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Beginners • Re: What's wrong with few OSes in Raspberry pi?

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Not all are optimised for Pi/ARM.
It is getting better as the Videocore GPU is now well supported by Mesa3D and the Pi is supported in the mainstream Kernel.
The Raspberry Pi OS is tweaked better.
Not even 'optimised', it just won't boot/work. Several distros like those from RedHat and SuSE don't include a special ARM64 kernel variant for 'Pi', or actually for all those hundreds of SBCs/boards/computers with ARM SoCs from Allwinner, Amlogic, Broadcom, Marvell, Rockchip, to name a few lower cost. See full list: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/ke ... 4/boot/dts

If a board has UEFI firmware like almost all x86-64 from Intel/AMD, the distro would simply run on a board, at least boot and have some network connectivity and so on. But Pi is far from usable with mainstream kernel currently (6.12), unless you buy an USB2-ethernet adaptor, then it sort of works for headless/CLI.

@segeysam
Arch Linux more of less assumes you compose the image for your Pi yourself, or actually partition and format the SD-card yourself and copy everything yourself to the card. You need an extra Linux computer and RPi Imager is not applicable.

Canonical/Ubuntu has done some special efforts to create a dedicated Pi3/4/5 kernel and also create a pre-installed image like those for RPiOS. I also used it on a Pi4-2GB when there was no good 64-bit Raspbian. It was the beta 'server/cloud' image, likely they see some benefits to provide those images. For creating a community test force maybe, so they later get more business customers or a built-in phone-home trick or search/ads stats, I don't know.

Pi5 has a new chip (the RP1) for which all drivers/subsystems have a long way to go I think before they are sort of default in the Linux mainline kernel sources.

Statistics: Posted by redvli — Sat Nov 23, 2024 1:28 pm



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