Which is the drivers that Fedora is using in their support.
Because ARMv6 is EOL by ARM, has a number of architecture issues and design/toolchain bugs. Until the RPi came along there was literally no other non low end phone devices that had the ARMv6 design in them. Fedora made…
aarch64 IS available. The firmware supports it when the appropriate options are enabled and the upstream 4.8 kernel supports it. The upstream kernel drivers for the Raspberry Pi, when built as a 64 bit kernel. A lot of…
You'd be better off using a BeagleBone, the SoC is much better designed for that purpose.
ARMv6 core, Fedora (and a lot of other distros) only support ARMv7 and newer.
Which is the drivers that Fedora is using in their support.
Because ARMv6 is EOL by ARM, has a number of architecture issues and design/toolchain bugs. Until the RPi came along there was literally no other non low end phone devices that had the ARMv6 design in them. Fedora made…
aarch64 IS available. The firmware supports it when the appropriate options are enabled and the upstream 4.8 kernel supports it. The upstream kernel drivers for the Raspberry Pi, when built as a 64 bit kernel. A lot of…
You'd be better off using a BeagleBone, the SoC is much better designed for that purpose.
ARMv6 core, Fedora (and a lot of other distros) only support ARMv7 and newer.