HAL_BCM2835 gone from GitLab?
Pages: 1 2
Stuart Painting (5389) 714 posts |
Earlier today, “Recent changes in GitLab” on the front page had an item about adding support for the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 3+. I rushed out a change to the “Raspberry Pi Port” wiki page, only to discover on subsequent checking that the HAL_BCM2835 component has completely disappeared from GitLab. Did they change their mind about the CM3+ and I’ve caught them mid-revert? Or has something else happened on the GitLab server? (Serves me right for jumping the gun in any case. First rule of product announcements: don’t say anything until you’ve got the product in your sweaty palms…) |
Jeffrey Lee (213) 6048 posts |
The HAL_BCM2835 component does seem to have gone missing from public view. Chances are it’s just been made private temporarily while they sort out a licensing issue or similar. |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
Given past history, chances are better that the Pi guys are soon(ish) going to announce the Pi4 or another incarnation of the Compute module, or maybe a ZeroW2…and support is being added to RISC OS so it’s ready to run on the new device right away. Not really sure where they can go with the Pi other than adding more memory (2GiB?) or bumping up the clock speed. I mean, the Pi3 is a quad core ARMv8 (32/64) with WiFi and Bluetooth onboard. So where can the Pi go while still being a Pi? I mean, proper Gigabit would be nice, as would multiple USB outputs so the four ports and network aren’t shared through the one single USB interface. Maybe SATA? But would it be a Pi with all that? That’s my €0,02. Edit: Pi Compute Module 3+, as mentioned in the top post. ;-) |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
<facepalm> Just wanted to look up a document in the source, and… yeah… GitLab doesn’t do a lot with NetSurf. |
John Williams (567) 768 posts |
I think I mentioned that on another thread. And you don’t often agree with me! But hey! I just logged-in like in the old days and it worked (Netsurf)! No deleting cookies or nuffink! Has something changed for the better? |
John Williams (567) 768 posts |
I’m sure justifiably – I don’t have your intellect or your technical skills! But I often have an opinion! |
John Williams (567) 768 posts |
OK – that should have been an “n” dash, but turned out as an “m” dash. What’s the solution? |
John Williams (567) 768 posts |
Whoops! Please delete post forever – I don’t have the right, despite being the author and copyright holder! |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
Bored, John? :-) You might be the author and copyright holder, but it’s pretty much implied that you are relinquishing copyright by writing something on a public forum – the entire thing wouldn’t work otherwise. The solution, by the way, is not to get precious about dash widths. Textile converts a minus symbol – into a wider dash. Things get more fun |
John Williams (567) 768 posts |
Fairly obviously the one which _ what’s the word – looked in Pluto for precise word, but couldn’t find it in panic! |
John Williams (567) 768 posts |
Of course I meant Dave H – our saviour! How dare you spook me like this! j |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
If you look underneath the little sideways blue/white G icon beside your name, you should see a link that says “Edit post”. That’ll let you go back and fix typos. Here’s one where I dictated the content of the article and let Google figure out what I meant : https://heyrick.eu/blog/index.php?diary=20110602 |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
My standard label for the auto predictive text is auto-bollox. I think that sums it up, on first use. |
Chris Mahoney (1684) 2165 posts |
Except the CM3+ has been available since January so there’s not really any reason to hide it now. Curious… |
Stuart Painting (5389) 714 posts |
The HAL_BCM2835 component is still hidden on GitLab, but a new “Beta RPi ROM” build has appeared on the Downloads page. A quick string search of the ROM reveals the text “Raspberry Pi Compute Module 3+”. The plot thickens… |
Chris Mahoney (1684) 2165 posts |
For what it’s worth, that string appears in the mixed.RiscOS.Sources.HAL.BCM2835.s.GPIO file. |
Chris Hall (132) 3554 posts |
The change means that the GPIO module, SPI enumeration and SDIO should now all work on the compute module 3+. |
Chris Mahoney (1684) 2165 posts |
I see that it’s showing up in Recent Changes again (along with a PCCardFS tweak which inexplicably has a PhotoCD for its GitLab icon). |
Chris Mahoney (1684) 2165 posts |
It’s gone again! |
Jeffrey Lee (213) 6048 posts |
Sounds like that’s just a glitch in the “recent changes” list this time, since the code is still there in gitlab |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
Damn. There goes a perfectly good conspiracy theory. |
Andrew Conroy (370) 740 posts |
Rick wrote:
Well predicted Rick! The Pi4 is released today! https://www.raspberrypi.org/products/raspberry-pi-4-model-b/ Any chance of next week’s Lottery numbers too? |
Jeffrey Lee (213) 6048 posts |
Cool – in my head I was still thinking that was going to be around a year away. |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
This new Pi has a core than will run 32-bit code? VERY cool! 4GB RAM & 4K screen at a decent refresh rate in RISCOS? & USB3 & fast ethernet? Want! |
Dominic Plunkett (2556) 34 posts |
Certainly can run 32bit code. |
Pages: 1 2