Hello All!
I have managed to build mbse on a brand new Pi (using a SD card as total storage).
I must work out how to use a USB hard drive with its own power supply (the Pi
power is not high enough at
2.5A).
How ever when trying to install mbse I have hit a snag and cannot work out how
to get around it.
Namely I cannot so a 'su' to install it via make install that is because (I
suspect) that the su feature
is not available only sudo.
The standard user needless to say is user pi when starting the system.
If I do a sudo -s
then run make it complains about $MBSE_ROOT not availble.
Can I do a sudo -s the set $MBSE_ROOT by just running export $MBSE_ROOT=/home/mbse
Then make install ?
Will that work correctly?
One issue I do know is that the O/S Raspbian is only 32 bit while the Pi is 64
so creating a reduced
system. The Pi 3B is possibly the first that is 64 bit.
I appreciate that the Pi is not the ideal hardware to run a bbs but I am 'assuming' I can work out how to
use a usb HD (there is no HD conenctions for a Sata) and just boot up and run
Vince Coen wrote to All:
Hello All!
I have managed to build mbse on a brand new Pi (using a SD card as
total storage).
I must work out how to use a USB hard drive with its own power
supply (the Pi power is not high enough at 2.5A).
How ever when trying to install mbse I have hit a snag and cannot
work out how to get around it.
Namely I cannot so a 'su' to install it via make install that is
because (I suspect) that the su feature is not available only
sudo.
The standard user needless to say is user pi when starting the
system.
If I do a sudo -s
then run make it complains about $MBSE_ROOT not availble.
Can I do a sudo -s the set $MBSE_ROOT by just running export
$MBSE_ROOT=/home/mbse
Then make install ?
Will that work correctly?
become root user (sudo su) and then set a password for root (passwd).
The classic su will work afterwards. This is how I worked around that
issue.
One issue I do know is that the O/S Raspbian is only 32 bit while
the Pi is 64 so creating a reduced system. The Pi 3B is possibly
the first that is 64 bit.
Nope, the Pi 2 already was / is 64 bit but at that time no 64 bit
distros (aarch64) were avaialbe for it. (Open) SuSE were the first to
come up with that.
Hop this helps,
Niels
Vince Coen wrote to All:
I appreciate that the Pi is not the ideal hardware to run a bbs
but I am 'assuming' I can work out how to use a usb HD (there is
no HD conenctions for a Sata) and just boot up and run
Um, the Pi is just perfect for running a bbs. And if it weren't for
QEMU and DOS door games, I'd run my MBSE system (open to the public
january 1st, 2019) on a Pi 1. MBSE does not cause heavy load and if
you tar-gzip you bbs every night and copy it to a usb stick, you are
quite safe with regards to the sd card. at least this is what the new Wintermute BBS will be made of.
The "old" Wintermute BBS (the current one) ran Synchronet for 10 years
with only three downtimes to replace a dead sd card.
Kind regards,
Niels
Hello Niels!
Thanks sorted but did do an export $MBSE_ROOT to cover it as well.
One issue I do know is that the O/S Raspbian is only 32 bit while
the Pi is 64 so creating a reduced system. The Pi 3B is possibly
the first that is 64 bit.
Nope, the Pi 2 already was / is 64 bit but at that time no 64 bit distros (aarch64) were avaialbe for it. (Open) SuSE were the first to come up with that.
Wonder why they have not created dual platforms 32 and 64 bit like every other
distro?
Sysop: | DaiTengu |
---|---|
Location: | Appleton, WI |
Users: | 991 |
Nodes: | 10 (1 / 9) |
Uptime: | 125:34:35 |
Calls: | 12,960 |
Calls today: | 2 |
Files: | 186,574 |
Messages: | 3,265,840 |