https://elinux.org/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=Jbracegirdle&feedformat=atomeLinux.org - User contributions [en]2024-03-19T09:26:38ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.31.0https://elinux.org/index.php?title=R-Pi_Troubleshooting&diff=165716R-Pi Troubleshooting2012-08-31T10:04:28Z<p>Jbracegirdle: Added details of how to fix start.elf</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Category:RaspberryPi]]<br />
<br />
Back to the [[R-Pi Hub|Hub]].<br />
<br />
This page lists the most common problems and suggests some solutions.<br />
<br />
See [[RPi_Bugs]] for problems that are bugs.<br />
<br />
==Power / Start-up==<br />
A good power supply that will supply 5V is vital. There is more information about See [[#Troubleshooting_power_problems]].<br />
===Red power LED does not light, nothing on display===<br />
The power is not properly connected.<br />
<br />
===Red power LED is blinking===<br />
The red power LED should never blink, because it is hard-wired to the 3.3V power supply rail. If it is blinking, as one user has reported<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=7528</ref> it means the 5V power supply is dropping out. Use a different power supply.<br />
<br />
===Red power LED is on, green LED does not flash, nothing on display===<br />
*The Raspberry Pi cannot find a valid image on the SD card. Check card is inserted correctly. Check that you have correctly written a Raspberry Pi image to the card. Insert the SD card into a Windows machine and you should see bootcode.bin, loader.bin and start.elf amongst others. See also, [[RPi_VerifiedPeripherals#SD_cards|Known SD Cards]].<br />
*Try with no cables connected except the USB power lead, and SD card inserted. You should see flashing of the OK light for ~20 seconds. If that helps, plug in cables one at a time to identify which is interfering with boot.<br />
*The voltage is too low (below 5 V), try a different power supply and/or cable. The R-Pi needs a supply rated for 700 mA or more. Some supplies labeled as such cannot actually provide their rated current while maintaining 5V. See also, [[#Troubleshooting_power_problems]].<br />
*There is a bug in the distributed version of bootcode.bin which causes problems with some sdcards. Try this version: https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/blob/234c19de7cbaaf4997671d61df20a05759066295/boot/bootcode.bin. Please let us know if it "fixes" your non-working SD card (or, more importantly, if it doesn't). This can also manifest itself as intermittent booting, or only booting when cold.<br />
*''(unlikely)'' hardware abuse, for example by connecting a 7 V supply to a 3v3 GPIO output pin<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=5096&p=76503#p76503</ref> or powering up the board after a solder splash shorts some traces<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=5096&p=76654#p76654</ref>.<br />
*Look at the SD card holder on the Raspberry Pi carefully. At first glance it may look fine but the contacts must be springy and they must protrude at least 2mm as measured from the lower edge of the holder to the top of the contact bulge. This happens due to the solder process and the type of holder used. Some of the solder residue falls into the contact cavity restricting the springiness and the height that the contact protrudes. You can fix this yourself but remember you can void your warranty. The contacts are delicate so be carefull. Insert a needle pin under the contact bulge and pull lightly up until the one end of the contact unclips. Clean the cavity where the contact unclipped from of any solder or other residue by blowing into the cavity. Clip the contact back into the cavity by lightly pushing it into the cavity. Do this for all the contacts. Look at these photos. [[Media:SDcardHolder.JPG]], [[Media:UnclipContact.JPG]], [[Media:UnclippedContact.JPG]]<br />
<br />
===Green LED blinks in a specific pattern===<br />
<br />
With recent firmware, according to [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=8725#p103338 this forum post] the green light will blink in a specific pattern to indicate some types of errors:<br />
<br />
* 3 flashes: <tt>loader.bin</tt> not found<br />
* 4 flashes: <tt>loader.bin</tt> not launched<br />
* 5 flashes: <tt>start.elf</tt> not found<br />
* 6 flashes: <tt>start.elf</tt> not launched<br />
<br />
If start.elf won't launch it may be corrupt and can be replaced with arm240_start.elf or any of the other armXXX_start.elf files.<br />
<br />
===Coloured splash screen===<br />
[[File:Debug-screen.jpg]]<br />
<br />
With recent firmware, a coloured splash screen is displayed after firmware (start.elf) is loaded. This should be replaced by linux console a second later.<br />
However if the coloured screen remains, it suggests the kernel.img file is failing to boot. Try replacing it with a known good one.<br />
<br />
===Kernel Panic on boot ===<br />
Text appears on screen, but then hangs with debug messages. This can be caused by USB devices such as keyboards. <br />
Try again with nothing in the USB.<br />
<br />
===Raspberry Pi shuts down soon after booting up===<br />
This is caused by a power supply producing too low a voltage. See [[#Troubleshooting_power_problems]].<br />
<br />
===Pi boots sometimes but not always===<br />
With a known good power supply and known good SD card, the R-Pi boots occasionally, but other times shows only a tiny green flicker from the "OK" LED and it fails to start, even with no USB devices and no Ethernet. This has been reported several times<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/will-not-boot-consistently-any-suggestions-before-i-send-my-pi-back</ref><br />
<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/booted-once-wont-work-again</ref><br />
<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/possible-fault-pi-boots-sometimes-but-not-always</ref> and remains an open issue. Low voltage or an improper SD card can cause it. Some SD cards will work until they warm up slightly, and then fail<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=5900&p=79008#p79008</ref>. When exposed to 21 C room temperature the warmest part of an uncased working R-Pi should be 41 C<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=5900&p=78973#p78973</ref>. The wiki has a [[RPi_VerifiedPeripherals#SD_cards | list of working SD cards]]. Buy from a reliable vendor as it has been [http://www.petapixel.com/2011/05/20/one-third-of-the-sandisk-memory-cards-on-earth-are-counterfeit/ claimed] that 1/3 of all "Sandisk" labelled memory cards are counterfeit.<br />
*It could be that the SD memory card is not making proper contact with the Raspberry Pi. Look at the SD card holder on the Raspberry Pi carefully. At first glance it may look fine but the contacts must be springy and they must protrude at least 2mm as measured fron the lower edge of the holder to the top of the contact bulge. This happens due to the solder process and the type of holder used. Some of the solder residue falls into the contact cavity restricting the springiness and the height that the contact protrudes. You can fix this yourself but remember you can void your warranty. The contacts are delicate so be carefull. Insert a needle pin under the contact bulge and pull lightly up until the one end of the contact unclips. Clean the cavity where the contact unclipped from of any solder or other residue by blowing into the cavity. Clip the contact back into the cavity by lightly pushing it into the cavity. Do this for all the contacts. Look at these photos. [[Media:SDcardHolder.JPG]], [[Media:UnclipContact.JPG]], [[Media:UnclippedContact.JPG]]<br />
<br />
==Keyboard / Mouse / Input Devices==<br />
<br />
===R-Pi does not respond to key presses / Keyboard randomly repeats key presses===<br />
This is caused by inadequate power. Use a good power supply and a good power cable. Some cheap cables that work with a cell phone, cannot fully power the R-Pi. Some USB devices require a lot of power: most will have a label showing the voltage and mA requirements. They should be 5v 100mA each max, any more than this they must be used with a powered USB hub. Try unplugging every USB device except the keyboard (you should also note that some keyboards have built in hubs and can try to draw 150mA (Pi can only handle 100mA per USB slot without a hub)).<br />
Also, use the latest software. Forum user MrEngman [http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/absolute-beginners/using-a-powered-usb-port-to-power-a-rpi#p76485 reported] some keyboard repeats and wireless hangs until [http://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads upgrading] to the debian6-19-04-2012 kernel, which he reports stable with no problems even with a low [[R-Pi_Troubleshooting#Troubleshooting_power_problems | TP1-TP2 voltage]] of 4.65 - 4.68 volts.<br />
<br />
===Keyboard / Mouse interferes with USB WiFi device===<br />
Connecting a keyboard and/or mouse while a USB WiFi device is connected, may cause one or both devices to malfunction. On April 30 2012, there was a bugfix<ref>https://github.com/raspberrypi/linux/commit/e09244e60881148431ecd016ccc42f1fa0678556</ref> relating to USB sharing between high-speed (eg. WiFi) and full/low-speed devices (eg. keyboard/mouse). User spennig<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/usb-power-hub-wifi/page-4#p74609</ref><ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/success-with-kb-mouse-wifi?value=3761&type=8&include=1&search=1</ref> reports this patch did not fix the Mouse/WiFi conflict. On 2012-05-12, user spennig was pleased to confirm that wifi was working with a USB keyboard and mouse, as long as the Raspberry Pi had a good PSU and a powered hub. Even so, some experimentation was needed, e.g. USB WiFi connected to the device, and the keyboard and mouse connected to the powered hub. Some experimentation may be necessary to find a working combination; however a good power supply is essential.<br />
<br />
===Wireless Keyboard trouble===<br />
Some wireless keyboards, for example the Microsoft Wireless Keyboard 800 are reported to fail<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/display-and-keyboard-issues-on-a-real-pi#p74816</ref> even though the current drawn by the wireless adaptor is within the R-Pi USB spec limit of 100 mA. This may be a software driver problem.<br />
<br />
===Re-mapping the keyboard with Debian Squeeze===<br />
If different letters appear on-screen from that which you typed, you need to reconfigure you keyboard settings. In Debian, from a command line type:<br />
sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration<br />
Follow the prompts. Then restart your RasPi.<br />'''Or:'''<br /> From the command line type:<br />
sudo nano /etc/default/keyboard<br />
Then find where it says <blockquote>XKBLAYOUT=”gb”</blockquote>and change the gb to the two letter code for your country. [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?p=78325#p78325]<br />
<br />
===Slow keyboard mapping=== <br />
If you have remapped your keyboard and get a very long delay during the keyboard mapping at startup, type the following once on the command line after you have logged in:<br />
sudo setupcon<br />
<br />
===No USB device works, with known good PS, SD card, KB=== <br />
There has been more than one report<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=7533</ref><ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?t=5766#p77576</ref><ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?t=5766#p80995</ref> of a R-Pi booting but not getting USB input, using a known-good power supply, SD card, and keyboard. The more common cause for no USB devices working is [[#Troubleshooting_power_problems|low power supply voltage]] from bad PSU, cable, or USB hub, but in this case the problem was no clock signal present at the LAN9512 USB/Ethernet chip "IC3", and the solution was to reflow the solder on the 25 MHz crystal "X1" on the bottom side of the board.<br />
Or return the board for a replacement, but before making this conclusion, confirm known good peripherals. A significant number of <br />
[[RPi_VerifiedPeripherals#USB_Keyboards| USB keyboards]] are not compatible with R-Pi. As of June 1 2012, Eben reported<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=6822&p=89589&hilit=eben#p89513</ref> that only about 1 in 1000 shipped R-Pi boards have been found to have a hardware fault of any kind.<br />
<br />
== Updating firmware ==<br />
=== Check your firmware version ===<br />
Using the latest firmware version may help various problems with SD card and display compatibility. Check the kernel version with:<br />
uname -a<br />
Linux RPi 3.1.19 #1 PREEMPT Fri Jun 1 14:16:38 CEST 2012 armv6l GNU/Linux<br />
<br />
And the GPU firmware with:<br />
/opt/vc/bin/vcgencmd version<br />
May 31 2012 13:35:03<br />
Copyright (c) 2012 Broadcom<br />
version 317494 (release)<br />
<br />
=== Get the latest firmware version ===<br />
The GPU firmware and kernel can be updated with [https://github.com/Hexxeh/rpi-update Hexxeh's rpi-update tool].<br />
<br />
However this requires the Pi to be successfully booted. With sdcard problems, you may not get that far, so can try a manual udpate.<br />
If you have a Linux machine, rpi-update can be run on that in an offline mode, and will update your sdcard from the Linux machine.<br />
<br />
Otherwise, on a Windows computer, you will see the "/boot" partition appear as the contents of SD card. <br />
You can download the latest GPU firmware version [https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/blob/master/boot/start.elf here].<br />
Click on '''view raw''', then save it, and put the new start.elf file on the sdcard replacing the existing one. Similarly, the latest kernel is [https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/tree/master/boot/kernel.img here].<br />
After updating these files you should be able to boot. You still need to run rpi-update to update the kernel modules (in /lib/modules) and the GPU libraries (in /opt/vc).<br />
<br />
=== Choosing the right ARM/GPU memory split ===<br />
There is a choice of how the 256M of RAM is divided between the ARM and GPU:<br />
arm240_start.elf : 240M ARM, 16M GPU split : Maximum ARM memory. Good for ARM desktop use. No accelerated video or 3D possible.<br />
arm192_start.elf : 192M ARM, 64M GPU split : Reasonable ARM memory. Simple video (omxplayer) or 3D (quake) is possible. This is the default.<br />
arm128_start.elf : 128M ARM, 128M GPU split : Use this for heavy 3D work, or 3D plus video. Needed for XBMC.<br />
<br />
To switch replace start.elf with one of the above files and reboot. E.g.<br />
sudo cp /boot/arm240_start.elf /boot/start.elf && sudo reboot<br />
<br />
== SD cards ==<br />
<br />
* If you have problems, check you have latest firmware version (described above)<br />
* Some SD cards do not work on the R-Pi, so check the [[RPi_VerifiedPeripherals#SD_cards|list of known SD cards]].<br />
* If you are having problems setting up your SD card you might want to start by erasing it completely - especially if it has been used elsewhere and still contains data / partitions.<br />
** Windows and Mac users can download a formatting tool from the SD Association: https://www.sdcard.org/downloads/formatter_3/<br />
* Reformatting cards is also easy to do in a digital camera.<br />
* After writing the image to the SD card, verify that you can see the boot partition when you insert the SD card into your computer. The partition should contain a number of files, including ''start.elf'' and ''kernel.img''. If you do not see these files on the SD card, you have made an error writing the image file.<br />
* If you are manually preparing your SD card on Linux or Mac OS using the ''dd'' command, this operation will completely erase any existing data and partitions. Make sure you write to the whole card (e.g. <tt>/dev/sdd</tt>) and not to an existing partition (e.g. <tt>/dev/sdd1</tt>).<br />
* If you have an sdcard that doesn't work with latest firmware, head over [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=6093 here].<br />
* If you put the SD card into your PC in an attempt to write the R-Pi operating system onto it, and the PC tells you the card is write-protected, even with the write-protect tab in the correct, forward position, then you may have a faulty SD-card rewriter. There's a common fault with many SD-card rewriters - The write-protect tab is detected by a very thin, narrow metal strip, that is part of a switch. When the card is inserted, the write-protect tab is supposed to push the strip and make/break the contact, as needed. Unfortunately, these strips have a habit of getting stuck, because they are mounted in a thin plastic channel, and only need to be deformed slightly sideways to get jammed.<br />
Luckily, if you have this problem, most built-in card readers are easy to pull apart and repair; some users have even reported succesfully unjamming the switch with a blast of compressed air from a can into the SD-card slot without having to dismantle anything.<br />
You may also be able to temporarily get round the problem by putting the write-protect tab in a half-way position - this pushes on a different part of the strip and may break the contact - it's worth trying a few, slightly different positions. You could also use a USB-SD card adaptor, which are cheap to buy.<br />
<br />
==Networking==<br />
<br />
===Ethernet connection is lost when a USB device is plugged in===<br />
