It's not designed for that. You should use a linux machine. I used Ubuntu installed inside VirtualBox on a Windows PC.truehl wrote:Sound very good, but I'm not sure I understood all steps in the right way. Is it right that I can do this from existing RPi with Wheezy?
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- Raspberry Pi Engineer & Forum Moderator
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Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
By gum... that was an ultra fast reply.
Netsurf was the one I was trying to remember, which I thought was quite good actually.
Thanks again, dom.
Netsurf was the one I was trying to remember, which I thought was quite good actually.
Thanks again, dom.
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Correct. Dillo is a bit too chopped back for me, but netsurf looks quite usable.
I am also seeing stability with wheezy as compared to squeeze. Have pi R1 permanently station behind main TV now with this - swmbo hasn't noticed but she will get an LXDE shaped shock if she accidentally selects HDMI port 2 on the TV remote. . .
I am also seeing stability with wheezy as compared to squeeze. Have pi R1 permanently station behind main TV now with this - swmbo hasn't noticed but she will get an LXDE shaped shock if she accidentally selects HDMI port 2 on the TV remote. . .

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- Raspberry Pi Engineer & Forum Moderator
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- Joined: Wed Aug 17, 2011 7:41 pm
- Location: Cambridge
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Dillo is very quick to launch and browse but it is very basic. It was included mainly for reading the Debian html documentation.
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Got it up and running really quickly and much faster than squeeze ......
Have a couple of questions:
Is the 1-wire support included in this release, if so which GPIO pin does it use ?
Can OWFS be loaded ?
Have a couple of questions:
Is the 1-wire support included in this release, if so which GPIO pin does it use ?
Can OWFS be loaded ?
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Hello, I've been trying to boot Wheezy, but with no luck it refuses to boot, the green LED stays off and the red LED stays solid. All I get is the Raspberry Pi logo showing up and the cursor coming up and disappearing.
Is there actually something it does during the first boot in the background or is it just not booting? I mean I don't even get any console output. Mind you, squeezy worked just fine after I updated the firmware, I had it playing quake 3 and everything. I've tried all kinds of different ways of trying to get it to boot, and I have been searching through the forums....
I have a Sandisk 16GB Class 10 Ultra. Using composite video and I have .7ma of power going to it with just the USB keyboard plugged in.
Is there actually something it does during the first boot in the background or is it just not booting? I mean I don't even get any console output. Mind you, squeezy worked just fine after I updated the firmware, I had it playing quake 3 and everything. I've tried all kinds of different ways of trying to get it to boot, and I have been searching through the forums....
I have a Sandisk 16GB Class 10 Ultra. Using composite video and I have .7ma of power going to it with just the USB keyboard plugged in.
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
This release still has the same USB issues with packet losses so nothing new there
Can we get a decent web browser please Mindori and net surf don't allow some of the browser Add ons would love chromium please
Can we get a decent web browser please Mindori and net surf don't allow some of the browser Add ons would love chromium please
one armed controls engineer, my grammar is bad but lets face it most keyboards don't suit a one armed man
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy) -as a Joomla Se
I have today downloaded the new version. I placed it onto an 8gb SD card.
The only problem I had during the first boot was trying to use the SSH enable/disable. I think it hung and I had to use Ctl C to exit it. I successfully used the option to extend the partition and do the Timezone correction.
Also I cannot seem to find the field in Midori to enter the URL. If I edit a Speed Dial tile then it works. The Netsurf works for me - but its rendering is not perfect yet.
I have placed the procedures I used at http://www.munroweb.net:180/Setting%20u ... Joomla.htm
I have to say that it does seem to be pretty fast
, especially as I am using it on a slower card.
The only problem I had during the first boot was trying to use the SSH enable/disable. I think it hung and I had to use Ctl C to exit it. I successfully used the option to extend the partition and do the Timezone correction.
Also I cannot seem to find the field in Midori to enter the URL. If I edit a Speed Dial tile then it works. The Netsurf works for me - but its rendering is not perfect yet.
I have placed the procedures I used at http://www.munroweb.net:180/Setting%20u ... Joomla.htm
I have to say that it does seem to be pretty fast

Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
I have been informed today that my Raspberry Pi was full open due to remote SSH access being enabled by default for root with the default password.
I would suggest to disable remote SSH root access in /etc/ssh/sshd_config with "PermitRootLogin no" (like Ubuntu does I think?).
This, especially since the documentations here and there, and even the raspi-config tool highlights the need to change the password for the "pi" user, but not mention to the root.
Cordially
I would suggest to disable remote SSH root access in /etc/ssh/sshd_config with "PermitRootLogin no" (like Ubuntu does I think?).
