I want to try some networking projects with Raspberry Pis, and I need to just send packets between a pair of pis. I would be happy as a first step just being able to ping between to Raspberry Pis in ad-hoc mode. I have not successfully done this despite looking at several tutorials and examples online.
I have 2x Raspberry Pis with the Debian Wheezy OS installed.
I am trying to use wget to download the Raspbian image for the Raspberry Pi (http://downloads.raspberrypi.org/images/raspbian/2012-07-15-wheezy-raspb...).
It starts downloading fine but then finished after a second without error but clearly not finished and leaves a tiny file instead of the full one:
kemra102@iacon:~/Downloads$ wget http://downloads.raspberrypi.org
Raspberry Pi is a nifty mini PC, but some users wished it had more RAM memory.
Il team di Raspberry Pi, il famoso mini-pc a basso costo che sta spopolando nella rete, è felice di annunciare il rilascio definito di RaspbianOS ovvero una distribuzione, derivata da Debian Wheezy, interamente dedicata ed ottimizzata per il Raspberry Pi.
I benchmark eseguiti dimostrano come RaspbianOS sia molto più performare di Debian sul Raspberry (valori che oscillano tra il 10% e il 50%).
I'm attempting to run Varnish, but it seems that a child process is dying on startup. Can anyone suggest the best way for me to go about debugging what's going wrong?
Background
I have a raspberry pi on which I'd installed Debian, which was running varnish fine.
Recently, I decided to install Raspbian (An OS based on Debian, but optimised for the raspberry pi).
Published at LXer:
Raspbian is the Debian Linux distribution optimized for the ARMv7 Raspberry Pi. Older versions of Raspbian are based upon Debian Linux 6.0 on the Linux 3.1 kernel and GCC 4.4.5. However, the latest Debian Linux 7.0 on the latest Raspbian package-set has the Linux 3.6.11 armv6l kernel and GC 4.6.
Read More...
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The single-circuit-board Raspberry Pi computer, only as big as a credit card, makes it easy to gain experience with embedded Linux systems. We’ll show you some hands-on examples of how to use the Raspberry Pi in an everyday environment.
I've just installed Kali Linux on my SD card that I use with Raspberry. This new OS I think is very good, but at the installation I don't have the opportunity to overclock as it is possible with Raspbian so I'd like to try to check differences. How could I do?