This is caused by inadequate power. Use a good power supply and a good power cable. Some cheap cables that work with a cell phone, cannot fully power the R-Pi. Some USB devices require a lot of power (>100 mA), so they must be used with a powered USB hub. Some cheap USB hubs suck power from the Raspberry Pi even if a USB power supply is connected.<br />
<br />
There is an ongoing issue with the Ethernet connection being lost when mouse and / or keyboard are connected via a powered USB hub. The simplest way to solve this is to connect your mouse and keyboard directly into the 2 USB ports on the R-Pi.<br />
<br />
===Ethernet connects at 10M instead of 100M===<br />
The LED in the corner of the board labelled "10M" is mislabeled. When that LED is on, the R-Pi is actually connected at 100 Mbps. You can confirm the true transfer rate using a network benchmark such as iperf. You can also read the current network speed with<br />
cat /sys/class/net/eth0/speed<br />
<br />
===Cannot ssh in to Pi===<br />
<br />
In the Debian image, ssh is disabled by default. Boot commands are taken from /boot/boot.rc if that file present. There is an example file named '''boot_enable_ssh.rc''' that enables ssh. So:<br />
<br />
sudo mv /boot/boot_enable_ssh.rc /boot/boot.rc<br />
<br />
and reboot should enable ssh. (password as below)<br />
<br />
===Network/USB chip gets too hot to touch===<br />
<br />
This is normal. In open air at 24 C, the LAN9512 Ethernet/USB chip reaches about 52 C after some time. This is too hot to touch for more than a few seconds, but it is not unusually hot for the chip.<br />
<br />
The <br />
[http://www.smsc.com/media/Downloads_Public/Data_Sheets/9512.pdf LAN9512 data sheet] in Table 4.1 on p.40 says it comes in two versions, rated for operation at an ambient temperature in still air (Ta) of 70 C (commercial) or 85 C (industrial). It uses 763 mW at 3.3V with maximum traffic on 100baseT and both USB ports (Table 4.3.4, p. 42).<br />
<br />
There is a study of RasPi heat profiles by "Remy" at [http://www.geektopia.es/es/technology/2012/06/22/articulos/se-calienta-el-ordenador-raspberry-pi-estudio-de-sus-temperaturas-en-funcionamiento.html ¿Se calienta el ordenador Raspberry Pi? Estudio de sus temperaturas en funcionamiento] (''Is the Raspberry Pi computer getting hot? A study of its operational temperature.'') The Spanish article has numerous color temperature images of RasPi in various operational modes, with the highest LAN9512 case temperature measured as 64.5 C.<br />
<br />
===Networking no longer works when changing SD card between two Raspberry Pis===<br />
<br />
In some distributions, /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules remembers which MAC address is associated with eth0, so each new device will be assigned as a different interface (eth1, eth2, etc.) due to the different MAC addresses. Editing /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules to remove the invalid rules and rebooting may help fix the problem.<br />
<br />
===Crashes occur with high network load===<br />
<br />
The USB driver allocates memory from the kernel, and when traffic is very high (e.g. when using torrents/newsgroup downloads) this memory can be exhausted causing crashes/hangs. You should have a line like:<br />
<br />
vm.min_free_kbytes = 8192<br />
<br />
in /etc/sysctl.conf. Try increasing that number to 16384 (or higher). If that doesn't work, try adding to /boot/cmdline.txt<br />
<br />
smsc95xx.turbo_mode=N<br />
<br />
which will reduce network throughput, but has improved stability issues for some.<br />
<br />
==Passwords==<br />
===I do not know the password to login===<br />
Please check the page [http://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads http://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads] for the correct username and password for each image.<br />
<br />
Here are the most common username/password combinations:<br />
*Debian after Feb 2012: pi/raspberry<br />
*Debian 17 Feb 2012: pi/suse<br />
*Arch: root/root<br />
*Bodhi: pi/bodhilinux<br />
<br />
===Some programs refuse to accept my password===<br />
While using Debian, some programs may ask for your password but refuse to accept a valid password.<br />
<br />
This is a fault in some Debian images and will be fixed soon. If you are using an image with this fault, enter the following command on the command line.<br />
gconftool-2 --type bool --set /apps/gksu/sudo-mode true<br />
Please enter this command carefully, the spaces are important. The command should be accepted without any response or errors.<br />
<br />
===I don't know the root password===<br />
<br />
There is no root password set by default on Debian. You are expected to do everything through sudo. You can set one with "sudo passwd root" - just make sure you know what you are doing with a root account.<br />
<br />
==Sound==<br />
===Sound does not work with an HDMI monitor===<br />
This is caused by some computer monitors which select DVI mode even if an HDMI cable is connected. This fix may be necessary even if other HDMI devices work perfectly on the same monitor (or TV)!<br />
<br />
Edit the configuration file - see the instructions at [[R-Pi_ConfigurationFile]].<br />
<br />
Add the following line to the configuration file:<br />
hdmi_drive=2<br />
<br />
This will force it to select HDMI mode.<br />
<br />
===Sound does not work at all, or in some applications===<br />
In Debian Squeeze, sound is disabled by default because the ALSA sound driver is still "alpha" (not fully tested) on the R-Pi. To try out sound, from the command prompt ''before'' "startx", type<br />
<br />
sudo apt-get install alsa-utils<br />
sudo modprobe snd_bcm2835<br />
<br />
On Debian Wheezy, snd_bm2835 is enabled, by default, do that step is not necessary. Next try:<br />
<br />
sudo aplay /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Front_Center.wav<br />
<br />
By default output will be automatic (hdmi if hdmi supports audio, otherwise analogue). You can force it with:<br />
<br />
sudo amixer cset numid=3 <n><br />
<br />
where n is 0=auto, 1=headphones, 2=hdmi.<br />
<br />
With recent firmware, you can build hello_audio with:<br />
cd /opt/vc/src/hello_pi/<br />
./rebuild.sh<br />
cd hello_audio<br />
<br />
With older firmware<br />
cd /opt/vc/src/hello_pi/hello_audio<br />
make<br />
<br />
to test analogue output:<br />
./hello_audio.bin<br />
and:<br />
./hello_audio.bin 1<br />
to test HDMI.<br />
<br />
Also note that you may have to add your user to the 'audio' group to get permission to access the sound card.<br />
<br />
==Display==<br />
===Startx fails to start===<br />
If you just get errors instead of a desktop when typing<br />
startx<br />
you may be out of storage space on the SD card. By default there are only a few hundred MB free in the 2 GB main partition, which can quickly fill up if you download files. Make sure there is some space free (gparted can expand a partition, if the SD card is > 2GB). Also, installing some software may incorrectly create or modify a .Xauthority file in your home directory, causing startx to fail, according to [http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/startx-fails-worked-yesterday this thread]. Temporarily renaming, moving, or deleting that file may fix the problem.<br />
<br />
===Screen is the wrong color===<br />
Check and see if the DVI cable is screwed in properly. If that doesn't work then try [[#Interference_visible_on_a_HDMI_or_DVI_monitor|this]] section.<br />
<br />
===Video does not play or plays very slowly===<br />
The only hardware-accelerated video player is in the [http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/general-discussion/openelec-meets-raspberry-pi-part-1-xbmc XBMC distribution] and its command line variant [[omxplayer]]. H264 is the only hardware-accelerated codec, for playback. No hardware encoding is supported. Additional codecs were not purchased as licensing fees would have increased the R-Pi's price.<br />
<br />
===Can only get 800x480 resolution in LXDE (Arch linux)===<br />
Known issue with distro package as of 17th April 2012 - there's some missing boot config information. Creating a suitable cmdline.txt fixes it - type the following at the Raspberry Pi command line:<br />
<br />
<pre><br />
sudo echo "dwc_otg.lpm_enable=0 console=ttyAMA0,115200 kgdboc=ttyAMA0,115200 root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootfstype=ext3 rootwait" >/boot/cmdline.txt<br />
</pre><br />
<br />
===Big black borders around small image on HD monitors===<br />
<br />
Out of the box, R-Pi graphics don't necessarily fill the whole screen. This is due to something called "Underscan", and it can be fixed easily.<br />
<br />
Note: the best solution is to disable overscan in display menu options (it may be called "just scan", "screen fit", "HD size", "full pixel", "unscaled", "dot by dot", "native" or "1:1"), then use the disable_overscan=1 option.<br />
<br />
Edit the configuration file, see the instructions at [[R-Pi_ConfigurationFile]].<br />
<br />
Add the following lines to the configuration file...<br />
<br />
If your display has no overscan:<br />
<br />
<pre><br />
<br />
disable_overscan=1<br />
<br />
</pre><br />
<br />
or if your display has some overscan:<br />
<br />
<pre><br />
<br />
overscan_left=-20<br />
<br />
overscan_right=-20<br />
<br />
overscan_top=-20<br />
<br />
overscan_bottom=-20<br />
<br />
</pre><br />
<br />
Making the R-Pi graphics fill the screen is a matter of experimenting with the numbers you put in the config.txt file. Change the numbers – try jumps of 5 or 10 at a time. Bigger negative numbers reduce the black borders (so -40 means less black border than -20). The numbers do not all have to be the same; you can use this feature to centre the display on the screen.<br />
<br />
===Writing spills off the screen on HD monitors===<br />
<br />
Out of the box, R-Pi graphics may be larger than the 1080p (ie Full HD) screen. This is due to something called "Overscan", and it can be fixed easily by creating a simple text file on the R-Pi SD card by using Notepad on your PC.<br />
<br />
Follow the instructions in the section "Big black borders around small image on HD monitors", but use positive numbers for the overscan settings, for example<br />
<pre><br />
<br />
overscan_left=20<br />
<br />
overscan_right=20<br />
<br />
overscan_top=20<br />
<br />
overscan_bottom=20<br />
<br />
</pre><br />
<br />
===Interference visible on a HDMI or DVI monitor===<br />
This may be caused by loss of signal on long video cables. The signal level may be increased by changing a configuration parameter.<br />
<br />
[[File:RPi_HDMI_interference.jpg|600px]]<br />
<br />
Edit the configuration file, see the instructions at [[R-Pi_ConfigurationFile]].<br />
<br />
Add the following line to the configuration file<br />
config_hdmi_boost=4<br />
<br />
You may experiment with different values of config_hdmi_boost. Value 1 is used for very short cables, value 7 is used for very long cables.<br />
<br />
This option can also help when there is no display output at all, the display periodically blanks, or colours are wrong/inverted.<br />
<br />
This symptom can also be caused by RasPi +5V (measured from TP1 to TP2) falling too low. See "Troubleshooting Power Problems".<br />
<br />
===No HDMI output at all===<br />
First make sure the display is powered on and switched to the right input before booting Pi.<br />
<br />
If you have the [http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/1435 Wheezy] image (recommended) then try<br />
hdmi_safe=1<br />
<br />
Otherwise, try adding the following line to the configuration file (similar to interference case above)<br />
config_hdmi_boost=4<br />
<br />
Your monitor/cable may not be asserting the hotplug signal. You can override this with:<br />
hdmi_force_hotplug=1<br />
<br />
Also [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=7513 try] the following video options:<br />
hdmi_group=2<br />
hdmi_mode=4<br />
which resolved an issue with DVI monitor reporting "input signal out of range"<br />
<br />
As a last resort, try deleting (rename to keep backup) config.txt from the SD card.<br />
<br />
Also check that the RasPi +5V voltage (measured from TP1 to TP2) is in the correct range. One user found that his DVI-D monitor blanked out when +5V was too low. See "Troubleshooting Power Problems".<br />
<br />
===Composite displays only back and white or no image===<br />
The output display will default to HDMI if a HDMI display is connected, and composite if not. Make sure there isn't a HDMI cable connected when you want to use composite output.<br />
<br />
The composite display defaults to NTSC (American) output. Most TVs will show an image with that, but older PAL (European) televisions may display only back and white or no image. To fix this:<br />
<br />
Edit the configuration file, see the instructions at [[R-Pi_ConfigurationFile]].<br />
<br />
Add the following line to the configuration file<br />
sdtv_mode=2<br />
<br />
(You can try other values: 0 is NTSC, 1 is Japanese NTSC, 2 is PAL, 3 is Brazilian PAL)<br />
<br />
==GPIO==<br />
Remember that the GPIO pins are 3.3V logic level only, and are <strong>NOT</strong> 5V tolerant.<br />
<br />
If you momentarily shorted the two end GPIO pins together (+3.3V and +5V), or a supply pin to ground, and the Pi appears to be dead, don't panic. The input polyfuse may have tripped. It is self-resetting after it cools down and the polymer re-crystallizes, which can take several hours. Set the Pi aside and try again later.<br />
<br />
The GPIO pins connect directly into the core of the ARM processer, and are static-sensitive, so you should avoid touching the pins wherever possible. If you are carrying a static charge, for example by taking off an acrylic pullover, or walking across a nylon carpet, touching the GPIO pins could destroy your R-Pi, so always earth yourself before touching the pins or anything connected to them.<br />
<br />
==General==<br />
===The time is incorrect===<br />
If the clock is off by a series of hours, in the command line type:<br />
sudo dpkg-reconfigure tzdata<br />
<br />
The R-Pi has no real-time clock, so unless it can access a timeserver over the network at boot, or time is manually entered by the user, the time/date will restart counting from the last logged time in the previous session.<br />
<br />
===A part broke off===<br />
<br />
The silver cylinder near the microUSB power input is a 220 uF capacitor ("C6" on schematic). It sticks up and due to the small surface-mount pads, it is easy to break off; several people have done so. This is a power supply filter capacitor which reduces any noise and spikes on the input +5V power. If you like, you can solder it back on, or just leave it off. If you do solder it back on, take care to observe the correct polarity with the black stripe towards the board edge. This part, C6 is a "just in case" component which is good design practice to include, but [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=4926| as it turns out] most power supplies still work OK without this part installed. This part is also [http://elinux.org/RPi_Hardware#Capacitor_C6 discussed here].<br />
<br />
===Unable to install new software===<br />
When trying to install a software package (using the command sudo apt-get install xxxx) you may see the error<br />
Package yyyy is not available<br />
This means that your software list is out of date. Before attempting to install software, you should always make sure that you are using the latest software list by using the command<br />
sudo apt-get update<br />
<br />
==Troubleshooting power problems==<br />
<br />
If you think you have a problem with your power supply, it is a good idea to check the actual voltage<br />
on the Raspberry Pi circuit board. Two test points labelled TP1 and TP2 are provided on the circuit board<br />
to facilitate voltage measurements.<br />
<br />
Use a multimeter which is set to the range 20 volts DC (or 20v =). You should see a voltage between 4.75 and 5.25 volts. Anything outside this range indicates that you have a problem with your power supply or your power cable.<br />
<br />
If you have not used a multimeter before, see these [[http://www.sparkfun.com/tutorials/202 basic instructions]]<br />
<br />
Note: Even if the multimeter shows the correct voltage, you may have some power supply problems. A multimeter only displays the average voltage. If there are very short-lived dips or spikes in the voltage, these will not be shown by the multimeter. It is best to measure voltage when Pi is busy.<br />
<br />
If your voltage is low, it could be:<br />
* The power supply produces too low a voltage<br />
* The power supply cannot supply enough current, which results in a voltage drop. Make sure Power supply is labelled as at least 700mA. (Some cheap power supplies don't deliver what is labelled).<br />
* The USB power cable is low quality. See: [[On_the_RPi_usb_power_cable]]<br />
* Attached USB devices want too much power. The Pi is only designed for up to 100mA USB devices. A USB device wanting more that that will cause a voltage drop.<br />
Note: keyboards with LCD displays, built in USB hubs, backlights, etc are likely to be problematic. Try to use a basic one. Wifi dongles are also unlikely to work when directly connected. Connect high powered USB devices to a powered USB hub.<br />
<br />
Try booting without HDMI, ethernet or USB deviced plugged in, and see if the voltage improves.<br />
See also: [[RPi_Hardware#Power_Supply_Problems| Power Supply Problems]]<br />
<br />
[[File:RPI_Test_Points.JPG|400px]] [[File:Voltmeter.JPG|250px]]<br />
<br />
