Posts by chewitt

    Does anybody know what exactly i must do to get it working?

    You need to self-build an LE image with their drivers or whatever hacks are required to make their cards work patched into the Linux kernel. We used to have driver add-ons that overlaid some of the so-called "popular" card vendor drivers; but those were a complete pain to maintain and over time nobody on staff wanted to continue/make the effort and they were dropped. We encourage users who want DVB cards that "just work" under LibreELEC or any other mainstream distro to vote with their wallets and purchase products from vendors who upstream their drivers/firmware and engage in mainline kernel support for their products. TBS make some nice hardware but do not fit that description. Caveat Emptor /shrug

    When coming back to the device a few hours later, it had forgotten the wifi password as it was asking for it again. The device was no longer reachable on the network either. Is this a known issue? is there a place to track this bug?

    It's not a general issue that we see with other WiFi drivers that we choose to include in LE images. Any issues with the aic8800 driver that we choose not to include in LE images are not something we're interested in taking bug-reports on. The Khadas driver repo would be a more appropriate place to log tickets.

    NB: ConnMan stores WiFi credentials in a profile reference that contains the MAC address of the NIC interface so check the MAC address doesn't rotate/change after boot or on each boot. If it does, ConnMan will correctly see a 'new' connection and will reprompt for the passphrase again.

    Some things to try (not in any specific sequence):

    a) Remove the SD card and power on the RPi board. Check that the firmware screen shows up and HDMI and EDID are 'OK'

    b) Check that you've updated to the lasted RPi-eeprom firmware? If not, update and try again

    c) See if the image here https://chewitt.libreelec.tv/testing/LibreE…-12.90.1.img.gz behaves any different?

    d) Using a spare SD card write the nightly image to the card (so clean install not update) .. booting?

    I'm using an RPi5 with my own nightly image for aeons without issues so there's no general problem. I have a hunch it might be eeprom firmware related (b).

    You can delete the Addons DB file and it will be regenerated on next boot from the add-ons found in /storage/.kodi/addons though you might need to manually (re)enable some of the add-ons again. You can also delete the EPG database as this contains transient data and will be repopulated from Tvheadend.

    The online repo the .tar.xz file is downloaded from has (for unknown reasons) regenerated the download and this has caused the hash of the downloaded file to change. We see the same on GitHub sometimes.

    The correct fix is updating PKG_SHA256 in package.mk to use the 'got' hash value instead of the current 'wanted' hash. The alternate workaround is setting PKG_SHA256="" (null) which disables the hash check. The one-line command vpeter posted does this.

    Code
    https://git.zx2c4.com/wireguard-tools/snapshot/wireguard-tools-v1.0.20250521.tar.xz

    This URL ^ (correctly formatted, unlike the one you posted) works fine for me.

    Or bump bump the wireguard-tools package to the current release, e.g. https://github.com/LibreELEC/Libr…ools/package.mk

    Or download the .tar.xz file from somewhere else (and storing it with the correct filename) to sources/wireguard-tools/ and then manually generate the required .url and .sha256 files and content (look at existing files to crib the simple format).

    Doesn't the kernel detect devices at boot time?

    It should, but the user has provided zero evidence that it did, and they've also been fiddling with files they shouldn't. So the normal protocol is to ask for evidence (the LE13 pastekodi output, which will show the full EDID block, full log, and system log) so that blind guessing isn't involved.

    Code
    cp /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/95-udevil-mount.rules /storage/.config/udev.rules.d

    Clone the udev rules file ^

    Code
    # check for blockdevices, /dev/sd*, /dev/sr*, /dev/mmc*, and /dev/nvme*
    SUBSYSTEM!="block", KERNEL!="sd*|sr*|mmc*|nvme*", GOTO="exit"       <= edit this
    
    # check for blockdevices, /dev/sd*, /dev/sr*, /dev/mmc*, and /dev/nvme*
    SUBSYSTEM!="block", KERNEL!="sd*|sr*|nvme*", GOTO="exit"            <= to this, i.e. drop mmc*

    Then edit the file using nano and change this block towards the top of the file ^ then save/reboot to effect the change.

    The change means for any mmc* blockdevice it skips straight to exit and doesn't process partition mounting. NB: This will also prevent SD cards from ever mounting as those are also mmc* devices. I doubt you need that though.

    The Kodi release process has been a little challenging over the last year. This is partly due to different people picking up a complex an unpopular task, but also because there's a desire to release for all platforms at the same time and we've repeatedly seen issues with one platform which takes days-to-weeks to resolve. In the meantime development continues to roll forwards and more things get merged into the master branch: hence the staggered timing between LE which simply tracks the master branch in nightlies instead of following Alpha releases (these days we start formal releases at Beta) and official Kodi binaries finally being released once the build issues are resolved.

    Is there a way to pass kernel options or modify filesystem node parameters for the KMS to customise these settings?

    I have fuzzy recall RPi5 uses 10-bit internally padded to 12-bit for output in some circumstances as the SoC doesn't natively support the required 10-bit output. There is some upstream work being done to improve output from Kodi which might indirectly influence things, but the direct and short answer to the question above is "No"