This, especially since the documentations here and there, and even the raspi-config tool highlights the need to change the password for the "pi" user, but not mention to the root.
Cordially
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
In the default configuration it is not possible to log in as root as it doesn't have a password set.Alkarex wrote:I have been informed today that my Raspberry Pi was full open due to remote SSH access being enabled by default for root with the default password.
I would suggest to disable remote SSH root access in /etc/ssh/sshd_config with "PermitRootLogin no" (like Ubuntu does I think?).
This, especially since the documentations here and there, and even the raspi-config tool highlights the need to change the password for the "pi" user, but not mention to the root.
(PS sorry I've been quiet the past few days - I'm back from travelling now and will update on various issues tomorrow).
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
I've been using this image since the day after it became available for download. It seems to be a big improvement on the previous release - certainly from a responsiveness perspective.
I've had two problems since I've been using it:
- I'm seeing the same issue exiting x windows as I think someone else has reported. On around 1 in 4 occasions I don't get the shell prompt back - just a black screen which doesn't respond to a Ctrl C, D, \ or anything else that might be expected to kill a hung process. A power cycle is the only way out I've found so far.
- I'm also seeing the keyboard 'bounce' problem too (in X, using SPE) but not very often. I've only 2 USB devices (a cheap Asda wired keyboard and mouse) connected, but they are both plugged into the same USB port via a cheap 4-way USB (unpowered) hub. I'm going to remove this from my config for the next couple of days and use the two on board ports directly to see if this resolves it (I'm aware of the potential power supply issues), but I didn't experience the issue under the same circumstances with the squeeze release.
Otherwise, very happy with the beta and I'll be sticking with it rather than reverting to the squeeze release. Thanks for your efforts with this so far.
Tim.
I've had two problems since I've been using it:
- I'm seeing the same issue exiting x windows as I think someone else has reported. On around 1 in 4 occasions I don't get the shell prompt back - just a black screen which doesn't respond to a Ctrl C, D, \ or anything else that might be expected to kill a hung process. A power cycle is the only way out I've found so far.
- I'm also seeing the keyboard 'bounce' problem too (in X, using SPE) but not very often. I've only 2 USB devices (a cheap Asda wired keyboard and mouse) connected, but they are both plugged into the same USB port via a cheap 4-way USB (unpowered) hub. I'm going to remove this from my config for the next couple of days and use the two on board ports directly to see if this resolves it (I'm aware of the potential power supply issues), but I didn't experience the issue under the same circumstances with the squeeze release.
Otherwise, very happy with the beta and I'll be sticking with it rather than reverting to the squeeze release. Thanks for your efforts with this so far.
Tim.
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Ok so I had a SanDisk Ultra 8GB class 6 that had appeared to die. I just put wheezy on it. Now the stupid card has decided to work.
Thought the card was toast.



Thought the card was toast.
512MB version 2.0 as WordPress Server
Motorola Lapdock with Pi2B
Modded Rev 1.0 with pin headers at USB
http://rich1.dyndns.tv/
(RS)Allied ships old stock to reward its Customers for long wait!
Motorola Lapdock with Pi2B
Modded Rev 1.0 with pin headers at USB
http://rich1.dyndns.tv/
(RS)Allied ships old stock to reward its Customers for long wait!
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
The Wheezy image does not appear to have swapfile. I am creating one at 256MB
512MB version 2.0 as WordPress Server
Motorola Lapdock with Pi2B
Modded Rev 1.0 with pin headers at USB
http://rich1.dyndns.tv/
(RS)Allied ships old stock to reward its Customers for long wait!
Motorola Lapdock with Pi2B
Modded Rev 1.0 with pin headers at USB
http://rich1.dyndns.tv/
(RS)Allied ships old stock to reward its Customers for long wait!
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
I am trying to get wheezy up and running but I keep getting this error when running 'sudo apt-get update'
Any ideas on how to fix this?
Code: Select all
W: Failed to fetch http://http.debian.net/debian/dists/wheezy/main/binary-armel/PackagesIndex MD5Sum mismatch
E: Some index files failed to download. They have been ignored, or old ones used instead.