<br />
If you prefer to make your own PSU - see: [[RPi_5V_PSU_construction| Power Supply construction - HowTo]]<br />
<br />
==Hardware versions/revisions==<br />
Several different boards have been found probably from different assembly lines, and the following tables try to help you identify your board for better troubleshooting.<br />
<br />
Look for the date of manufacturing printed with the year and week. In this example year (2012) and week (18th):[[File:Date_of_manufacturing.jpg|200px|thumb|right]]<br />
<br />
For what we can see for model B boards there are mainly two versions that differ on the type RAM used, Samsung (S) and Hynix (H).<br />
<br />
For '''Board ver'''. we used: <model><RAM Maker><production date> (ex.: BS1218 is "Model B, Samsung RAM, 18th week of 2012")<br />
<br />
Model A:<br />
{| border="1" class="wikitable"<br />
|-<br />
! Board<br />
ver.<br />
! RAM<br />
Chip <br />
! USB<br />
Chip <br />
! Front<br />
! Back<br />
|-<br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
|}<br />
<br />
<br />
Model B:<br />
{| border="1" class="wikitable"<br />
|-<br />
! Board<br />
ver.<br />
! RAM<br />
Chip <br />
! USB<br />
Chip <br />
! Front<br />
! Back<br />
|-<br />
| BS12xx<br />
| Samsung<br />
| SMSC<br />
| [[File:RaspberryPi-Board_A-Front.JPG|200px|thumb|center]]<br />
| [[File:RaspberryPi-Board_A-Back.JPG|200px|thumb|center]]<br />
|-<br />
| BH12xx<br />
| Hynix<br />
| SMSC<br />
| [[File:RaspberryPi-Board_B-Front.JPG|200px|thumb|center]]<br />
| [[File:RaspberryPi-Board_B-Back.JPG|200px|thumb|center]]<br />
|}<br />
<br />
<big>See a '''complete list''' and user feedback here: [[RaspberryPi Boards]]</big><br />
<br />
=References= <br />
<references/><br />
<br />
{{Template:Raspberry Pi}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:RaspberryPi]]</div>Jbracegirdlehttps://elinux.org/index.php?title=Products&diff=164546Products2012-08-27T17:45:45Z<p>Jbracegirdle: Added link to CPU data sheet for Raspberry Pi</p>
<hr />
<div>Here is a list of products which use embedded Linux.<br />
<br />
Please see the [[Talk:Products|talk page]] for information about how we want to populate this page.<br />
<br />
== Televisions ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Televisions using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Mobile Phones ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Mobile Phones using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers<br />
! Proprietary Software<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.accton.com/homepage/main3/product_range/23_CE/VM1188T.htm VM1188T]<br />
| [http://www.accton.com Accton]<br />
| 2006<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.cellon.com/products.jsp?id=18 C8000]<br />
| [http://www.cellon.com/ Cellon]<br />
| 2005<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS8901223473.html 3G Linux Ref Design]<br />
| [http://www.catt.ac.cn/english/ Datang]<br />
| 2004<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS4367004471.html E28 FMC phones]<br />
| [http://www.e28.com/eng/ E28]<br />
| 2006<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| OMAP 730<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS5033717348.html E28 E2800]<br />
| [http://www.e28.com/eng/ E28]<br />
| 2003<br />
| 32<br />
| 32<br />
| ARM9<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS2220873893.html E28 E2800+]<br />
| [http://www.e28.com/eng/ E28]<br />
| 2004<br />
| 64<br />
| 32<br />
| ARM9 300MHz<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.g-tekgroup.com/products/pwg_500.asp PWG500]<br />
| [http://www.g-tekgroup.com/ G-Tek]<br />
| 2006<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| X<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/articles/AT2559540724.html G500i]<br />
| Grundig<br />
| 2005<br />
| 52 - User<br />
| X<br />
| OMAP850<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| X<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.haier.com/products/product.asp?proID=4948 N60]<br />
| [http://www.haier.com Haier]<br />
| 2006<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| X<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.imcosys.com/smartphones.html GPS Phone]<br />
| [http://www.imcosys.com/ ImCoSys]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 64<br />
| 64<br />
| OMAP 730<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| [http://www.imcosys.com/English/Download/download.html SDK & Flash Image]<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Openmoko Freerunner<br />
| Openmoko<br />
| 2008<br />
| 128<br />
| 256<br />
| armV4@400Mhz<br />
| [http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Neo_FreeRunner Openmoko wiki],<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware](schematics freely available)<br />
| [http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Distributions multiple distributions]<br />
| None(but 3 proprietary firmwares: gsm,gps and wifi)<br />
| None<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Nokia N900<br />
| Nokia<br />
| ?<br />
| 256<br />
| 256M NAND +32G eMMC<br />
| OMAP 3430 SoC( 600 MHz ARM Cortex-A8 CPU)<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
| see [http://wiki.maemo.org/Free_Maemo here]<br />
| see [http://wiki.maemo.org/Free_Maemo here]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Htc Dream<br />
| HTC<br />
| ?<br />
| 192M(but some reserved for the DSPs)<br />
| <br />
| MSM7201A(armv6-novfp@528Mhz)<br />
| run android by default,GNU/Linux port [http://www.htc-linux.org/wiki/index.php?title=Dream#Kernel_Status in progress](require routing or ADP)<br />
|<br />
| yes by default([http://trac.osuosl.org/trac/replicant/wiki/HTCDreamProprietaryDrivers list here] )<br />
| yes by default<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Audio and Video Mobile Players ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Audio and Video Mobile Players using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers<br />
! style="width:300px" | Proprietary Software<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| PMA430<br />
| Archos<br />
| ?<br />
| 64MB(48MB usable)<br />
| ?(loop image on the hdd used)<br />
| omap1(armv4@74.34 bogomips)<br />
|<br />
| [http://openpma.org/wiki/Main_Page alternative community distribution]<br />
| yes(dm270fb.o(framebuffer driver),mabe others)<br />
| yes(qtopia),you can't change the kernel unless you find or write a replacement for the proprietary drivers<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Archos 5<br />
| Archos<br />
| ?<br />
| 128 M<br />
| 40G/60G/120G/160G/250G hdd<br />
| OMAP3<br />
|<br />
| [http://www.openaos.org/ openaos(alternative(to android) community distribution)]<br />
comes with android by default,<br />
but thanks to an SDE(special developer edition) firmware GNU/Linux can be installed.<br />
OpenAOS and SDE are based on openembedded.<br />
|?<br />
|?<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Archos 7<br />
| Archos<br />
| ?<br />
| 128 M<br />
| 160G/320G hdd<br />
| OMAP3<br />
|<br />
| [http://www.openaos.org/ openaos(alternative(to android) community distribution)]<br />
comes with android by default,<br />
but thanks to an SDE(special developer edition) firmware GNU/Linux can be installed.<br />
OpenAOS and SDE are based on openembedded.<br />
|?<br />
|?<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Internet tablet ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Internet tablet using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers<br />
! style="width:300px" | Proprietary Software<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [[N800]]<br />
| Nokia<br />
| ?<br />
| 128MB<br />
| 256MB<br />
| OMAP2420@400 MHz <br />
| <br />
| yes(wifi(free wifi driver available but still need a calibration binary).dsp,sound )<br />
| can be remplcad by [http://dev.openbossa.org/trac/mamona/wiki mamona] but no wifi and sound<br />
|-<br />
| [http://tabletsetc.com/tablets/4tiitoo-wetab/specs/ WeTab]<br />
| Neofonie/Pegatron<br />
| 2010<br />
| 1 GB<br />
| 16 GB<br />
| 1.66GHz Intel Atom N450 <br />
| Running MeeGo<br />
| http://wetab.mobi/en/developers/downloads-and-howtos/<br />
|<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Settop Boxes ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Settop Boxes using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Freedom Jump<br />
| Amino Communications<br />
| 2010<br />
| 1 GB DDR 3<br />
| 512 MB<br />
| Intel® Atom CE4150<br />
| MeeGo platform<br />
| http://www.aminocom.com/products/freedom-jump/<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Roku SD/HD/HD-XR/XDS<br />
| Roku<br />
| 2010<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
| NXP PNX8935<br />
|<br />
| [http://support.roku.com/entries/246042-roku-player-open-source-resources|Roku open source]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Digital Video Recorders ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Digital Video Recorders using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Game Consoles ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Game Consoles using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| PlayStation 2<br />
| Sony Computer Entertainment<br />
| 2000<br />
| 32MB<br />
| unknown<br />
| MIPS 64-bit R5900<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStation_2 PS2 wikipedia page], [http://playstation2-linux.com/ Playstation-linux community site]<br />
| [http://blackrhino.xrhino.com/main.php?page=home Black Rhino Linux distribution site]<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| PlayStation 3<br />
| Sony Computer Entertainment<br />
| 2006<br />
| 512 MB<br />
| unknown<br />
| CELL broadband engine<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStation_3 PS3 wikipedia page]<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_for_PlayStation_3 wikipedia PS3-linux page]<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Didj<br />
| LeapFrog Enterprises<br />
| 2008<br />
| 32MB<br />
| 256MB<br />
| [[LF-1000]]/[[Pollux]]<br />
| [[Didj]]<br />
| [[Leapfrog Source Code]]<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Leapster Explorer<br />
| LeapFrog Enterprises<br />
| 2010<br />
| 64MB<br />
| 512MB<br />
| [[LF-1000]]/[[Pollux]]<br />
| [[Leapster Explorer]]<br />
| [[Leapfrog Source Code]]<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| LeapPad Explorer<br />
| LeapFrog Enterprises<br />
| 2011<br />
| 64MB<br />
| 2GB<br />
| [[LF-1000]]/[[Pollux]]<br />
| [[Leappad Explorer]]<br />
| [[Leapfrog Source Code]]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Network Attached Storage (NAS) ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Network Attached Storage using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| NSLU2<br />
| [http://www.linksys.com Linksys]<br />
| 2004<br />
| 32MB<br />
| 8MB<br />
| Intel XScale IXP420<br />
| <br />
| http://www.nslu2-linux.org (community site with improved firmwares)<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Network Camera ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Network Camera using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| NC353L<br />
| [http://www3.elphel.com Elphel, Inc]<br />
| 2007<br />
| 64MB<br />
| 128MB<br />
| Axis EtraxFS<br />
| http://wiki.elphel.com<br />
| http://sourceforge.net/projects/elphel<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
== Networked Media Players ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Networked Media Players using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [[Freecom MusicPal | MusicPal]]<br />
| [http://www.freecom.com Freecom]<br />
| 2007<br />
| 32MB<br />
| unknown<br />
| [[Marvell 88W8618]]<br />
| <br />
| http://www.musicpal.info (under Legal Notice]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Still and Video Cameras ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Not Yet Categorized devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| HDR-UX1, HDR-SR1 video cameras<br />
| Sony<br />
| 2006<br />
| ??<br />
| ??<br />
| ARM9<br />
| [http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10551&storeId=10151&langId=-1&productId=11035608 Sonystyle store listing]<br />
| [http://www.sony.net/Products/Linux/Download/HDR-UX1_HDR-SR1.html Sony Linux Download area]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Assistive Technology ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Assistive Technology devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.toby-churchill.com/en/content/lightwriters-0 Lightwriter SL38]<br />
| [http://www.toby-churchill.com Toby Churchill Ltd]<br />
| 2004<br />
| 64<br />
| 256<br />
| StrongARM SA-1110<br />
| [http://balloonboard.org/ Developer site]<br />
| [http://husaberg.toby-churchill.com/balloon/ code and sources]<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Robots and Smart-companions ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Robots and smart-companions using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karotz Karotz]<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mindscape_(software_publisher) Mindscape ] then [http://www.aldebaran-robotics.com/ Aldebaran Robotics]<br />
| 2011<br />
| 64<br />
| 256<br />
| Samsung [http://elinux.org/S3C2440 S3C2440] (ARM920T@400Mhz)<br />
| [http://dev.karotz.com/ Developer site]<br />
|<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Network devices ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Network devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! Connectivity<br />
! Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers or software<br />
|-<br />
| Sheevaplug<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marvell_Technology_Group Marvell]<br />
|<br />
| 512M<br />
| 512M<br />
| Kirkwood 88F6281 (armv5@1.2Ghz)<br />
| Ethernet,usb,sdio<br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| ?<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Modular devices ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Modular devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! Connectivity<br />
! Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers or software<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.buglabs.net/bugbase bugbase 1.2]<br />
| [http://www.buglabs.net Bug Labs]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 128<br />
| 32<br />
| imx31(armv6-vfp@533Mhz)<br />
| USB host(on the von hippel module),micro-sd,usb OTG<br />
| Up to 4 modules(802.15.4,motion detector,screen(320x240),sound card,breakout(von hippel),gps modules availables),<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://bugcommunity.com/wiki/index.php/BUGbase schematics] freely available)<br />
| [http://bssvn.buglabs.net/svn/!tree/10763 Bug svn]<BR><br />
Based on [http://pokylinux.org/ poky linux],<BR><br />
uses [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concierge_OSGi concierge OSGI],<BR><br />
Can use bug 1.3's [http://cgit.openembedded.net/cgit.cgi/openembedded/tree/conf/machine/bug.conf Basic machine support in openembedded] <br />
| http://www.buglabs.net/downloads<br />
| No(the powervr is not used)<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.buglabs.net/bugbase bugbase 1.3]<br />
| [http://www.buglabs.net Bug Labs]<br />
| 2009<br />
| 128<br />
| 32<br />
| imx31(armv6-vfp@533Mhz)<br />
| wifi(libertas_sdio),bluetooth,USB(on the von hippel module),micro-sd,usb OTG<br />
| Up to 4 modules(802.15.4,motion detector,screen(320x240),sound card,breakout(von hippel),gps modules availables),<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://bugcommunity.com/wiki/index.php/BUGbase schematics] freely available)<br />
| [http://bssvn.buglabs.net/svn/!tree/10763 Bug svn]<BR><br />
Based on [http://pokylinux.org/ poky linux],<BR><br />
uses [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concierge_OSGi concierge OSGI],<BR><br />
[http://cgit.openembedded.net/cgit.cgi/openembedded/tree/conf/machine/bug.conf Basic machine support in openembedded]<br />
| http://www.buglabs.net/downloads<br />
| No(the powervr is not used)<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=27_33&products_id=227 Overo fire]<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com Gumstix]<br />
| ?<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP 3530(also contain POWERVR SGX + C64x)<br />
| wifi(libertas),bluetooth,micro-sd,usb OTG+Host(not shure if USB is on the module or only avaliable on extensions boards)<br />
| expansions board available<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://pubs.gumstix.com/boards/ schematics] freely available but only for extension boards)<br />
| [http://cgit.openembedded.net/cgit.cgi/openembedded/tree/conf/machine/overo.conf Machine support in openembedded]<br />
|<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=226 overo air]<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com Gumstix]<br />
| ?<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP 3503(no 3D acceleration and no DSP)<br />
| wifi(libertas),bluetooth,micro-sd,usb OTG+Host(not shure if USB is on the module or only avaliable on extensions boards)<br />
| expansions board available<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://pubs.gumstix.com/boards/ schematics] freely available but only for extension boards)<br />
|<br />
|<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=228 overo water]<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com Gumstix]<br />
| ?<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP 3530(also contain POWERVR SGX + C64x)<br />
