Tiny Core Linux
dCore Import Debian Packages to Mountable SCE extensions => dCore X86 => Topic started by: sbaguz on March 26, 2015, 11:25:55 AM
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Hi all,
just a question.
I'm really excited about dCore and I would like to give it a try. I have already downloaded all the needed files for jessie, but I see in the sce list that there is no wifi package as there is for wheezy. So my question is: the wifi package has been merged with one of the existing packages or I will not be able to use the simple connecting script I know from standard Tiny Core Plus?
Thanks in advance
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Hi sbaguz,
I will add a wifi.sce package for the other dCore ports. I did not realize it was missing. I will aim for that today, but definitely by the weekend.
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Wifi is part of the wireless.sce mega extension. So the wifi.sce in the dCore-wheezy area is deprecated and will be removed.
Just load the wireless.sce and you will have the wifi tool.
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Thanks.
Now I think I'm ready to test dCore.
;)
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Wow!!! :o
Everything has been easier than expected: I love dCore!!! :-*
Even if I still have some doubts/feature requests (i.e: how to uninstall a package? how to update a package?), I think/hope one day dCore will be the default Tiny Core distro: the magic of Tiny Core + the Debian package repositories=the best possible distro!
But trying to connect (with usual cliorx sudo wifi.sh) gave me an unexpected problem: I got an error saying
locale not supported by C library, locale unchanged
and I wasn't able to connect. But I did nothing to locale, I left default settings.
I simply installed fluxbox, aterm, geany, midnight commander, p7zipfull, feh, mplayer (onboot) and links, xpdf (ondemand).
Can you help me?
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Ok, I will look into it tonight.
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I think I found were the problem was...
I restarted dCore with a base option, then I loaded one-by-one my sce packages.
The problem arose with Links2.
Then I realized that I did not directly change locale, but in Links2 settings I chose my language (Italian): in some way this messed up the terminal configuration, breaking wifi script.
I hope this can help.
;)
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Ok, I don't use locales or other languages so would be hard for me to test. Was it the same terminal session as links was run in that saw the issue?
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Not only that one: from that moment on, even rebooting, I haven't been able to use wifi script anymore in any terminal session...
To solve this issue I basically had to make a new install and to avoid changing language in Links2.
I suppose it would have been the same simply deleting .links folder in my home/tc.
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Ok. It seems to be how the programs are interacting and not something I can control from my end. Probably the same behavior between links and wifi is seen in Core.