk with the named file
-s <secondstage>
Update secondstage image with the named file
ABOOTIMG(1)