Skip to content
  1. Jun 20, 2022
  2. Jun 15, 2022
  3. Jun 13, 2022
  4. May 30, 2022
  5. May 25, 2022
  6. May 24, 2022
  7. May 23, 2022
  8. May 22, 2022
  9. May 21, 2022
  10. May 16, 2022
  11. May 14, 2022
  12. May 11, 2022
  13. May 10, 2022
  14. May 08, 2022
  15. May 07, 2022
    • Nicolas Mailloux's avatar
      9a784000
    • Nicolas Mailloux's avatar
      KT: Improvements · ceb89908
      Nicolas Mailloux authored
      ceb89908
    • Nicolas Mailloux's avatar
      KT: rcS improvements · 84535321
      Nicolas Mailloux authored
      84535321
    • Nicolas Mailloux's avatar
      Amazon Kindle Touch (KT) initial support · ef538541
      Nicolas Mailloux authored
      Things *seem* to be going well!
      The kernel sources were taken from Amazon's website at https://kindle.s3.amazonaws.com/Kindle_src_5.3.7.3_2715280002.tar.gz . When compiled and executed, it will display '2.6.35' as its version number, but it is in fact a 2.6.31 kernel. The reason for this hackery is that the glibc chroots in InkBox OS don't support 2.6.31 kernels, but do support 2.6.35.x ones. Changing the version number in the kernel Makefile seemed to do the job fine, and I haven't seen any problems in using glibc binaries and libraries, they all run fine with this new 'patch'.
      This kernel has been slightly modified to support devtmpfs mounting via backporting and with some changes due to the 2.6.35 hack mentioned above, especially in the AR6003 Wi-Fi chip sources.
      A new toolchain (arm-none-linux-gnueabi, GCC 4.4.1 from 2009) has been added in the toolchain/ directory and is the only toolchain I know that produces a bootable kernel.
      You may compile a kernel for this device by executing the following command:
      
      env GITDIR=/home/build/inkbox/kernel TOOLCHAINDIR=/home/build/inkbox/kernel/toolchain/gcc-4.4.1/ THREADS=8 TARGET=arm-none-linux-gnueabi scripts/build_kernel.sh kt root
      ef538541
  16. May 03, 2022
  17. May 02, 2022
  18. May 01, 2022
  19. Apr 28, 2022
  20. Apr 12, 2022