U-Boot loader for Banana Pi.
To install this bootloader, follow the instructions in
http://linux-sunxi.org/Bootable_SD_card#Bootloader
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads ELF ubldr from file ubldr on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Banana Pi, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for Cubieboard2.
To install this bootloader, follow the instructions in
http://linux-sunxi.org/Bootable_SD_card#Bootloader
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads ELF ubldr from file ubldr on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Cubieboard, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for Banana Pi M2.
To install this bootloader, follow the instructions in
http://linux-sunxi.org/Bootable_SD_card#Bootloader
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads PIE ubldr.bin from file ubldr.bin on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Banana Pi, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for Cubieboard.
To install this bootloader, follow the instructions in
http://linux-sunxi.org/Bootable_SD_card#Bootloader
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads ELF ubldr from file ubldr on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Cubieboard, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for PandaBoard.
To install this bootloader, copy the files MLO and u-boot.img to the FAT
partition on an SD card. Normally this is partition 1, but different
partitions can be set with U-Boot environment variables.
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file uboot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is passed to ubldr using the fdtfile env variable.
It defaults to omap4-panda.dtb unless you override it. ubldr loads
the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on the FreeBSD partition.
(Not tested)
* By default, it loads ELF ubldr from file ubldr on the FAT partition
to address 0x88000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on the PandaBoard, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/PandaBoard
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for Banana Pi M3.
To install this bootloader, follow the instructions in
http://linux-sunxi.org/Bootable_SD_card#Bootloader
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads ELF ubldr from file ubldr on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Banana Pi M3, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for pcDuino3
To install this bootloader on an sdcard just do :
dd if=/usr/local/share/u-boot/u-boot-boardname/u-boot-sunxi-with-spl.bin of=/path/to/sdcarddevice bs=1k seek=8 conv=notrunc,sync
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr.bin
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr.bin loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads PIE ubldr.bin from file ubldr.bin on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Allwinner boards, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
NLTK is a leading platform for building Python programs to work with human
language data. It provides easy-to-use interfaces to over 50 corpora and
lexical resources such as WordNet, along with a suite of text processing
libraries for classification, tokenization, stemming, tagging, parsing,
and semantic reasoning, and an active discussion forum.
Thanks to a hands-on guide introducing programming fundamentals alongside
topics in computational linguistics, NLTK is suitable for linguists,
engineers, students, educators, researchers, and industry users alike.
NLTK is available for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux. Best of all, NLTK is
a free, open source, community-driven project.
NLTK has been called "a wonderful tool for teaching, and working in,
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with natural language".
mod_backtrace is an experimental module for Apache httpd 2.x which
collects backtraces when a child process crashes. Currently it is
implemented only on Linux and FreeBSD, but other platforms could be
supported in the future.
Requirements: Apache httpd >= 2.0.49 must be built with the
--enable-exception-hook configure option and mod_so enabled.
Activating mod_backtrace:
1. Load it like any other DSO:
LoadModule backtrace_module modules/mod_backtrace.so
2. Enable exception hooks for modules like mod_backtrace:
EnableExceptionHook On
3. Choose where backtrace information should be written.
If you want backtraces from crashes to be reported some place other
than the error log, use the BacktraceLog directive to specify a
fully-qualified filename for the log to which backtraces will be
written. Note that the web server user id (e.g., "nobody") must
be able to create or append to this log file, as the log file is
mod_whatkilledus is an experimental module for Apache httpd 2.x which
tracks the current request and logs a report of the active request
when a child process crashes.
Requirements: Apache httpd >= 2.0.49 must be built with the
--enable-exception-hook configure option and mod_so enabled.
Activating mod_whatkilledus:
1. Load it like any other DSO.
LoadModule whatkilledus_module modules/mod_whatkilledus.so
2. Enable exception hooks for modules like mod_whatkilledus:
EnableExceptionHook On
3. Choose where the report on current activity should be written. If
you want it reported to some place other than the error log, use the
WhatKilledUsLog directive to specify a fully-qualified filename for
the log. Note that the web server user id (e.g., "nobody") must
be able to create or append to this log file, as the log file is
not opened until a crash occurs.