Thanks a lot for your feedback, it was helpful. > If you want to use existing SW stack that's on that board (quickboot, > the flashing tools, etc.) I suggest getting support from wherever you > obtained the board. I wish this were an option, but our support contract with the original vendor has long since expired. I've been asked to do a quick-n-dirty demo using this hardware (which will be thrown away next year), and I wanted to have precise control over the image contents. Now that I see how much work this would be, I think I'll just stick with the original board support and live with a slow boot time for this demo. `:-} On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 7:06 PM, Stephen Warren <swarren@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 10/31/2012 12:29 PM, Evade Flow wrote: >> I've inherited a Tegra2 T20-based system that I'd like to flash a new >> kernel to. I built this kernel using OpenEmbedded/Yocto, and the kernel >> sources from: >> >> - http://nv-tegra.nvidia.com/gitweb/?p=linux-2.6.git;a=summary > > If you want to use existing SW stack that's on that board (quickboot, > the flashing tools, etc.) I suggest getting support from wherever you > obtained the board. I know nothing about it, and I imagine anyone else > on this list is in the same boat. Any support you receive on this > mailing this will be targeted at using public tools/SW like U-Boot (or > just possible our more usual fastboot bootloader), the mainline kernel, > and the flashing tools/scripts usually used with those. > >> burnflash.sh for p852 board > > That board name and your mention of quickboot all imply some automotive > board. It isn't one of the boards we support in mainline. The developer > I spoke to was surprised people outside NVIDIA even had the board. > > Sorry I can't be any more help. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-tegra" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html