Depends on the exact version of the stick. Some are supported - others are nor - See Here
Your best bet is to go to addons -> LibreELEC Modules --> DVB Modules --> Linux-Media: select it and REBOOT.
Hopefully it should all now work
Depends on the exact version of the stick. Some are supported - others are nor - See Here
Your best bet is to go to addons -> LibreELEC Modules --> DVB Modules --> Linux-Media: select it and REBOOT.
Hopefully it should all now work
1) Which version of Fedora did you use arm7 or aarm64?
2) How do you use it in Fedora when it is working?
3) Post output of lsmod
Unless you changed something port 22 is the default.
"nmap" is not recognized as an internal or external command, program or file executable
Also install network-tools from the LibreELEC addons (Addons - LibreELEC --> Program add ons --> network-tools) and reboot
Yes it is possible, but note the last commit for this program was over 7 years ago.
1) Download the speedometer.zip from Here
extract to a directory - Probably /storage/speedometer-master
2) Download the urwid tar Here
extract to a directory - Probably /storage/urwid-2.0.1
3) Enter speedometer-master directory and copy urwid data
cp -r /storage/urwid-2.0.1/urwid .
Now run it: (Change to your requirements)
python speedometer.py -tx eth0
If you have no need or desire to upgrade then sticking to a stable version is always a good idea.
As this is an addon to LE, you'd be better off posting your question on the Netflix Kodi forum Here
From Windows, open a terminal (Command prompt) and try;
ssh root@<RPi3 IP address> and post the output.
Also install network-tools from the LibreELEC addons (Addons - LibreELEC --> Program add ons --> network-tools) and reboot.
Now run:
nmap -sn <local IP address>/24 Something like 192.168.0.1/24 and post the output.
Please report if everything is now working. Tnx
Nightlys are, by their nature unstable.
If you have an issue, you really should use a stable or an alpha build where problems can be tagged.
QuoteAny suggestions?
How about giving details of hardware used, version of LE and a debug log. There is only SO much we can deduce.
You need to execute it as
./rclone config
You'd be better off creating a directory like /storage/bin for your executables
Then edit /storage/.profile and add
PATH=/storage/bin:$PATH
This will ensure that it can be run from anywhere
See HERE for more details.
.... and on what HW and what image are you using?
I believe the links have expired because of a time limit.
Are there no later LE images that can run on your box?
If LE is set to DHCP and you can connect to other local IP addresses then it has to be a router issue.
What is your gateway/router IP address?
If you have a DHCP reservation in the router try removing it.
Also output of:
more /storage/.cache/connman/wifi_b827ebec6b45_50697a7a61486177616969_managed_psk/settings
Sorry but I'm not too sure what the issue is.
At first your title suggests you cannot get a drive to be recognised nor mounted but later on you say
Quote"So right now I have all 4 drives back into play."
But then later on you say
QuoteGiven it was formatted ext4, and I ejected the disk, it should have been clean.
So I have no idea what you are trying report.
Also you didn't even advise what image you are using.
Have you only one RPi? So what you are saying is that Raspbian works but LE doesn't. Have you tried OSMC to see if that works.
Screenshot is created by pressing Screen Prt on your KB.
What's the output of
ls -al /storage/.cache/connman
Also set network to dhcp and see if that connects.
You would be better of using LinuxServer.io Nextcloud addon.
1) Install LinuxServer.ios repository.
Add-ons → LibreELEC Add-ons → Add-on repository → LinuxServer.io’s Docker Add-ons
2) Install Nextcloud
Add-ons → LinuxServer.io’s Docker Add-ons → Services →Nextcloud