| micro-sd,usb OTG+Host(not shure if USB is on the module or only avaliable on extensions boards)<br />
| expansions board available<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://pubs.gumstix.com/boards/ schematics] freely available but only for extension boards)<br />
|<br />
|<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=211 Overo earth]<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com Gumstix]<br />
| ?<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP 3503(no DSP,no 3d acceleration)<br />
| micro-sd,usb OTG+Host(not shure if USB is on the module or only avaliable on extensions boards) <br />
| expansions board available<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://pubs.gumstix.com/boards/ schematics] freely available but only for extension boards)<br />
|<br />
|<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=5969 TNY-A9G20-LPW-I02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2009<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9G20(400Mhz)<br />
| Micro-SD, RTC (ext. battery), USB OTG (Full Speed), Serial DBGU (Linux console), JTAG, 2 expansion connectors.<br />
| MotherBoard(s) : MOB-TNY-A9XXX-MD2-CXX, Expansion board(s): GPI2 (1W,I2C, SPI, UART), GPS, GSM/GPRS, GSM/HSDPA, WiFi/BlueTooth, KNX/RF, Wireless MBUS, ZigBee...<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=5885 TNY-A9263-C02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2008<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9263(200Mhz)<br />
| USB OTG (Full Speed), Serial DBGU (Linux console),2 expansion connectors.<br />
| Motherboard(s) : MOB-TNY-A9XXX-MD2-CXX, Expansion board(s): GPI2 (1W,I2C, SPI, UART), GPS, GSM/GPRS, GSM/HSDPA, WiFi/BlueTooth, KNX/RF, Wireless MBUS, ZigBee...<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=6237 TNY-T3730-ULP-C01]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2011<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP3730(800Mhz)<br />
| Micro-SD, Battery Charger, USB OTG (Full Speed), UART (Linux Console), Jtag, 2 expansion connectors<br />
| No motherboard(s), No expansion board(s).<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=5933 QIL-A9260-C02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2011<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9260(200Mhz)<br />
| 2Mbits SPI Serial Flash, 64Kbits SPI E2PROM, Micro-SD, RTC, 2 expansion connectors<br />
| Motherboard(s) : MOB-QIL-A9XXX-CXX, No expansion boards.<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=6113 USB-A9G20-LPW-C02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2011<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9G20(400Mhz)<br />
| Micro-SD, RTC, USB Debug (Full Speed), USB Device FS, 2x USB Host FS, Ethernet 10/100, expansion connector<br />
| Motherboard(s) : N/A, Expansion boards : GPI2 (1W,I2C, SPI, UART), GPS, GSM/GPRS, GSM/HSDPA, WiFi/BlueTooth, KNX/RF, Wireless MBUS, ZigBee...<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=5932 USB-A9263-C02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2009<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9263(200Mhz)<br />
| Micro-SD, USB Debug (Full Speed), USB Device FS, 2x USB Host FS, Ethernet 10/100, expansion connector<br />
| Motherboard(s) : N/A, No Expansion board(s)<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|}<br />
<BR><br />
<br />
== Development boards ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Development boards'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! Connectivity<br />
! Notes<br />
! Proprietary Drivers<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|-<br />
|[http://beagleboard.org/ Beagle Board]<br />
|Texas Instruments <br />
|2008<br />
|256M<br />
|256M<br />
|OMAP3530<br />
|<br />
| lot of informations in the [[BeagleBoard|BeagleBoard wiki page]],<BR><br />
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware](schematics freely available)<br />
| The powervr(3d chip) require a proprietary 3d driver for the 3d part<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
|[http://beagleboard.org/bone BeagleBone]<br />
|Texas Instruments <br />
|2011<br />
|256MB<br />
|none (MicroSD)<br />
|AM3358<br />
|Ethernet 10/100<br />
|[[BeagleBone|BeagleBone wiki page]], [[BeagleBoard|BeagleBoard wiki page]],<BR><br />
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware](schematics freely available)<br />
|The powervr(3d chip) require a proprietary 3d driver for the 3d part<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
|[http://pandaboard.org/ Pandaboard]<br />
|Texas Instruments <br />
|2010<br />
|8Gb(x32) x 2ch<br />
|(2G(x32) x4pcs) 2CS/ch<br />
|OMAP4430<br />
|WLAN, Bluetooth, 10/100 Ethernet<br />
| [[PandaBoard|Pandaboard wiki page]],<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=fr&pg=6186 Snowball SDK & PDK]<br />
|[http://www.calao-systems.com/ CALAO Systems]<br />
|2011<br />
|1GB<br />
|4GB / 8GB<br />
|ST-Ericsson A9500 Dual Cortex A9 + Mali 400<br />
|WiFi, BlueTooth, GPS, HDMI, CVBS, Ethernet 10/100, Audio In / Out, Micro-SD, Serial Port (Linux console), JTAG, MiPi34, 3D Accelerometer, Magnetometer & Gyrometer, Pressure sensor, 3x expansion connectors<br />
|Expansion Board(s) : MOB-SKY-S9500-AVI-CXX (2x USB OTG HS, LVDS 24Bits, TSC, LED Driver, MiPi DSI, MiPi CSI...), DAB-SKY-S9500-GPI-CXX (CANBus, Modem 2G/3G, 4x Uart, 8x GPIO, 8x ADC)<br />
|[http://www.igloocommunity.org/ Igloo Community]<br />
|[http://www.igloocommunity.org/ Igloo Community]<br />
|[http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/EMBEDDED%20COMPUTERS/SKY-S9500-ULP-XXX/ CALAO Systems Repository]<br />
|-<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.raspberrypi.org/ US$ 25 Raspberry Pi Computer]<br />
|Raspberry Pi Foundation<br />
|2012<br />
|256<br />
|none (SD Card)<br />
|Broadcom ARM11 (ARM v6) + Videocore GPU<br />
|10/100 Ethernet, HDMI , Composite , Audio, USB Host, GPIO, JTAG , MIPI DSI + CSI<br />
|[[RPi Hub|Phenomenal RPi Hub]]<br />
|[http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/1839 MPEG-2 and VC-1 Licences]<br />
[https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/tree/master/opt/vc OpenGL, OpenMax examples]<br />
|[http://www.raspberrypi.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Raspberry-Pi-Schematics-R1.0.pdf Schematics]<br />
[http://www.raspberrypi.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/BCM2835-ARM-Peripherals.pdf CPU Datasheet]<br />
|[http://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads Card Images]<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.ledato.de/ NanosG20]<br />
|Ledato<br />
|?<br />
|64M/128M<br />
|128M/512M<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|}<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Development boards'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! style="width:120px" | Processor<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! style="width:150px" |Video Display<br />
! style="width:250px" |Interfaces<br />
! OS support<br />
! Notes<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.armkits.com/Product/devkit8000.asp/ DevKit8000]<br />
|[http://www.armkits.com Embest] <br />
|TI OMAP3530<br />
|256M<br />
|256M<br />
|LCD, DVI-D and S-Video<br />
|UART, USB Host, USB OTG, Ethernet, Audio, SD, Keyboard, Jtag<br />
|Linux2.6.28, WinCE6.0<br />
|[[Devkit8000]] wiki page<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.armkits.com/Product/devkit8500d.asp/ DevKit8500D/A]<br />
|[http://www.armkits.com Embest] <br />
|style="width:120px" |TI DM3730/AM3715<br />
|512M<br />
|512M<br />
|LCD, DVI-D and S-Video<br />
|UART, USB Host, USB OTG, Ethernet, Audio, SD, Keyboard, Jtag<br />
|Linux2.6.28, WinCE6.0, Android2.2<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.atmel.com/dyn/products/tools_card.asp?tool_id=4102 NGW100]<br />
|[http://www.atmel.com Atmel]<br />
|Atmel AVR32: AT32AP7000<br />
|32M<br />
|8M serial + 8M parallel<br />
|"LCD Controller"<br />
|UARTs, USB slave, 2x 100MBit Ethernet, I2C, SPI, JTAG, AC97<br />
|Linux 2.6 [http://www.avr32linux.org http://www.avr32linux.org]<br />
|<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Development Boards with FPGA ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Development Boards with FPGA'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.armadeus.com/english/products-processor_boards-apf27.html APF27]<br />
| [http://www.armadeus.com/ Armadeus Systems]<br />
| 2009<br />
| up to 256<br />
| up to 512<br />
| i.MX27 400MHz + Spartan3a<br />
| [http://www.armadeus.com/english/products-processor_boards-apf27.html Company Site]<br />
| [http://www.armadeus.org Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
<br />
== Development Boards with MINI2440v2 with 3.5'' ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Development Boards with MINI2440V2'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
[http://www.developmentboard.net/index.php/productdetail/Development+board/ARM9/SAMSUNG/S3C2440/MINI2440v2+with+MegaDisplay+3.5/info/1]<br />
| [http://www.developmentboard.net]<br />
| 2009<br />
| up to 256<br />
| up to 512<br />
| i.MX27 400MHz + Spartan3a<br />
| [http://www.developmentboard.net/index.php/productdetail/Development+board/ARM9/SAMSUNG/S3C2440/MINI2440v2+with+MegaDisplay+3.5/info/1]<br />
| [http://www.developmentboard.net Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Not Yet Categorized ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Not Yet Categorized devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Indamixx 2 Audio Tablet<br />
| Indamixx<br />
| 2010<br />
| 2 GB<br />
| 150 GB HDD<br />
| Atom N450<br />
| [http://www.indamixx.com/shop-28.html Company website]<br />
| http://www.indamixx.com/shop-60.html<br />
|-<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT4268573160.html HS210]<br />
| [http://www.ericsson.com Ericsson]<br />
| 2000<br />
| 32<br />
| 32<br />
| StrongARM SA-1110<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| X<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-500<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2007<br />
| 64<br />
| 16<br />
| i.MX31<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a500 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-300<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 64<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a300 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-300 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-9<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2004<br />
| 64<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a9 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-9 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-240<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 64<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a240 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-240 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-230<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 32<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a230 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-230 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-220<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 32<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a220 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-220 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-210<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2005<br />
| 32<br />
| 4<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a210 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-210 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Eddy v2.1 Series<br />
| [http://www.sysbas.com/ SystemBase]<br />
| 2008<br />
| 32<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 210MHz<br />
| [http://www.sysbas.com/e-Products/?sNum=400 Company Site]<br />
| [http://embeddedmodule.com/ Eddy Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Matrix Series<br />
| [http://www.artila.com/ Artila]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 64<br />
| 16<br />
| ARM9 180MHz<br />
| [http://www.artila.com Company Site]<br />
| [http://www.artila.com/p_matrix.html Matrix Site]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Home And Building Automation, Smart Energy ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''HABA & Smart Energy controllers using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=fr&pg=6114 HABA-KNX-EXPLORER-C01]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com CALAO Systems]<br />
| 2011<br />
| 128<br />
| 256<br />
| AT91SAM9G20 (400MHz)<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/HABA%20CONTROLLERS/HABA-KNX-EXPLORER-XXX/ Repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/HABA%20CONTROLLERS/HABA-KNX-EXPLORER-XXX/ Repository]<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
[[Category:Products]]</div>Jbracegirdlehttps://elinux.org/index.php?title=Products&diff=164144Products2012-08-24T16:54:31Z<p>Jbracegirdle: Updated Raspberry Pi web links and added new licence links</p>
<hr />
<div>Here is a list of products which use embedded Linux.<br />
<br />
Please see the [[Talk:Products|talk page]] for information about how we want to populate this page.<br />
<br />
== Televisions ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Televisions using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Mobile Phones ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Mobile Phones using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers<br />
! Proprietary Software<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.accton.com/homepage/main3/product_range/23_CE/VM1188T.htm VM1188T]<br />
| [http://www.accton.com Accton]<br />
| 2006<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.cellon.com/products.jsp?id=18 C8000]<br />
| [http://www.cellon.com/ Cellon]<br />
| 2005<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS8901223473.html 3G Linux Ref Design]<br />
| [http://www.catt.ac.cn/english/ Datang]<br />
| 2004<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS4367004471.html E28 FMC phones]<br />
| [http://www.e28.com/eng/ E28]<br />
| 2006<br />
| -<br />
| -<br />
| OMAP 730<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS5033717348.html E28 E2800]<br />
| [http://www.e28.com/eng/ E28]<br />
| 2003<br />
| 32<br />
| 32<br />
| ARM9<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS2220873893.html E28 E2800+]<br />
| [http://www.e28.com/eng/ E28]<br />
| 2004<br />
| 64<br />
| 32<br />
| ARM9 300MHz<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| -<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.g-tekgroup.com/products/pwg_500.asp PWG500]<br />
| [http://www.g-tekgroup.com/ G-Tek]<br />
| 2006<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| X<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://linuxdevices.com/articles/AT2559540724.html G500i]<br />
| Grundig<br />
| 2005<br />
| 52 - User<br />
| X<br />
| OMAP850<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| X<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.haier.com/products/product.asp?proID=4948 N60]<br />
| [http://www.haier.com Haier]<br />
| 2006<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| X<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.imcosys.com/smartphones.html GPS Phone]<br />
| [http://www.imcosys.com/ ImCoSys]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 64<br />
| 64<br />
| OMAP 730<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| [http://www.imcosys.com/English/Download/download.html SDK & Flash Image]<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Openmoko Freerunner<br />
| Openmoko<br />
| 2008<br />
| 128<br />
| 256<br />
| armV4@400Mhz<br />
| [http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Neo_FreeRunner Openmoko wiki],<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware](schematics freely available)<br />
| [http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Distributions multiple distributions]<br />
| None(but 3 proprietary firmwares: gsm,gps and wifi)<br />
| None<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Nokia N900<br />
| Nokia<br />
| ?<br />
| 256<br />
| 256M NAND +32G eMMC<br />
| OMAP 3430 SoC( 600 MHz ARM Cortex-A8 CPU)<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
| see [http://wiki.maemo.org/Free_Maemo here]<br />
| see [http://wiki.maemo.org/Free_Maemo here]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Htc Dream<br />
| HTC<br />
| ?<br />
| 192M(but some reserved for the DSPs)<br />
| <br />
| MSM7201A(armv6-novfp@528Mhz)<br />
| run android by default,GNU/Linux port [http://www.htc-linux.org/wiki/index.php?title=Dream#Kernel_Status in progress](require routing or ADP)<br />
|<br />
| yes by default([http://trac.osuosl.org/trac/replicant/wiki/HTCDreamProprietaryDrivers list here] )<br />
| yes by default<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Audio and Video Mobile Players ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Audio and Video Mobile Players using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers<br />
! style="width:300px" | Proprietary Software<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| PMA430<br />
| Archos<br />
| ?<br />
| 64MB(48MB usable)<br />
| ?(loop image on the hdd used)<br />
| omap1(armv4@74.34 bogomips)<br />
|<br />
| [http://openpma.org/wiki/Main_Page alternative community distribution]<br />
| yes(dm270fb.o(framebuffer driver),mabe others)<br />
| yes(qtopia),you can't change the kernel unless you find or write a replacement for the proprietary drivers<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Archos 5<br />
