Hi I am trying to install geos on a raspberry pi running rasbian wheezy so that I can include the shapely modules in my python scripts. I tried using: git clone git://git.debian.org/git/pkg-grass/geos

Confusingly, while Debian itself seems to be robust about enabling cross-builds in their own package, there seems to be much less official documentation about how raspberry Pi OS (64 bit) packages are built.


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Still having one problem with this version, I can't install any plugins from the repository.

I've included the octoprint.log error message.

I'm not using a raspberry, maybe it's because of that, but the git version works fine.

There is a mailing list called debian-arm where people could contribute their efforts and ask questions. As you can see in the list, there is already a new firmware which was released few days back which might make booting directly a reality instead of the workaround shared above.

In late January 2021, the Raspberry Pi OS package raspberrypi-sys-mods added a trusted GPG key and configuration entry in the APT package manager.[16] This addition made it easier to install Visual Studio Code, a source code editor developed by Microsoft. This change initiated a query to Microsoft's package servers every time the system checked for updates.[16] Given Microsoft's once-adversarial history with Linux, this form of telemetry upset some users.[17] The changes were later removed.[18]

I tried it first with the recommended image in the OMV guide. Then with the current image from raspberry-image downloaded online. Both times after installing raspbian there was no way to update. This was the error:

I thought it might be some problem with the local debian mirror, so I left it until now. I just tried again and it seems to have solved it. I can update without problems. I assume that if someone has tried to install OMV without updating before, they will have had problems. Now it works. I think those who ran the OMV script yesterday whithout upgrading before, should re-install today from scratch if they are still having problems.

Finally I have installed with the image downloaded online by raspberry-image. Note: Before burning the image I configured the PI user to avoid possible problems with the OMV script. This user can be deleted later to avoid risks of hacking by brute force.

I am running about 5 docker containers on a raspberry pi 4b+ (4gb ram version), and about after 30 hours, it will become painfully slow to use, in all aspects. This server does not use a desktop environment, only SSH. But when it becomes slow, even SSH connections are incredibly slow, as well as every docker service being hosted, as well as its general network performance. I thought this was a RAM issue, so I added a swap space of 4GB. It seemed to help a little bit, but it still now has this issue where it slows down. And the only other issue i could find that was similar to mine was this: Raspberry Pi 3 gets freezes after some days.

This command opens a PuTTY terminal. Log in with your user name and password. The default user name is 'pi' and the default password is 'raspberry'. After logging in, you can execute interactive shell commands like 'top'.

The raspberrypi function returns a connection object, r, for Raspberry Pi hardware that has been set up using the Hardware Setup screen. The hostname, user name, and password used to construct the raspberrypi object are the default MATLAB session values for these parameters. Simulink Support Package for Raspberry Pi Hardware saves one set of communication parameters, i.e. hostname, user name and password, for the Raspberry Pi hardware as default MATLAB session values. Note, the default MATLAB session values for the communication parameters are first determined during the firmware update process. The communication parameters may subsequently be changed using the Tools > Run on Target Hardware > Options... UI in a Simulink model and are sticky, meaning that once you change the communication parameter values they are saved as default MATLAB session values, and are used for all Simulink models.

Simulink Support Package for Raspberry Pi Hardware generates a Linux executable for each Simulink model you run on the Raspberry Pi hardware. The generated executable has the same name as the Simulink model and is saved on the Raspberry Pi hardware. To run/stop a Simulink model, you can use the runModel and stopModel methods of the raspberrypi object. ff782bc1db

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