The "normal" problem with projectors is limited-range vs full-range colourspace, but the "flashed in rainbow-like colour" description doesn't fit the normal comment of colours looking a bit washed out. So assuming you have removed and reseated cables, to triage anything you need to provide some pictures and tell us what the projector indicates is being sent on the HDMI connection, e.g. the resolution, bi-depth, colourspace, etc. - and put Kodi into debug mode with a current LE13 nightly image and run "pastekodi" then share the log URL. The log probably won't tell us anything useful (same as the mode output you shared) but you never know.
Posts by chewitt
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If the current HDMI cables and/or internal firmware (most NUC like devices use an internal DP to HDMI adapter and this has some firmware) have issues with 4K60 but the Kodi GUI (desktop) defaults to 4K60 and "adjust refresh" is not used and/or 1080p modes are not whitelisted, Kodi will upscale everything to 4K60 to compound the problem. It's also possible to have bandwidth issues with uncertified HDMI cables. Have a read of https://wiki.libreelec.tv/configuration/4k-hdr for explanations of recommended config.
To force 1080p desktop, run tail /sys/class/drm/*/status to understand what connector type/number is in active use. Assuming HDMI-A-1, then add video=HDMI-A-1:1920x1080M@60D to kernel boot params; which will be either the syslinux.cfg file in the root folder of the USB (legacy boot) or EFI/BOOT/grub.cfg on the USB (EFI boot). If the active connector is not HDMI-A-1 adjust the video= command accordingly. This forces the initial kernel DRM state to 1080p@60 and not 4K where it probably defaults to 4K60.
NB: Some users solve 4K60 issues by using an external DP to HDMI adaptor instead of the HDMI ports on the box. This is not always a guarantee of success as most adaptors are cheap and can also have rubbish firmware; but unlike the internal one soldered to the motherboard, you can order a bunch from Amazon and experiment until you find one that plays nice.
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The written style of your posts is hard to follow; too much "conversation" and not enough facts, and lots of broken text and missing punctuation. NB: We are used to reading Google translated copy/pasted text. You are welcome to post the original German text to your posts (in addition to the English translation). If you want to post only in German perhaps post in the kodinerds forum.
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I'll keep an eye on the progress of Rockchip and the TV boxes based on that chip.
There are currently no device-tree files for modern-ish Rockchip based Android set-top boxes in the upstream kernel, and after years of slog attempting support for Android boxes on Amlogic hardware the project staff have no real interest or plans to repeat that experience on Rockchip hardware. In short, even if support for current/recent Rockchip SoC(s) becomes brilliant, you should have low expectations of finding an LE image for the box.
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I'm a firm believer in "if it works, don't fix it" so if all is good there is no burning need to update frequently. That said, with a nightly build things like add-ons are in a development repo, so at some future point when Kodi moves from Alpha to Beta to release that dev repo will initially stop being updated, and later will be nuked to free up disk space; so once things move to release it's probably a good idea to bump. Other users have OCD about running the latest nightly, but while we are generally pretty good at avoiding any bugs and problems, these are nightlies so everyone runs them at their own risk.
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I run LE from an nvme drive on an RPi5 and it works fine. Just boot the RPi from SD card, write the LE image to the nvme drive using dd, then set the boot config changes needed, power off and remove the SD card, power on again.
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ConnMan and IWD are simple packages to bump up/down normally. I can't remember bumping iw which probably indicates it's no drama too. There are nightlies here https://test.libreelec.tv/12.2/RPi/RPi2/ if you want to narrow things down by date.
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Start with building a standard image. Then (outside the LE buildsystem) clone ConnMan sources, and make/commit your changes to the files. Then create diff patches of your changes (git format-patch) and move the patch files to packages/network/connman/patches and rebuild the image; the presence of patches will be detected and the buildsystem will rebuild connman (only) and package a fresh image. Transfer the .tar or .img.gz file to /storage/.update/ on the RPi and reboot to update.
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RK3288/RK3328/RK3399 depend on a different kernel patchset which I am still trying to encourage (re)work on from knaerzche and Kwiboo. I'm not really able to judge the state of things and I don't have working test hardware. I'm not suprised there are issues, and I don't plan to do much about it for now.
RK356X is expected to have issues with page faults as there's been zero development on fixing buffer sizes. As I don't really code, I plan to have Claude AI investigate that problem, but first I need to prepare all the relevant source materials for the prompt, and then I'll need to have enough tokens/time to let it work on the issue. AV1 isn't supported on the hardware.
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Most S905W boxes have SDIO WiFi chips like SSV6501P that aren't supported in the mainline kernel. Drivers can be found for the 3.14 and 4.9 Amlogic (Android) vendor kernel, but they don't compile against the mainline kernel due to major crypto differences that were made in mainline several years ago. One of the Armbian devs did manage to evolve/fixup the SSV6501P driver enough to work on Rockchip boards, but he nuked Amlogic support in the driver in the process, and it doesn't work that great on Rockchip so AFAIK nobody has bothered to reinstate Amlogic support. Even if it was done I'd refuse to include that driver in LE images as the driver code looks like it was authored by a first-year computer science student (and that's being rude to students); it's garbage.
Look at https://wiki.libreelec.tv/configuration/…ration-advanced for IR remote things.
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Bash
#!/bin/sh # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later # Copyright (C) 2009-2016 Stephan Raue ([email protected]) # Copyright (C) 2017-present Team LibreELEC (https://libreelec.tv) token=$(echo "LibreELEC-9.2" | sha256sum | cut -d ' ' -f 1) cat "$@" | curl https://paste.libreelec.tv -F 'file=@-' -H "Authorization: Bearer ${token}"Save that ^ as /storage/newpaste and make it executable with chmod +x /storage/newpaste
Then do pastekodi -c | /storage/newpaste and it will generate the URL
ix.io has been down for years, hence we use our own paste server these days.
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You can interrupt boot to enter the u-boot console and set things in the u-boot environment (env) if you ave a USB debug UART tool connected, but I don't think that will get you anywhere as I'm not sure mainline u-boot supports that kind of GPIO power-on control on Amlogic hardwar; the mainline codebase is rather minimal and focussed on not much beyond booting the board. I'd suggest asking Q's in the Armbian forums as their devs are more up on this kind of topic, and while LE is a little different to Armbian, they are also using upstream u-boot not the downstream vendor sources that CE are using.