| Archos<br />
| ?<br />
| 128 M<br />
| 40G/60G/120G/160G/250G hdd<br />
| OMAP3<br />
|<br />
| [http://www.openaos.org/ openaos(alternative(to android) community distribution)]<br />
comes with android by default,<br />
but thanks to an SDE(special developer edition) firmware GNU/Linux can be installed.<br />
OpenAOS and SDE are based on openembedded.<br />
|?<br />
|?<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Archos 7<br />
| Archos<br />
| ?<br />
| 128 M<br />
| 160G/320G hdd<br />
| OMAP3<br />
|<br />
| [http://www.openaos.org/ openaos(alternative(to android) community distribution)]<br />
comes with android by default,<br />
but thanks to an SDE(special developer edition) firmware GNU/Linux can be installed.<br />
OpenAOS and SDE are based on openembedded.<br />
|?<br />
|?<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Internet tablet ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Internet tablet using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers<br />
! style="width:300px" | Proprietary Software<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [[N800]]<br />
| Nokia<br />
| ?<br />
| 128MB<br />
| 256MB<br />
| OMAP2420@400 MHz <br />
| <br />
| yes(wifi(free wifi driver available but still need a calibration binary).dsp,sound )<br />
| can be remplcad by [http://dev.openbossa.org/trac/mamona/wiki mamona] but no wifi and sound<br />
|-<br />
| [http://tabletsetc.com/tablets/4tiitoo-wetab/specs/ WeTab]<br />
| Neofonie/Pegatron<br />
| 2010<br />
| 1 GB<br />
| 16 GB<br />
| 1.66GHz Intel Atom N450 <br />
| Running MeeGo<br />
| http://wetab.mobi/en/developers/downloads-and-howtos/<br />
|<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Settop Boxes ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Settop Boxes using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Freedom Jump<br />
| Amino Communications<br />
| 2010<br />
| 1 GB DDR 3<br />
| 512 MB<br />
| Intel® Atom CE4150<br />
| MeeGo platform<br />
| http://www.aminocom.com/products/freedom-jump/<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Roku SD/HD/HD-XR/XDS<br />
| Roku<br />
| 2010<br />
| ?<br />
| ?<br />
| NXP PNX8935<br />
|<br />
| [http://support.roku.com/entries/246042-roku-player-open-source-resources|Roku open source]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Digital Video Recorders ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Digital Video Recorders using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
| X<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Game Consoles ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Game Consoles using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| PlayStation 2<br />
| Sony Computer Entertainment<br />
| 2000<br />
| 32MB<br />
| unknown<br />
| MIPS 64-bit R5900<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStation_2 PS2 wikipedia page], [http://playstation2-linux.com/ Playstation-linux community site]<br />
| [http://blackrhino.xrhino.com/main.php?page=home Black Rhino Linux distribution site]<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| PlayStation 3<br />
| Sony Computer Entertainment<br />
| 2006<br />
| 512 MB<br />
| unknown<br />
| CELL broadband engine<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStation_3 PS3 wikipedia page]<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_for_PlayStation_3 wikipedia PS3-linux page]<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Didj<br />
| LeapFrog Enterprises<br />
| 2008<br />
| 32MB<br />
| 256MB<br />
| [[LF-1000]]/[[Pollux]]<br />
| [[Didj]]<br />
| [[Leapfrog Source Code]]<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Leapster Explorer<br />
| LeapFrog Enterprises<br />
| 2010<br />
| 64MB<br />
| 512MB<br />
| [[LF-1000]]/[[Pollux]]<br />
| [[Leapster Explorer]]<br />
| [[Leapfrog Source Code]]<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| LeapPad Explorer<br />
| LeapFrog Enterprises<br />
| 2011<br />
| 64MB<br />
| 2GB<br />
| [[LF-1000]]/[[Pollux]]<br />
| [[Leappad Explorer]]<br />
| [[Leapfrog Source Code]]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Network Attached Storage (NAS) ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Network Attached Storage using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| NSLU2<br />
| [http://www.linksys.com Linksys]<br />
| 2004<br />
| 32MB<br />
| 8MB<br />
| Intel XScale IXP420<br />
| <br />
| http://www.nslu2-linux.org (community site with improved firmwares)<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Network Camera ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Network Camera using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| NC353L<br />
| [http://www3.elphel.com Elphel, Inc]<br />
| 2007<br />
| 64MB<br />
| 128MB<br />
| Axis EtraxFS<br />
| http://wiki.elphel.com<br />
| http://sourceforge.net/projects/elphel<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
== Networked Media Players ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Networked Media Players using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [[Freecom MusicPal | MusicPal]]<br />
| [http://www.freecom.com Freecom]<br />
| 2007<br />
| 32MB<br />
| unknown<br />
| [[Marvell 88W8618]]<br />
| <br />
| http://www.musicpal.info (under Legal Notice]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Still and Video Cameras ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Not Yet Categorized devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| HDR-UX1, HDR-SR1 video cameras<br />
| Sony<br />
| 2006<br />
| ??<br />
| ??<br />
| ARM9<br />
| [http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10551&storeId=10151&langId=-1&productId=11035608 Sonystyle store listing]<br />
| [http://www.sony.net/Products/Linux/Download/HDR-UX1_HDR-SR1.html Sony Linux Download area]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Assistive Technology ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Assistive Technology devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.toby-churchill.com/en/content/lightwriters-0 Lightwriter SL38]<br />
| [http://www.toby-churchill.com Toby Churchill Ltd]<br />
| 2004<br />
| 64<br />
| 256<br />
| StrongARM SA-1110<br />
| [http://balloonboard.org/ Developer site]<br />
| [http://husaberg.toby-churchill.com/balloon/ code and sources]<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Robots and Smart-companions ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Robots and smart-companions using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source or Notes<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karotz Karotz]<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mindscape_(software_publisher) Mindscape ] then [http://www.aldebaran-robotics.com/ Aldebaran Robotics]<br />
| 2011<br />
| 64<br />
| 256<br />
| Samsung [http://elinux.org/S3C2440 S3C2440] (ARM920T@400Mhz)<br />
| [http://dev.karotz.com/ Developer site]<br />
|<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Network devices ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Network devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! Connectivity<br />
! Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers or software<br />
|-<br />
| Sheevaplug<br />
| [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marvell_Technology_Group Marvell]<br />
|<br />
| 512M<br />
| 512M<br />
| Kirkwood 88F6281 (armv5@1.2Ghz)<br />
| Ethernet,usb,sdio<br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| ?<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Modular devices ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Modular devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! Connectivity<br />
! Notes<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
! Proprietary Drivers or software<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.buglabs.net/bugbase bugbase 1.2]<br />
| [http://www.buglabs.net Bug Labs]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 128<br />
| 32<br />
| imx31(armv6-vfp@533Mhz)<br />
| USB host(on the von hippel module),micro-sd,usb OTG<br />
| Up to 4 modules(802.15.4,motion detector,screen(320x240),sound card,breakout(von hippel),gps modules availables),<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://bugcommunity.com/wiki/index.php/BUGbase schematics] freely available)<br />
| [http://bssvn.buglabs.net/svn/!tree/10763 Bug svn]<BR><br />
Based on [http://pokylinux.org/ poky linux],<BR><br />
uses [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concierge_OSGi concierge OSGI],<BR><br />
Can use bug 1.3's [http://cgit.openembedded.net/cgit.cgi/openembedded/tree/conf/machine/bug.conf Basic machine support in openembedded] <br />
| http://www.buglabs.net/downloads<br />
| No(the powervr is not used)<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.buglabs.net/bugbase bugbase 1.3]<br />
| [http://www.buglabs.net Bug Labs]<br />
| 2009<br />
| 128<br />
| 32<br />
| imx31(armv6-vfp@533Mhz)<br />
| wifi(libertas_sdio),bluetooth,USB(on the von hippel module),micro-sd,usb OTG<br />
| Up to 4 modules(802.15.4,motion detector,screen(320x240),sound card,breakout(von hippel),gps modules availables),<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://bugcommunity.com/wiki/index.php/BUGbase schematics] freely available)<br />
| [http://bssvn.buglabs.net/svn/!tree/10763 Bug svn]<BR><br />
Based on [http://pokylinux.org/ poky linux],<BR><br />
uses [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concierge_OSGi concierge OSGI],<BR><br />
[http://cgit.openembedded.net/cgit.cgi/openembedded/tree/conf/machine/bug.conf Basic machine support in openembedded]<br />
| http://www.buglabs.net/downloads<br />
| No(the powervr is not used)<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=27_33&products_id=227 Overo fire]<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com Gumstix]<br />
| ?<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP 3530(also contain POWERVR SGX + C64x)<br />
| wifi(libertas),bluetooth,micro-sd,usb OTG+Host(not shure if USB is on the module or only avaliable on extensions boards)<br />
| expansions board available<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://pubs.gumstix.com/boards/ schematics] freely available but only for extension boards)<br />
| [http://cgit.openembedded.net/cgit.cgi/openembedded/tree/conf/machine/overo.conf Machine support in openembedded]<br />
|<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=226 overo air]<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com Gumstix]<br />
| ?<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP 3503(no 3D acceleration and no DSP)<br />
| wifi(libertas),bluetooth,micro-sd,usb OTG+Host(not shure if USB is on the module or only avaliable on extensions boards)<br />
| expansions board available<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://pubs.gumstix.com/boards/ schematics] freely available but only for extension boards)<br />
|<br />
|<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=228 overo water]<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com Gumstix]<br />
| ?<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP 3530(also contain POWERVR SGX + C64x)<br />
| micro-sd,usb OTG+Host(not shure if USB is on the module or only avaliable on extensions boards)<br />
| expansions board available<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://pubs.gumstix.com/boards/ schematics] freely available but only for extension boards)<br />
|<br />
|<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=211 Overo earth]<br />
| [http://www.gumstix.com Gumstix]<br />
| ?<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP 3503(no DSP,no 3d acceleration)<br />
| micro-sd,usb OTG+Host(not shure if USB is on the module or only avaliable on extensions boards) <br />
| expansions board available<BR>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware]([http://pubs.gumstix.com/boards/ schematics] freely available but only for extension boards)<br />
|<br />
|<br />
| ?<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=5969 TNY-A9G20-LPW-I02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2009<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9G20(400Mhz)<br />
| Micro-SD, RTC (ext. battery), USB OTG (Full Speed), Serial DBGU (Linux console), JTAG, 2 expansion connectors.<br />
| MotherBoard(s) : MOB-TNY-A9XXX-MD2-CXX, Expansion board(s): GPI2 (1W,I2C, SPI, UART), GPS, GSM/GPRS, GSM/HSDPA, WiFi/BlueTooth, KNX/RF, Wireless MBUS, ZigBee...<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=5885 TNY-A9263-C02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2008<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9263(200Mhz)<br />
| USB OTG (Full Speed), Serial DBGU (Linux console),2 expansion connectors.<br />
| Motherboard(s) : MOB-TNY-A9XXX-MD2-CXX, Expansion board(s): GPI2 (1W,I2C, SPI, UART), GPS, GSM/GPRS, GSM/HSDPA, WiFi/BlueTooth, KNX/RF, Wireless MBUS, ZigBee...<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=6237 TNY-T3730-ULP-C01]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2011<br />
| 256M<br />
| 256M<br />
| OMAP3730(800Mhz)<br />
| Micro-SD, Battery Charger, USB OTG (Full Speed), UART (Linux Console), Jtag, 2 expansion connectors<br />
| No motherboard(s), No expansion board(s).<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=5933 QIL-A9260-C02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2011<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9260(200Mhz)<br />
| 2Mbits SPI Serial Flash, 64Kbits SPI E2PROM, Micro-SD, RTC, 2 expansion connectors<br />
| Motherboard(s) : MOB-QIL-A9XXX-CXX, No expansion boards.<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=6113 USB-A9G20-LPW-C02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2011<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9G20(400Mhz)<br />
| Micro-SD, RTC, USB Debug (Full Speed), USB Device FS, 2x USB Host FS, Ethernet 10/100, expansion connector<br />
| Motherboard(s) : N/A, Expansion boards : GPI2 (1W,I2C, SPI, UART), GPS, GSM/GPRS, GSM/HSDPA, WiFi/BlueTooth, KNX/RF, Wireless MBUS, ZigBee...<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=5932 USB-A9263-C02]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/index.php?lng=en calao systems] <br />
| 2009<br />
| 64M<br />
| 256M<br />
| AT91SAM9263(200Mhz)<br />
| Micro-SD, USB Debug (Full Speed), USB Device FS, 2x USB Host FS, Ethernet 10/100, expansion connector<br />
| Motherboard(s) : N/A, No Expansion board(s)<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/ repository]<br />
| No<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|}<br />
<BR><br />
<br />
== Development boards ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Development boards'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! Connectivity<br />
! Notes<br />
! Proprietary Drivers<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|-<br />
|[http://beagleboard.org/ Beagle Board]<br />
|Texas Instruments <br />
|2008<br />
|256M<br />
|256M<br />
|OMAP3530<br />
|<br />
| lot of informations in the [[BeagleBoard|BeagleBoard wiki page]],<BR><br />
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware](schematics freely available)<br />
| The powervr(3d chip) require a proprietary 3d driver for the 3d part<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
|[http://beagleboard.org/bone BeagleBone]<br />
|Texas Instruments <br />
|2011<br />
|256MB<br />
|none (MicroSD)<br />
|AM3358<br />
|Ethernet 10/100<br />
|[[BeagleBone|BeagleBone wiki page]], [[BeagleBoard|BeagleBoard wiki page]],<BR><br />
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_hardware open hardware](schematics freely available)<br />
|The powervr(3d chip) require a proprietary 3d driver for the 3d part<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
|[http://pandaboard.org/ Pandaboard]<br />
|Texas Instruments <br />
|2010<br />
|8Gb(x32) x 2ch<br />
|(2G(x32) x4pcs) 2CS/ch<br />
|OMAP4430<br />
|WLAN, Bluetooth, 10/100 Ethernet<br />
| [[PandaBoard|Pandaboard wiki page]],<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=fr&pg=6186 Snowball SDK & PDK]<br />
|[http://www.calao-systems.com/ CALAO Systems]<br />
|2011<br />
|1GB<br />
|4GB / 8GB<br />
|ST-Ericsson A9500 Dual Cortex A9 + Mali 400<br />
|WiFi, BlueTooth, GPS, HDMI, CVBS, Ethernet 10/100, Audio In / Out, Micro-SD, Serial Port (Linux console), JTAG, MiPi34, 3D Accelerometer, Magnetometer & Gyrometer, Pressure sensor, 3x expansion connectors<br />
|Expansion Board(s) : MOB-SKY-S9500-AVI-CXX (2x USB OTG HS, LVDS 24Bits, TSC, LED Driver, MiPi DSI, MiPi CSI...), DAB-SKY-S9500-GPI-CXX (CANBus, Modem 2G/3G, 4x Uart, 8x GPIO, 8x ADC)<br />
|[http://www.igloocommunity.org/ Igloo Community]<br />
|[http://www.igloocommunity.org/ Igloo Community]<br />
|[http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/EMBEDDED%20COMPUTERS/SKY-S9500-ULP-XXX/ CALAO Systems Repository]<br />
|-<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.raspberrypi.org/ US$ 25 Raspberry Pi Computer]<br />
|Raspberry Pi Foundation<br />
|2012<br />
|256<br />
|none (SD Card)<br />
|Broadcom ARM11 (ARM v6) + Videocore GPU<br />
|10/100 Ethernet, HDMI , Composite , Audio, USB Host, GPIO, JTAG , MIPI DSI + CSI<br />
|[[RPi Hub|Phenomenal RPi Hub]]<br />
|[http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/1839 MPEG-2 and VC-1 Licences]<br />
[https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/tree/master/opt/vc OpenGL, OpenMax examples]<br />
