Difference between revisions of "What can I do with IGEP0020"

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== Booting your IGEPv2 board<br>  ==
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#REDIRECT:[[What can I do with IGEPv2]]
 
 
First of all, you may want to boot your board. IGEP0020 can boot:  
 
 
 
*from a [[How to boot from MicroSD Card|MMC/microSD card]] (first priority in boot order).
 
*from OneNAND&nbsp;memory.
 
 
 
<br>
 
 
 
The IGEPv2 board boot process is divided in '''3 booting phases''':<br>
 
 
 
#[[The bootloader X-loader|xloader]] boot process (It's not possible to interact with the board).
 
#[[The bootloader U-Boot|uboot boot]] process (It's possible to interact with the board using the console).
 
#[[The Linux kernel|Linux Kernel]] starting process (It's possible to interact with the board using the console when the kernel has already started).<br>
 
 
 
== Logging in<br>  ==
 
 
 
IGEPv2 board uses the serial debug for output all debug information and the users can interact with the board.
 
 
 
Now that you have set up the system is correctly configured you are ready to login. You can do it via:
 
 
 
*Serial Console: [[Using serial debug port to communicate|here]] is a short explanation about how to correctly configure your Serial Console<br>
 
*SSH
 
 
 
The default login user is: root
 
 
 
There is no password for this user.
 
 
 
== Using the board LED's<br>  ==
 
 
 
This is probably the most simple feature in the board, but sometimes LED's may be the only way of checking the status of some of your applications.<br>
 
 
 
IGEP0020 has 4 LED's which you can control, for example, using 'echo':
 
<pre>echo 1 &gt; /sys/devices/platform/leds-gpio/leds/d240\:green/brightness
 
 
 
echo 1 &gt; /sys/devices/platform/leds-gpio/leds/d240\:red/brightness
 
 
 
echo 1 &gt; /sys/devices/platform/leds-gpio/leds/d440\:green/brightness
 
 
 
echo 1 &gt; /sys/devices/platform/leds-gpio/leds/d440\:red/brightness
 
</pre>
 
You can turn them down using the same command and write '0' instead of '1'.
 

Latest revision as of 10:45, 13 April 2012