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Try to change your sources to your local mirror, best in FTP:sporez wrote:I am trying to get wheezy up and running but I keep getting this error when running 'sudo apt-get update'
Code: Select all
W: Failed to fetch http://http.debian.net/debian/dists/wheezy/main/binary-armel/PackagesIndex MD5Sum mismatch
Code: Select all
sudo nano /etc/apt/sources.list
Code: Select all
ftp://ftp.fr.debian.org
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Thank you for the quick reply! Changing it to ftp://ftp.us.debian.org seems to have worked!Alkarex wrote:Try to change your sources to your local mirror, best in FTP:sporez wrote:I am trying to get wheezy up and running but I keep getting this error when running 'sudo apt-get update'
Code: Select all
W: Failed to fetch http://http.debian.net/debian/dists/wheezy/main/binary-armel/PackagesIndex MD5Sum mismatch
and use e.g. for France:Code: Select all
sudo nano /etc/apt/sources.list
Code: Select all
ftp://ftp.fr.debian.org

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Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Hi, I noticed this too, I assumed that one was created by default.Lob0426 wrote:The Wheezy image does not appear to have swapfile. I am creating one at 256MB
What is the situation regarding a "swapfile" or "Partition" on Wheezy?
Apologies if my question appears stupid.
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
It has a swapfile, which is created and managed by dphys-swapfile. See `man dphys-swapfile` for how to enabled, disable and configure.SupremeSpod wrote:Hi, I noticed this too, I assumed that one was created by default.Lob0426 wrote:The Wheezy image does not appear to have swapfile. I am creating one at 256MB
What is the situation regarding a "swapfile" or "Partition" on Wheezy?
Apologies if my question appears stupid.
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
I really like this new Debian version, but I am having problems getting the system to shut down properly. The system hangs intermittently during a "shutdown -h now" command with the LED lights on so I have to pull the plug. For obvious reasons this eventually corrupted my install and I have to reimage today. Is there a reliable way to shutdown or reboot the system? This may not be related to wheezy as I see similar complaints with the squeeze version.
My Raspberry Pi Project Page:
https://www.flaminghellmet.com/launch/
https://www.flaminghellmet.com/launch/
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
I'm not convinced this in itself should lead to image corruption. The root filesystem should have been unmounted at this point, so pulling the plug should be safe.pjc123 wrote:I really like this new Debian version, but I am having problems getting the system to shut down properly. The system hangs intermittently during a "shutdown -h now" command with the LED lights on so I have to pull the plug. For obvious reasons this eventually corrupted my install and I have to reimage today. Is there a reliable way to shutdown or reboot the system? This may not be related to wheezy as I see similar complaints with the squeeze version.
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
The problem is that I do not know what has been completed after issuing a shutdown command, including the unmounting of the filesystems, because the screen goes blank (I am in the init 5 gui state). I am going to start running a sync command before the shutdown from now on to help the situation. I am reimaging after this post, so I am going to see if there are any messages in the logs.asb wrote: I'm not convinced this in itself should lead to image corruption. The root filesystem should have been unmounted at this point, so pulling the plug should be safe.
My Raspberry Pi Project Page:
https://www.flaminghellmet.com/launch/
https://www.flaminghellmet.com/launch/
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Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
Used Debian Wheezy on my PC a while ago, but since I haven't got my Pi yet I'm just saying pretty much anything. So there are no specific graphics acceleration driver yet? Does that mean that performance in graphics terms the Pi isn't faster? Also, after seeing Gentoo in action on the Pi I'm surprised by the speed!
- OMightyBuggy
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Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
No idea of how much of a noob question this is, but can you add the option of changing the user name on first boot on later images or update?
I used the command 'sudo usermod -l Blah pi' and I get a error saying the process is being used.
I used the command 'sudo usermod -l Blah pi' and I get a error saying the process is being used.
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Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
A few points about the wheezy set up, which is altogether more rounded than the squeeze.
I see that the problem with the usb hub killing the ethernet cable connection has not yet been solved with wheezy. I hope that this will be addressed with the Alpha version?
When I run python programs that need the module "pygame" in the programme environment "Idle3" it cannot find the module, however if I run it in the "idle" it does. (it also works in Geany which I have installed)
I do miss the fancy screen savers of the squeeze.
Also I find it a less open system -- one point is that there is no "Other" catagory in the startup menu.
All the best
Jeff
I see that the problem with the usb hub killing the ethernet cable connection has not yet been solved with wheezy. I hope that this will be addressed with the Alpha version?
When I run python programs that need the module "pygame" in the programme environment "Idle3" it cannot find the module, however if I run it in the "idle" it does. (it also works in Geany which I have installed)
I do miss the fancy screen savers of the squeeze.
Also I find it a less open system -- one point is that there is no "Other" catagory in the startup menu.
All the best
Jeff
Re: Help test the next Debian image (wheezy)
After re-imaging my wheezy install, the shutdown problem went away; something was corrupt.
My Raspberry Pi Project Page:
https://www.flaminghellmet.com/launch/
https://www.flaminghellmet.com/launch/