|[http://www.raspberrypi.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Raspberry-Pi-Schematics-R1.0.pdf Schematics]<br />
|[http://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads Card Images]<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.ledato.de/ NanosG20]<br />
|Ledato<br />
|?<br />
|64M/128M<br />
|128M/512M<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|<br />
|}<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Development boards'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! style="width:120px" | Processor<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! style="width:150px" |Video Display<br />
! style="width:250px" |Interfaces<br />
! OS support<br />
! Notes<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.armkits.com/Product/devkit8000.asp/ DevKit8000]<br />
|[http://www.armkits.com Embest] <br />
|TI OMAP3530<br />
|256M<br />
|256M<br />
|LCD, DVI-D and S-Video<br />
|UART, USB Host, USB OTG, Ethernet, Audio, SD, Keyboard, Jtag<br />
|Linux2.6.28, WinCE6.0<br />
|[[Devkit8000]] wiki page<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.armkits.com/Product/devkit8500d.asp/ DevKit8500D/A]<br />
|[http://www.armkits.com Embest] <br />
|style="width:120px" |TI DM3730/AM3715<br />
|512M<br />
|512M<br />
|LCD, DVI-D and S-Video<br />
|UART, USB Host, USB OTG, Ethernet, Audio, SD, Keyboard, Jtag<br />
|Linux2.6.28, WinCE6.0, Android2.2<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
|[http://www.atmel.com/dyn/products/tools_card.asp?tool_id=4102 NGW100]<br />
|[http://www.atmel.com Atmel]<br />
|Atmel AVR32: AT32AP7000<br />
|32M<br />
|8M serial + 8M parallel<br />
|"LCD Controller"<br />
|UARTs, USB slave, 2x 100MBit Ethernet, I2C, SPI, JTAG, AC97<br />
|Linux 2.6 [http://www.avr32linux.org http://www.avr32linux.org]<br />
|<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Development Boards with FPGA ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Development Boards with FPGA'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.armadeus.com/english/products-processor_boards-apf27.html APF27]<br />
| [http://www.armadeus.com/ Armadeus Systems]<br />
| 2009<br />
| up to 256<br />
| up to 512<br />
| i.MX27 400MHz + Spartan3a<br />
| [http://www.armadeus.com/english/products-processor_boards-apf27.html Company Site]<br />
| [http://www.armadeus.org Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
<br />
== Development Boards with MINI2440v2 with 3.5'' ==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Development Boards with MINI2440V2'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
[http://www.developmentboard.net/index.php/productdetail/Development+board/ARM9/SAMSUNG/S3C2440/MINI2440v2+with+MegaDisplay+3.5/info/1]<br />
| [http://www.developmentboard.net]<br />
| 2009<br />
| up to 256<br />
| up to 512<br />
| i.MX27 400MHz + Spartan3a<br />
| [http://www.developmentboard.net/index.php/productdetail/Development+board/ARM9/SAMSUNG/S3C2440/MINI2440v2+with+MegaDisplay+3.5/info/1]<br />
| [http://www.developmentboard.net Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Not Yet Categorized ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''Not Yet Categorized devices using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Indamixx 2 Audio Tablet<br />
| Indamixx<br />
| 2010<br />
| 2 GB<br />
| 150 GB HDD<br />
| Atom N450<br />
| [http://www.indamixx.com/shop-28.html Company website]<br />
| http://www.indamixx.com/shop-60.html<br />
|-<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT4268573160.html HS210]<br />
| [http://www.ericsson.com Ericsson]<br />
| 2000<br />
| 32<br />
| 32<br />
| StrongARM SA-1110<br />
| [http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9423084269.html LinuxDevices]<br />
| X<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-500<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2007<br />
| 64<br />
| 16<br />
| i.MX31<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a500 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-300<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 64<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a300 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-300 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-9<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2004<br />
| 64<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a9 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-9 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-240<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 64<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a240 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-240 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-230<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 32<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a230 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-230 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-220<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 32<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a220 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-220 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Armadillo-210<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en Atmark Techno]<br />
| 2005<br />
| 32<br />
| 4<br />
| ARM9 200MHz<br />
| [http://www.atmark-techno.com/en/products/armadillo/a210 Company Site]<br />
| [http://armadillo.atmark-techno.com/filebrowser/armadillo-210 Armadillo Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Eddy v2.1 Series<br />
| [http://www.sysbas.com/ SystemBase]<br />
| 2008<br />
| 32<br />
| 8<br />
| ARM9 210MHz<br />
| [http://www.sysbas.com/e-Products/?sNum=400 Company Site]<br />
| [http://embeddedmodule.com/ Eddy Developer Site]<br />
|-<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| Matrix Series<br />
| [http://www.artila.com/ Artila]<br />
| 2006<br />
| 64<br />
| 16<br />
| ARM9 180MHz<br />
| [http://www.artila.com Company Site]<br />
| [http://www.artila.com/p_matrix.html Matrix Site]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
== Home And Building Automation, Smart Energy ==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5"<br />
|+'''HABA & Smart Energy controllers using Embedded Linux'''<br />
|- style="background:#CCCCCC"<br />
! style="width:100px" | Product Name<br />
! Company Name<br />
! Year<BR>Introduced<br />
! RAM<BR>MB<br />
! Flash<BR>MB<br />
! Processor<br />
! style="width:150px" | Source<br />
! style="width:250px" | Download Area<br />
<br />
|- align="center"<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/articles.php?lng=fr&pg=6114 HABA-KNX-EXPLORER-C01]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com CALAO Systems]<br />
| 2011<br />
| 128<br />
| 256<br />
| AT91SAM9G20 (400MHz)<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/HABA%20CONTROLLERS/HABA-KNX-EXPLORER-XXX/ Repository]<br />
| [http://www.calao-systems.com/repository/HABA%20CONTROLLERS/HABA-KNX-EXPLORER-XXX/ Repository]<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|}<br />
<BR><BR><BR><br />
<br />
[[Category:Products]]</div>Jbracegirdlehttps://elinux.org/index.php?title=RPi_Hub&diff=164102RPi Hub2012-08-24T11:22:39Z<p>Jbracegirdle: Removed the immediate dispatch links as all Farnell/Element14 pages are saying out of stock again</p>
<hr />
<div>{{TOC right}}{{Template:Hub_Flags}} <!-- please edit template to alter banner and flag display on all hubs --><br />
{{Clear}}<br />
'''The Raspberry Pi wiki pages on this site are a community work - the Raspberry Pi Foundation is not responsible for content on these pages.'''<br />
<br />
==Now shipping to customers==<br />
Premier Farnell and RS Components have started shipping to customers. Congratulations to those at the front of the queue!.<br />
<br />
Work is ongoing to clear the backlog of orders, with both distributors now manufacturing them in serial production. Farnell/Element14 have stated that all people worldwide who ordered their Raspberry Pi through them on or before April 18th should receive theirs by the end of June.<br />
<br />
Update: In the US, on 2012 July 24, Newark/Element 14 is quoting five '''weeks''' and Allied is still quoting 12 weeks. An order placed by Rick Seiden on July 19, 2012 at Newark/Element 14 shipped July 31, 2012, indicating a less than five week wait time.<br />
<br />
See the [[RPi Buying Guide | Buying Guide]] on how to order one, or visit the [http://www.raspberrypi.org Raspberry Pi Foundation Home Page]<br />
<br />
==About==<br />
[[File:RpiFront.jpg|300px|thumb|right|The Rpi beta board (model B)]]<br />
<br />
The Raspberry Pi (short: RPi or RasPi) is an ultra-low-cost credit-card sized Linux computer which was conceived with the primary goal of teaching computer programming to children. It was developed by the [http://www.raspberrypi.org Raspberry Pi Foundation], which is a UK registered charity (Registration Number 1129409). The foundation exists to promote the study of computer science and related topics, especially at school level, and to put the fun back into learning computing. The device is expected to have many other applications both in the developed and the developing world ([[RPi_Philosophy|Read more]]).<br />
<br />
Raspberry Pi is manufactured and sold in partnership with the worldwide industrial distributors [http://www.farnell.com/ Premier Farnell/Element 14] and [http://rswww.com/ RS Components].<br />
<br />
* You can get the latest news from the [http://www.raspberrypi.org Foundation Home Page], the [http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=Raspberry_Pi Twitter Feed] or in the [http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/general-discussion/news-articles-and-blog-posts-about-raspberry-pi forums].<br />
* For Raspberry Pi frequently asked questions see the [[R-Pi FAQ]] or the [http://www.raspberrypi.org/?page_id=8 Raspberry Pi Foundation's FAQ] page.<br />
* Both manufacturing partners provide community areas for more technically focused discussions, articles, FAQs and related information:<br />
:* Premier Farnell: [http://www.element14.com/community/groups/raspberry-pi?view=discussions Element 14 Raspberry Pi Group]<br />
:* RS-Components: [http://www.designspark.com/theme/raspberrypi DesignSpark - Raspberry Pi]<br />
* Products are RoHS, CE, FCC, CTick, CSA and WEEE compliant<ref>http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44828/l/raspberry-pi-safety-data-sheet</ref>. In common with all Electronic and Electrical products the Raspberry Pi should not be disposed of in household waste. Please contact the distributor from whom you purchased your Raspberry Pi device for details regarding WEEE in your country.<br />
* Price: 25USD Model A, 35USD for Model B, excluding taxes, postage and packaging. For information about availability and shipping see the [[RPi Buying Guide | Buying Guide]].<br />
<br />
<br />
===History===<br />
* Confused about seeing different versions of the board? Visit the [[Rpi HardwareHistory | History of the Raspberry Pi Hardware]] for information about the past versions.<br />
<br />
* RegHardware's very detailed analysis is [http://www.reghardware.com/2011/11/28/raspberry_pi/ well worth a read]. Wikipedia also has [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raspberry_Pi an entry].<br />
<br />
* Russell Davis (aka forum admin ukscone) has a series of blog articles recording his perspective of the [http://russelldavis.org/2012/01/14/the-raspberry-pi-part-one/ Raspberry Pi story] in several parts from the beginning.<br />
<br />
* You will often hear mention of the BBC Micro Computer when people talk about the purpose of the Raspberry Pi Foundation. See this article on the [http://www.reghardware.com/2011/11/30/bbc_micro_model_b_30th_anniversary/ history of the BBC Micro Computer].<br />
<br />
* Here's a video from the Financial Times, with three different groups evaluating the raspberry pi: http://video.ft.com/v/1498254373001/Taste-testing-the-Raspberry-Pi (March 2012)<br />
<br />
==Getting Started==<br />
{| border="1" style="background:transparent;"<br />
| style="width:33%; vertical-align:top; border:1px solid #aaa;" |<br />
===[[Buying RPi |Buying Guide]]===<br />
----<br />
Where can I get one and for how much?<br />
* The Raspberry Pi can no longer only be purchased via their official distribution partners - detailed information can be found on the [[Buying RPi | RPi Buying Guide]] page.<br />
<br />
* Additional accessories, peripherals and merchandise will also be available through the [http://www.raspberrypi.com/ Raspberry Pi Shop], aswell as [http://thepihut.com/ The Pi Hut's Raspberry Pi Store]<br />
<br />
| style="width:33%; vertical-align:top; border:1px solid #aaa;" |<br />
<br />
===[[RPi Hardware Basic Setup | Basic Setup]]===<br />
----<br />
First little Raspberry Pi Steps...<br />
* Ensure you have all the [[RPi Hardware Basic Setup#Typical_Hardware_You_Will_Need |equipment]] you need to go with your Raspberry Pi.<br />
* Become familiar with the [[RPi Hardware Basic Setup#Connecting_Together | board layout and connect]] it ready for power up.<br />
* If you have not been provided with a pre-setup SD card you will need to prepare one with your chosen [[RPi_Easy_SD_Card_Setup | Operating System distribution]]<br />
* Note: On the Debian OS after you log in you need to type startx at the prompt to get a graphic desktop.<br />
<br />
* '''Having problems? Try the [http://elinux.org/R-Pi_Troubleshooting Troubleshooting] page.'''<br />
<br />
| style="width:33%; vertical-align:top; border:1px solid #aaa;" |<br />
<br />
===[[RPi Beginners | Beginners Guide]]===<br />
----<br />
You've just got your new Raspberry Pi device - what now?<br />
* [[RPi Beginners | Beginners Guide]]<br />
<br />
* Learn about the basics with the [http://h2g2.com/dna/h2g2/A13735596 H2G2 - Introducing the Raspberry Pi] entry.<br />
<br />
* Get started with some basic projects and tutorials:<br />
[http://www.youtube.com/user/RaspberryPiTutorials Raspberry Pi YouTube Tutorials]<br><br />
[http://www.youtube.com/user/RaspberryPiBeginners Another set of video tutorials]<br />
<br />
[[RPi Tutorial Easy GPIO Hardware & Software | Easy GPIO Hardware & Software]] - in-progress at the moment<br />
Example projects/tuts which can be linked from here<br />
(or from within a beginners guide page perhaps):<br />
Setup XBMC media centre<br />
Programming tutorials (Liams YouTube etc)<br />
Easy GPIO (when complete or similar thing).<br />
Also links to some basic linux user guides.<br />
<br />
* Take a look through the [[R-Pi_Hub#Community|Community]] section, which contains a range of beginner and advanced tutorials and guides, as well as groups to help you find like-minded developers.<br />
<br />
|}<br />
<br />
==Resources==<br />
{| border="1" style="background:transparent;"<br />
<br />
| style="width:33%; vertical-align:top; border:1px solid #aaa; padding-left:5px;" |<br />
<br />
===[[RPi Hardware|Hardware]] & [[RPi VerifiedPeripherals|Peripherals]]===<br />
----<br />
<br />
*The Model B is more advanced than the Model A - see [[RPi Hardware]].<br />
*The RPi can be plugged into a [[RPi Screens|suitable TV or monitor]].<br />
*The unit will support a range of [[RPi VerifiedPeripherals |devices, peripherals and accessories]].<br />
*The [[Rpi Low-level peripherals| Low-level interfaces]] allow the use of optional [[RPi Expansion Boards|Expansion Boards]] in a wide range of projects.<br />
*For more advanced issues including see [[RPi Advanced Setup|Advanced Setup]].<br />
*[[RPi Peripherals|Setting up peripherals - examples/HowTos]]<br />
*[[RaspberryPi Boards|List of boards and user feedback]]<br />
*[[RPi 5V PSU construction|Power Supply construction - HowTo]]<br />
| style="width:33%; vertical-align:top; border:1px solid #aaa; padding-left:5px;" |<br />
<br />
===[[Rpi_Software|Software]] & [[RPi_Distributions|OS Distributions]]===<br />
----<br />
The Raspberry Pi will run a range of OS Distributions and run a variety of software.<br />
* See [[RPi Software|Software]] for an overview, and [[RPi Distributions|OS Distributions]] for supported operating system and pre-configured 'images'.<br />
*Main OS distributions include [[RPi Distributions#Debian_ARM | Debian ARM]], [[RPi Distributions#Fedora | Fedora]], [[RPi Distributions#KidsRuby | KidsRuby]] and [http://puppylinux.org/wikka/Puppi Puppi] from Puppy Linux.<br />
*Advice is also available if you want to [[Rpi_kernel_compilation|compile a kernel]] or [[RPi_Performance|test the Pi's performance]].<br />
*The Raspberry Pi supports a wide range of [[RPi Programming|programming languages]], with many tutorials available.<br />
*Information about installing specific [[RPi_applications|applications]] is available through the link.<br />
*Extensive (boot) configuration info (config.txt) is available [[RPi_config.txt|here]].<br />
*Monitor your Raspberry Pi with Raspcontrol [[Raspcontrol|here]]<br />
<br />
| style="width:33%; vertical-align:top; border:1px solid #aaa; padding-left:5px;" |<br />
<br />
===[[RPi Documentation|Documentation]]===<br />
----<br />
Documentation relating to the Raspberry Pi can be found [[RPi Documentation|here]].<br />
<br />
[[RPi DatasheetCategories|Frambozenier.org Documentation Project Datasheets]]<br />
<br />
Example documents which can be linked from here (or sub page):<br />
Official Datasheets<br />
White Papers<br />
User Manuals<br />
Recommended books (perhaps)<br />
<br />
=== RPi Troubleshooting ===<br />
<br />
Head over to the [[R-Pi Troubleshooting|troubleshooting page]] for help fixing common problems.<br />
<br />
=== RPi Bugs ===<br />
<br />
Head over to the [[RPi_Bugs|bugs page]] for a list of known bugs.<br />
<br />
=== RPi Model B 3D CAD files ===<br />
Theses are various 3D CAD Versions in both RAR and ZIP.<br />
<br />
* CATIA V5 RAR http://sdrv.ms/JqdhMb<br />
* CATIA V5 ZIP http://sdrv.ms/LjyLGD<br />
* ProE RAR http://sdrv.ms/KCv1hZ<br />
* ProE ZIP http://sdrv.ms/KCvhxq<br />
* STEP RAR http://sdrv.ms/KCvv7T<br />
* STEP ZIP http://sdrv.ms/JMhv18<br />
* SketchUp http://scc.jezmckean.com/item/581<br />
|}<br />
<br />
==Community==<br />
{| border="1" style="background:transparent;"<br />
| style="width:33%; vertical-align:top; border:1px solid #aaa; padding-left:5px;" |<br />
<br />
===[[RPi Projects |Projects]], [[RPi Guides |Guides]] & [[RPi Tutorials |Tutorials]]===<br />
----<br />
*An important source of information and guides is the [http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum Official Forum].<br />
*Knowledgeable users may want to review and help out with the [[RPi Tasks |Tasks page]].<br />
*Get started by following some of the many [[RPi Tutorials | Tutorials]].<br />
*Common tasks and useful tips are available through the [[RPi Guides | Guides page]]. <br />
*Projects can be found, and added to, on the [[RPi Projects |Projects page]].<br />
<br />
<br />
| style="width:33%; vertical-align:top; border:1px solid #aaa; padding-left:5px;" |<br />
<br />
===[[Rpi Education|Schools, Universities, Clubs & Groups]]===<br />
----<br />
*The Raspberry Pi Foundation's aims include encouraging education. Several groups including [http://www.computingatschool.org.uk/ Computing At School] aim to bring Computing Science back into schools.<br />
*Go to the [[Rpi Education|Education Page]] to add your project and find helpful links.<br />
<br />
| style="width:33%; vertical-align:top; border:1px solid #aaa; padding-left:5px;" |<br />
===[[RPi Community |Supporting Communities]]===<br />
----<br />
The [[RPi Community |Raspberry Pi Community]] is steadily growing: <br />
*[http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum The Official Raspberry Pi Forum]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.element14.com/community/groups/raspberry-pi?view=discussions Element 14 Raspberry Pi Group], community site of Premier Farnell<br />
<br />
*[http://www.designspark.com/theme/raspberrypi DesignSpark], community site of RS-Components<br />
<br />
*[http://www.frambozenbier.org/index.php/ 'Frambozenbier' (Raspberry Pi Homebrew)]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raspberrymod.com/ Raspberrymod] and [http://www.raspberrypiforums.com/forum RPiforums] Un-Official Raspberry Pi Discussion Boards<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raspberrypi-spanish.es Non-official community of Raspberry Pi in spanish language]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.worldofpi.com/ World Of Pi] A forum based on all things Raspberry Pi.<br />
<br />
*[[RPi Community Magazine]] - User contributed eMagazine, get involved!<br />
<br />
*[[RaspberryPi Osdev]] - Hardware specific OS-development community, sitting in freenode.net#raspberrypi-osdev.<br />
<br />
|}<br />
<br />
==About the RPi Wiki==<br />
<br />
'''Do not be afraid to add your bit, content is vital for the wiki to function.'''<br />
<br />
[[File:Rasp_turn_around.gif|200px|thumb|right|A 3D rendering of the Raspberry Pi logo by forum user Antario. [http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/projects-and-collaboration-general/raspberry-pi-3d-logo-animation Source]]]<br />
This wiki is '''open''' for the community. You are encouraged to sign up and add your own projects, guides and correct anything within it. It is important that users like you continue to add to and grow this wiki, that way others will be able to come and do the same making the wiki a valuable resource. See [[Help:Editing | Help Editing The Wiki]] and the [[Special:Upload | Upload File]] link (on the left sidebar) to reference images.<br />
Have a look at our [[RPi Wiki Best Practice|Guidelines]] and then you are free to go !<br />
<br />
=== Translations ===<br />
<br />
The wiki is being translated into several languages, some of which can be seen on the hub banner above. Current languages include:<br />
<br />
* English: [[R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* French: [[FR:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* German: [[DE:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* Greek: [[EL:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* Hungarian: [[HU:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* Japanese: [[JP:R-Pi_Hub]]<br />
* Polish: [[PL:R-Pi_Hub]]<br />
* Portugese: [[pt-BR:Raspberry Pi Board]]<br />
* Romanian: [[RO:R-Pi_Hub]]<br />
* Russian: [[RU:RaspberryPiBoard]]<br />
* Українська: [[UA:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* Spanish: [[ES:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* Italiano: [[IT:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* Chinese:[[CH:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* Hebrew:[[HE:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
* 한국어:[[KR:R-Pi Hub]]<br />
<br />
Any help translating would be greatly appreciated. Thank you to those who have already contributed!<br />
<br />
===Admins/Contributors===<br />
<br />
Please see the [[Talk:R-Pi_Hub|Talk]] page for outstanding issues and discussions regarding the RPi Hub and related pages. <br><br />
Also , have look at [[RPi Wiki Best Practice]]. You can discuss the recommendations <br />
[[Talk:RPi Wiki Best Practice | here ]] . <br />
<br />
To share your thoughts, comments, thanks and interesting articles, see our [[RPi Visitor Book |Visitor Book]].<br />
<br />
''Big thanks to elinux.org and their groups for the wiki space and content from which these pages have been grown.''<br />
<br />
=References=<br />
<references/><br />
<br />
{{Template:Raspberry Pi}}<br />
[[Category:RaspberryPi]]</div>Jbracegirdlehttps://elinux.org/index.php?title=RPi_VerifiedPeripherals&diff=155006RPi VerifiedPeripherals2012-07-27T11:59:28Z<p>Jbracegirdle: The EW-7811Un can be powered directly and linked to the installation guide.</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Category: Linux]]<br />
[[Category: ARM Development Boards]]<br />
[[Category: Broadcom]]<br />
[[Category: Development Boards]]<br />
[[Category: RaspberryPi]]<br />
[[Category: Education]]<br />
{{Template: RPi_Hardware}}<br />
<br />
<br />
'''A note about this page: For USB devices, please specify if they required a powered hub'''<br />
==Notes==<br />
<br />
19-Apr-2012: Now that the Model B board is shipping, details added should relate to this board and the [http://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads default Debian distribution] unless stated otherwise. A suggested suffix markup scheme is as follows:<br />
<br />
* (A) - Relates to model A production board<br />
* (B) - Relates to model B production board<br />
* (!) - Information from alpha and beta board days -- beta board verified peripherals should still apply to production boards for the most part, but the alpha board is fairly different<br />
* No markup - relates to all production boards<br />
<br />
''Discuss: [http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/?mingleforumaction=viewtopic&t=247 http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/?mingleforumaction=viewtopic&t=247]''<br />
<br />
If you are adding to a product list it would help clarity if entries are kept/added in alphabetical order.<br />
<br />
{{Warning|Adding peripherals may increase the loading on the power supply to your board and this, in turn, may affect the voltage presented to the RPi. If the RPi's supply voltage falls below a certain value (anecdotally stated as around 4.75V), or it begins to fluctuate, your setup may become unstable. There is a [http://elinux.org/RPi_Hardware#Power Wiki section about this issue] which is worth a read.}}<br />
<br />
'''Generally speaking the model B raspberry PI was designed only for <100mA USB devices!''' That is because the PI's PSU was chosen with a power budget of 700mA in mind of which 200mA were assigned to the two USB ports, so the raspberry PI's (poly)fuses were designed only for <100mA devices, and typical 140mA polyfuses will have as much as 0.6 volt across them when drawing currents near the 100mA limit. As a consequence the USB ports are only directly suitable for "single current unit" USB devices which according to USB specifications are designed to work with just 4.4 Volt. Not only do non single current unit devices draw more current, (causing greater Voltage drops, and greater stress on the fuses) they also might require 4.75 Volt to work. Therefore any non single current unit devices will only work when powered from a powered hub.<br />
<br />
== Powered USB Hubs ==<br />
A number of low-cost powered USB hubs are known to have caused problems. Members of the Raspberry Pi forums have reported low power or no power at all in some cases. The following is a list of specific Powered USB Hubs which appear to be fault-free. Please note that these do not take into account powering the Raspberry Pi from the hub, in addition to its peripherals.<br />
<br />
If you use a powered hub and PI PSU together consider powering them from the same power bar with switch, so you can turn them on simultaneously., especially if the HUB tries to feed the PI through their interconnect cable, due to the 100mA limiting fuse in the PI the PI will be partially powered which may cause problems (unwanted writes to the SD card).<br />
<br />
===Working USB Hubs===<br />
*'''Acme'''<br />
** USB 2.0 hub 4 port ([http://www.acme.eu/en-us/product/019188 ACME]) Based on NEC μPD720114 USB2.0 Hub Controller USB ID 0409:005a '''NOTE!''' It is bus-powered hub, but very cheap and small and works after a small modding: on usb-hub board you have 4 holes: V, D+, D- and GND. Connect GND, D+ and D- to the RasPI, and additionally connect GND and +5v from power supply to the same holes on usb-hub GND and V. Now there is common contacts: GND, D+ and D- between RasPI and hub needed to work, and additional power for USB devices, connected to the hub. Tested on my RasPI.<br />
*'''Belkin'''<br />
** F4U040 4-Port Ultra-Slim Desktop hub (powered 5v, 2.6A)<br />
** F5U224 4 port powered USB hub<br />
** F5U231/F5U234 Hi-speed USB 2.0 Tertrahub - 4 port powered USB hub (verified.. able to power Raspberry Pi using micro USB directly from hub)<br />
** F5U259-ME USB 2.0 7-Port Hub (Powered, able to apply power to Raspberry Pi via micro USB from this hub at same time)<br />
** F5U706ea/uk 2-in-1 Hub (USB 2.0, powered, 7-port)<br />
** F5U706701PerBlk 7-in-1 Hub (USB 2.0, powered 5V 2.5A , 7-port)<br />
*'''CyberPower'''<br />
** [http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817804002] CP-H720P 7-port powered hub with 3.6A adapter. Internally, a NEC Corp 0409:0050 device. Works perfectly with Model B, regardless of whether the RPi is being powered by the hub or externally.<br />
*'''D-Link'''<br />
** [http://www.amazon.com/D-Link-DUB-H7-High-Speed-7-Port/dp/B00008VFAF] 7-Port USB Hub DUB-H7 (See note below - doesn't work for all, apparently). Working model marked BUBH7A....A5. Worked with Debian on production B model, for keyboard, mouse, and thumb drives, also worked with ArchLinux, didn't work with Bodhi Linux immediately thereafter.<br />
** [http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817111131] 4-Port USB Hub DUB-H4 Worked on Debian with keyboard, mouse, and thumb drive. Also, was able to apply power to raspberry pi via micro usb from this hub at same time.<br />
*'''Digicom'''<br />
** [http://www.digicom.it/digisit/prodotti.nsf/itprodottiidx/MiniHubUsb204P#] MiniHUB 4-Port USB 2.0 with PSU 5V - 2A .<br />
*'''Eminent'''<br />
** [http://www.eminent-online.com/en/product/27/7-port-usb-2-0-hub.html] EM1107 7 Port USB 2.0 Hub with 2A power adapter. It's able to power the RPi, external HDD and other peripherals.<br />
* '''GearHead'''<br />
** [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004OBZ088/] GearHead 4 Port Hub with Energy Saving Power Switch (5V, 1A)<br />
* '''Genesys Logic (sold at Fry's)'''<br />
** Genesys Logic 4-Port USB 2.0 Hub 2.0 Amps (ID 05e3:0608)<br />
* '''Hama'''<br />
** Hama 4-way USB 2.0 Hub<br />
*'''HP'''<br />
** HP ZR2240w 21.5" Monitor with built in 2-Port USB Hub (B)<br />
*'''Laser'''<br />
** 7-Port USB Hub. 5V 1A (found at Harvey Norman Australia)(Also Australia Post Shops $9.95). You can power the PI by connecting both the main USB connector to the PI USB port, '''and''' from a spare USB port back to the power micro USB socket. If you don't do both, boot-loops are likely to occur.<br />
*'''Logik'''<br />
** [http://www.currys.co.uk/gbuk/logik-lp4hub10-4-port-powered-usb-hub-04979038-pdt.html] LP4HUB10 4-Port USB Hub. '''Throws errors when used with Fedora remix 14'''<br />
*'''LogiLink'''<br />
** UA0085 USB 2.0 Hub, 4-Port with PSU 5V, 2A<br />
** UA0096 USB 2.0 Hub, 10-Port with PSU 5V, 3.5A<br />
** UA0160 USB 2.0 Hub, 4-Port with PSU 5V, 2A. Able to power the RPi, keyboard, mouse and LogiLink UA0144 USB ethernet adapter. (More testing to come.)<br />
* '''Manhattan'''<br />
** [http://manhattan-products.com/en-US/products/6500-hi-speed-usb-2-0-micro-hub] (#160612) Hi-Speed USB 2.0 Micro HUB, AC Powered (identifies as ID 05e3:0608 Genesys Logic) Includes a 1000mA wall-wart (US style)<br />
*'''Newlink'''<br />
** NLUSB2-224P 4 port USB 2.0 Mini hub with PSU 5V 1A<br />
*'''Nilox'''<br />
** Nilox USB 2.0 4port HUB model HUB4USB2AC with PSU 5V 1.0A <br />
* '''Pluscom'''<br />
** Pluscom 7 Port USB 2.0 Hub Model U7PH-3A with 3Amp PSU. USB ID 1a40:0101. Powering Pi via microUSB from a hub port. Internally two 4 Port switches linked. Leaks power back up USB data cable to Pi but not really a problem when powering Pi at the same time. (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/7-port-usb-20-powered-hub-for-raspberry-pi.html TrendingUK ]) (also from [http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/330749956598 eBay ])<br />
*'''SumVision'''<br />
** Sumvision Slim 4 Port High Speed USB 2.0 HUB with PSU 5V 1.0A (from [http://www.7dayshop.com/catalog/account_history_info.php?page=1&order_id=5130107 | 7dayshop ])<br />
*'''Sitecom'''<br />
** CN-032 4 Port USB 2.0 Pocket Hub. Works for powering the Pi, an USB WLAN Adapter, wireless Kbd+Mouse. Using an 2500 mA Voltcraft SPS5-12W.<br />
*'''Targus'''<br />
** ACH81xx 7-port powered hub. 5V 3A power supply, with 2 high power ports. (possible conflicting behaviour with USB keyboard / Wifi Dongles)<br />
** ACH63EU 4-port. Using a 5V 2A power supply, which isn't supplied with the hub, it is able to power the PI as well.<br />
*'''Trendnet'''<br />
** [http://www.trendnet.com/products/proddetail.asp?prod=130_TU2-700&cat=49] TU2-700 7 Port Powered USB 2.0 Hub with AC Adapter (5V 2A)<br />
*'''Ultron'''<br />
** [http://www.ultron.de/v1/produktansicht.php?artnr=67072&kid=bfa8340c4e245...&l=en&WGType=Neue+USB-HUBS] UHN-710 7-port powered hub with PSU 5V, 3A. USB ID 1a40:0201.<br />
*'''Z-TEK'''<br />
** Z-TEK 7-port powered hub with PSU 5V, 4A. USB ID 1a40:0201.<br />
<br />
===Problem USB Hubs===<br />
*'''Belkin'''<br />
** 7-Port Powered Mobile Hub - device labelled F4U018, packaging labelled F5U701. lsusb reveals it to be two Genesys Logic 4-port hubs based on the GL850G chipset (vendor: 0x05e3 product: 0x0608) ganged together. Yields a lot of "handle_hc_chhltd_intr_dma:: XactErr without NYET/NAK/ACK" errors and device resets in /var/log/messages. Low speed devices such as keyboards work OK, wifi/mass storage is unreliable or broken. -- No error messages with the latest kernel, but still unstable with mass storage devices. Also, leaks current back to the Pi (can be fixed by overtaping GND and +5V pinouts)<br />
<br />
** F4U022 7-Port powered USB hub (powered 5v, 2.6A), same as F4U018<br />
** 7-Port Powered Hub - device labled F5U237 Rev.3 - ID 050d:0237 Wired ethernet fails to connect; gives "DWC OTG HCD URB enqueue failed adding QTD. Error status -4008" Result is same as DUB-H7 below.<br />
** F5U404 Hi-Speed USB 2.0 4-Port Mobile Hub. Faulty/bad design; Leaks current back up the cable to the Raspberry Pi.<br />
** F5U307 Hi-Speed USB 2.0 7-Port Hub (Powered, able to apply power to Raspberry Pi via micro USB from this hub at same time) It work's sometimes.<br />
<br />
*'''DELTACO'''<br />
** 7-Port USB Hub UH-713 Rev 3. This one consists also of two 05e3:0608 Genesys Logic, Inc. USB-2.0 4-Port HUBs connected together. The power supply is rated at 5 V 2 A. It kills ethernet when X11 is started.<br />
<br />
*'''D-Link'''<br />
** 7-Port USB Hub DUB-H7 (Prevents ethernet from being recognised so wrong time & no IP address). (See note above - it worked for me with some distros)<br />
<br />
*'''E-Solution'''<br />
** 4-Port 2A Supply (Does not detect at all during boot or after boot- no messages) [IC = Alcor Micro Corp (AU6254)]<br />
<br />
*'''Gear Head'''<br />
** UH7250MAC 7-port powered hub. Internally, two daisy-chained Genesys Logic 05e3:0608 devices. Causes Ethernet instability when used under very specific circumstances, in X11.<br />
<br />
*'''Kensington'''<br />
** 7-Port Dome Hub model no 1500129 (Possible problems with malfunctioning keyboard, kills mouse when GUI started).<br />
<br />
*'''Inland'''<br />
** 4-Port USB 2.0 Cable Hub model no 480426 (Some devices work, some don't, cheap unshielded untwisted wire design)<br />
<br />
*'''Logik'''<br />
** LP7HUB11 7-Port USB Hub. (Ethernet failed, slow response, in LXDE. Happened whether or not the hub's independent power supply was connected to the hub.)<br />
<br />
*'''Soniq'''<br />
** 4-Port 5V supply. Model number CUH100. (B). Appears to draw power away from the Raspberry Pi, even when the Pi has an isolated power line. Netgear WNA1100 WiFi Adapter (which is known to work in other setups is recognized, but unresponsive.<br />
<br />
*'''Trust'''<br />
** 10-port USB 2.0 Hub (powered). Prevents ethernet from being recognised.<br />
<br />
*'''Unbranded / Multiple Brands'''<br />
** 7-port silver/black hub. Also sold elsewhere under brands such as 'EX-Pro', 'Trixes' and 'Xentra' -- This is ''probably'' due to an inadequate power supply. -- I replaced the terrible power supply with a very good one, kept getting "DEBUG: handle_hc_chhltd_intr_dma:: XactErr without NYET/NAK/ACK" in dmesg, with no devices plugged in to the hub (with or without the power supply in)<br />
** Generic 7-port black hub with Genesys Logic GL850A chipset<br />
** Cerulian 10 Port USB 2.0 Top Loading Hub with 2A supply (kills mouse and network port)<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/absolute-beginners/cheap-powered-usb-hub-uk/#p76452</ref><br />
** [http://www.monoprice.com/products/product.asp?c_id=103&cp_id=10307&cs_id=1030701&p_id=226 USB 2.0 4 PORT INT/EXT DUAL HUB BAY] -- Genesys Chipset -- idVendor=05e3, idProduct=0607 -- low speed devices worked, but strange USB failures when X session started. High speed devices such as hard drives had failures.<br />
<br />
== USB Remotes ==<br />
* [https://www.google.com/search?q=tranksung+TS-Y150 Tranksung TS-Y150] USB RF Keyboard and air mouse (B)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.riitek.com/product_Info.asp?id=56 Riitek RT-MWK01] '''Rii''' Wireless 2.4 Ghz Keyboard-mouse Combo, also known as [http://www.digicom.it/digisit/prodotti.nsf/itprodottiidx/WKEYPE01 Digicom WKEYPE01]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ortek.com/html/pdt_view.asp?area=46&cat=152&sn=76 PKB 1800] Wireless Smart Pad ad Mini Keyboard. Pad works as mouse but not multi touch features. Keyboard works.<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ipazzport.com/02A.html iPazzport] mini 2.4 GHz wireless keyboard and touchpad<br />
<br />
== USB Keyboards ==<br />
USB keyboards that present themselves as a standard HID (Human Interface Device) device should work. '''Please be aware that some of these keyboards were probably used with a powered hub'''<br />
=== Working USB Keyboards ===<br />
The following is a list of specific keyboards known to work and which appear to work fault-free.<br />
<br />
* '''A4 Tech'''<br />
** Model KL-5 USB Keyboard, 20mA.<br />
<br />
* '''ABS'''<br />
** M1 Heavy Duty Professional Gaming Mechanical Keyboard (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Action Star'''<br />
** ACK-5010U Mini Keyboard And Mouse<br />
<br />
* '''Accuratus'''<br />
** KYB-Toughball-HI<br />
<br />
* '''Acer'''<br />
** KG-0917 Wireless Keyboard And Mouse Bundle (B)<br />
** KU-0906 Compact Keyboard (B) (Also known as Genius LuxeMate i200 Keyboard)<br />
** SK-9625 Multimedia Keyboard (B) (multimedia functions not tested)<br />
<br />
* '''Adesso'''<br />
** [http://ergoprise.com/product_images/j/699/ADP-PU21_big__14173_zoom.jpg PS/2 to USB Adapter] ADP-PU21, 100mA (tested only with keyboards)<br />
** Model AKB-410UB. Keyboard with Touchpad.<br />
<br />
* '''Apple'''<br />
** Apple Keyboard (109 keys) A1048 - requires powered hub<br />
** Apple Keyboard with Numeric Keypad (aluminium/wired) A1243<br />
** Apple Keyboard (aluminium/wired) A1242<br />
<br />
* '''Asda'''<br />
** Basic Wired Keyboard HK2026 (B)<br />
** Basic Wired Keyboard HK3014<br />
*** (Please note when I put this keyboard through Newlink USB hub, it didn't work as expected)<br />
** Premium Wireless Keyboard (white keys, silver back) HK8028<br />
** Wireless Multimedia Deskset (keyboard, mouse and USB dongle) Model: HKM8016B (Note: Shown on Asda Website as HK8016B) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Asus'''<br />
** KS-631U (comes with Asus Vento KM-63 keyboard/mouse set, not using powered hub) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''BTC - Behavior Tech Computer Corp.'''<br />
** Wired Portable Keyboard Model 6100 US (86+9 keys)<br />
*** Works with or without a powered hub<br />
** Wireless Multimedia Keyboard with build in pointer/mouse Model 9029URF III (86+17 keys) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Bush'''<br />
** Wired Slimline Keyboard KU-0833<br />
*** This does not require a USB hub in order to work with the Raspberry Pi<br />
*** In the UK, it is available from Argos for £9.99<br />
<br />
* '''Cerulian''' <br />
** Mini wireless keyboard and mouse deskset (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Cherry'''<br />
** CyMotion Master Linux (B)<br />
** RS 6000 USB ON<br />
** G84-4100PTMUS (B) (Compact keyboard. Rated 100mA. Works directly in Pi)<br />
<br />
* '''Dell'''<br />
** SK-8135 (B) (Rated 1.5A. Takes too much power from pi even when not used as USB hub. Symptom = repeated keystrokes)<br />
** SK-8115 (B) (Rated 100mA. Works directly in pi)<br />
** L100 (B)<br />
** RT7D50 (75ma) (run "sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration")<br />
** KB1421 (100ma)<br />
** KB2521 (100ma)<br />
** 1HF2Y (Works directly in pi)<br />
<br />
* '''Das Keyboard'''<br />
** Model S Professional Keyboard (Built in USB hub not tested) (B)<br />
** Model S Ultimate Keyboard (Built in USB hub working) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Dynex'''<br />
** DX_-WKBD (60ma) (B)<br />
** DX_-WKBDSL (Hot keys not yet tested with Debian) (tested through non-powered 3 dongle usb hub) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''EAPPLY'''<br />
** EBO-013 Wireless 2.4GHz compact keyboard with touchpad. Rated <40mA works directly from Pi. eBay ref 260962010276 from Shenzen, China.<br />
<br />
* '''Emprex'''<br />
** Wireless Media Control Keyboard With Trackball 9039ARF III (Media functions untested)<br />
<br />
* '''Fujitsu Siemens''' <br />
** KB SC USB UK (!)<br />
** KB910 USB, with led light on the highest level (B)<br />
** KB400 USB US<br />
<br />
* '''Gear Head''' <br />
** KB3700TP (USB Mini Smart Touch Touchpad Keyboard) (B)<br />
** KB3800TP (Wireless Touch Mini Touchpad Keyboard with Smart Touch) (B)<br />
*** Works when plugged directly into Raspberry Pi, did not work with powered hub (could be a hub issue)<br />
** KB3800TPW (Windows Smart Touch Wireless Keyboard with Touchpad) (B)<br />
** KB4950TPW (Wireless Touch II Touchpad Keyboard) (B)<br />
** KB1500U (USB Mini Keyboard) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Genius'''<br />
** Ergomedia 700 (GK-04008/C) used without Hub<br />
** KB-06XE (K639) (B)<br />
** Slimstar 8000 wireless keyboard<br />
<br />
* '''HP'''<br />
** KG-1061<br />
** KG-0851 Wireless Keyboard and Mouse<br />
** KU-0316 (B)<br />
** LV290AA#ABA Wireless Keyboard and Mouse<br />
** SK-2880<br />
<br />
* '''Hyundai'''<br />
** HY-K201<br />
<br />
* '''Imation''' <br />
** KBD-702 Multi-media Wired Keyboard<br />
*** (works after the firmware update via [https://github.com/Hexxeh/rpi-update rpi-update] as of 06/27/2012)<br />
<br />
* '''IOGEAR'''<br />
** IOGEAR GKM561R Wireless HTPC Multimedia Keyboard with Trackball<br />
** IOGEAR GKM681R 2.4GHz Wireless Compact Keyboard with Optical Trackball and Scroll Wheel<br />
<br />
* '''iPazzPort'''<br />
<br />
* '''itWork'''<br />
** KC04 (direct and by usb hub)<br />
<br />
* '''Jenkins'''<br />
** Jenkins Wireless Desktop Set Blue (B)<br />
<br />
* '''KeySonic'''<br />
** ACK-540RF (Wireless USB keyboard with built-in trackpad); works fine on Debian Squeeze plugged directly into Pi.<br />
** ACK-3700C<br />
** ACK-340U+(DE)<br />
<br />
* '''Laptopmate'''<br />
** AK-98UNTN7-UBRII Laptopmate RII Touch N7 Mini Wireless Keyboard with touchpad<br />
<br />
* '''LC-Power<br />
** K1000BMW (lsusb: ID 1241:f767 Belkin; dmesg: HOLTEK Wireless 2.4GHz Trackball Keyboard) tested with Debian 6.0.4<br />
<br />
* '''Lenovo'''<br />
** SK-8825 UK (B)<br />
** Lenovo Enhanced Multimedia Remote with backlit keyboard N5902 (US)<br />
** Lenovo Mini Wireless Keyboard N5901 (US)<br />
<br />
* '''Logik'''<br />
** Ultra slim keyboard LKBWSL11 (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Logitech'''<br />
** diNovo Mini wireless keyboard with media controls and clickpad 920-000586 (B)<br />
** diNovo Edge Keyboard, Windows edition, built-in TouchDisc track-pad, bluetooth w/ USB mini-receiver 967685-0403 (B)<br />
** Wii wireless keyboard KG-0802 (!)<br />
** C-BG17-Dual Wireless keyboard and mouse with wired USB receiver (B)<br />
** Deluxe 250 Keyboard<br />
** Internet 350 (M/N 967740-0403)<br />
** MK 220 wireless keyboard and mouse<br />
** MK 250 wireless keyboard and mouse<br />
** MK 260 wireless keyboard and mouse<br />
** MK 320 wireless keyboard and mouse [http://www.amazon.co.uk/Logitech-920-002885-MK320-Wireless-Desktop/dp/B003STDQYW/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1339166178&sr=8-3]<br />
** MK 520 wireless keyboard and mouse<br />
** MK 550 wireless keyboard and mouse (B)<br />
** EX110 Cordless Desktop, wireless keyboard and mouse (B)<br />
** K120 Keyboard (B)<br />
** K200 Keyboard (B)<br />
** K340 Wireless Keyboard (Unifying receiver, no powered hub) (B)<br />
** K350 Wireless Keyboard (B)<br />
** K400 wireless keyboard with touchpad (B)<br />
** K520 Keyboard (B)<br />
** K700 Wireless Keyboard with Touchpad and unifying receiver<br />
** K750 Wireless Solar Keyboard (B) (Mac version works too. (B) )<br />
** S510 wireless keyboard and mouse (B)<br />
** Ultra-Flat Keyboard (M/N Y-BP62A P/N 820-000245 PID SY126UK)labelled 100 mA. OK direct into Model B RPi.<br />
<br />
''Keyboards and mice also together with Unifying receiver'' <br />
<br />
* '''Microsoft''' <br />
**Wired Keyboard 600 Model 1366 (Debian 28-May-2012 on Production Model B)<br />
**Comfort Curve Keyboard 2000 v1.0 (Debian 13-Apr-2012 on Production Model B)<br />
**Comfort Curve Keyboard 3000 for Business<br />
**Microsoft Digital Media Pro Keyboard Model : 1031 (Debian 13-Apr-2012)<br />
**Microsoft Wireless Desktop 700 Keyboard v2.0 (Raspbian Pisces image 08-June-2012 on Production Model B)<br />
**Microsoft Natural Ergonomic Keyboard 4000 (B) (Debian "Wheezy" beta 18-June-2012)<br />
**Microsoft Wireless Natural Multimedia Keyboard (Raspbian Pisces 08-July-2012) (B)<br />
**Wireless Photo Keyboard (Model 1027) Unifying receiver, no hub<br />
<br />
* '''Mikomi''' <br />
** Wireless Deskset KM80545 Keyboard and mouse (Works but range is terrible less than a metre) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Monoprice'''<br />
** [http://www.monoprice.com/products/product.asp?c_id=104&cp_id=10404&cs_id=1040401&p_id=6854&seq=1&format=2|Monoprice PS/2 To USB Adapter] Directly and through an unpowered hub with a USB mouse plugged in.<br />
<br />
* '''Motorola'''<br />
<br />
** Bluetooth wireless ultra slim keyboard and mouse combo (sold as for the "Atrix" phone) work in combination with the Technika Bluetooth adaptor listed below<br />
<br />
* '''Novatech'''<br />
** [http://www.novatech.co.uk/products/peripherals/desktopkits/nov-wcombo.html|Novatech Wireless Combo - Keyboard & Mouse, Nano adapter] (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Perixx''' <br />
**Periboard 716 Wireless Ultra-Slim Keyboard with Touchpad (Debian 07-Jun-2012 on Production Model B)<br />
<br />
* '''Philips''' <br />
**Wired Multimedia Keyboard SPK3700BC/97 (Debian 19-Apr-2012 on Production Model B)<br />
<br />
* '''Rapoo'''<br />
**Rapoo E9080 Wireless Ultra-Slim Keyboard with Touchpad<br />
**Rapoo Wireless Multi-media Touchpad Keyboard E2700 [http://www.rapoo.com/showdetails.aspx?P_No=E2700]<br />
<br />
*'''Riitek'''<br />
**RT-MWK03 mini wireless keyboard & trackpad<br />
<br />
*'''Saitek'''<br />
** Eclipse II Backlit Keyboard PK02AU (B)<br />
** Eclipse Backlit Keyboard PZ30AV (B)<br />
** Expression Keyboard (US) <br />
** Cyborg V.5 (B)<br />
<br />
*'''SIIG'''<br />
** SIIG Wireless Multi-Touchpad Mini Keyboard 02-1286A v1.0 (B)<br />
<br />
*'''Silvercrest'''<br />
** MTS2219 Wireless Keyboard and mouse set. Powered hub NOT used. (B) <br />
<br />
*'''Sony'''<br />
** Keyboard for PlayStation 2 (PS2) Linux. Works without powered hub with 5v1A supply, requires manual keyboard remapping with Debian Squeeze to USA 101-key layout.<br />
<br />
* '''SteelSeries'''<br />
** Merc keyboard (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Sun Microsystems'''<br />
** Model: Type 7, SUN PN: 320-1348-02 (Danish key layout)<br />
** Model: Type 6, SUN PN: 320-1279-01 (Danish key layout)<br />
<br />
* '''Sweex'''<br />
** [http://www.sweex.com/en/assortiment/input/keyboards/KB060UK/ KB060UK] Wired Multimedia Keyboard<br />
<br />
* '''Technika'''<br />
** WKEY03 (B)<br />
** TKD-211<br />
<br />
* '''Tesco'''<br />
** Value Keyboard VK109 (B)<br />
** Multimedia K211 Wired Keyboard (B)<br />
<br />
*'''TrendingUK'''<br />
** Super Slim Apple Style Keyboard (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/usb-keyboard-for-the-raspberry-pi.html TrendingUK ]) (and [http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/330742818099 eBay ])<br />
** Super Slim Apple Style Keyboard Set (Keyboard & Mouse) (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/usb-keyboard--mouse-bundle-for-the-raspberry-pi.html TrendingUK ]) (and [http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/330730092277 eBay ])<br />
<br />
* '''Trust'''<br />
** Trust 17916 Compact Wireless Entertainment Keyboard http://www.trust.com/products/product.aspx?artnr=17916 (B)<br />
** Trust ClassicLine Keyboard http://trust.com/17184 <br />
** Trust Camiva MultiMedia Keyboard http://trust.com/products/product.aspx?artnr=16087<br />
** Trust Convex Keyboard http://trust.com/products/product.aspx?artnr=17603 tested debian6-19-04-2012 and archlinuxarm-13-06-2012 (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Unbranded'''<br />
** AK-601 Wireless Mini Keyboard and Trackball (with laser pointer) - sourced from eBay Chinese seller<br />
<br />
* '''Q-Connect'''<br />
** AK-808 (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Xenta'''<br />
** 2.4GHz Wireless Multimedia Entertainment Keyboard with Touchpad (B)<br />
** Multimedia Wireless Keyboard and Mouse Set (Keyboard Model: HK3518B) (B)<br />
** Mini Multimedia Keyboard (Model no.: 808M) (B)<br />
<br />
===Problem USB Keyboards===<br />
<br />
Note that generally PS/2 keyboards with an USB adapter will not work directly on a PI port, due to the fact that PS/2 keyboards are designed for normal 5V +-5% range, while USB keyboards must be designed to work with 4.4 Volt, and generally USB devices on the PI may receive less than 4.75 Volt. PS/2 + USB adapter keyboards might work behind a powered hub, which does provide the full 5.0V<br />
<br />
* '''Accuratus'''<br />
** Accuratus KYBAC100-101USBBLK causes kernel panic (rated 100mA). Tested with 1000mA cheap unbranded and Nokia 1200mA power adaptors.<br />
*'''Argos'''<br />
** Argos Value Wired Keyboard causes kernel panic<br />
* '''Choidy'''<br />
** Identifiers from usb-devices: Vendor=1a2c ProdID=0002 Rev=01.10 Product=USB Keykoard (yes, 'Keykoard') causes kernel panic<br />
* '''Cit''' <br />
** KB-1807UB Causes kernel panic (Rated <200ma)<br />
* '''Dell'''<br />
** SK-8115 causes kernel panic (rated 100mA) Debian 6-19-04-2012 (B)<br />
** Y-U0003-DEL5 Sticky / Non-responsive keys<br />
* '''GMYLE'''<br />
** Wired USB Slim Chocolate Multimedia Media Typing Keyboard With 3 USB Port hub (B) - Kernel Panic on startup if plugged in. If plugged in at login prompt then freeze. [http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0067EC3GW/]<br />
* '''Gear Head'''<br />
** KB2300U - Causes kernel panic (B)<br />
* '''Inland''' <br />
** Inland USB Keyboard Model #70010<br />
* '''Labtec'''<br />
** ultra-flat wireless desktop USB - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. Tested both debian6-19-04-2012 and archlinuxarm-13-06-2012 (B)<br />
* '''Logik'''<br />
** Wired Multimedia Keyboard Model: LKBWMM11 - causes kernel panic (on Debian 190412 distro) (B)<br />
** Wired Ultra Slim Keyboard Model: LKBWSL11 - causes USB power issues. Not reliable. Causes other USB devices to fail (B)<br />
* '''Logitech'''<br />
** Logitech Illuminated Keyboard (unstable; not working with led light on; tested both US and NO layouts with both Apple iPad 2 and Asus TF-101 USB chargers)<br />
** G110 Gaming Keyboard - only works with illumination off, otherwise unresponsive. Once failed it needs reconnecting before another attempt. (B)<br />
** G15 Gaming Keyboard - LCD and key backlights flicker, 95% unresponsive to typing. I don't know of a way to turn the illumination off. (B)<br />
** K360 Wireless Keyboard - Occasional sticky keys. (B)<br />
** K400 wireless keyboard with touchpad (completely non-functional on debian6-19-04-2012)<br />
** G510 Gaming Keyboard - lagging or unresponsive keys.<br />
* '''Microsoft''' <br />
** Wireless Desktop 800 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. (B)<br />
** Wireless Entertainment Keyboard - No key input recognized (possibly connectivity issue as pairing devices does not seem to work)<br />
** Wireless Optical Desktop 1000 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys (B)<br />
** Wireless Keyboard 2000 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. (B)<br />
** Wireless Desktop 3000 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys.<br />
** Arc wireless - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. (B)<br />
** Sidewinder X4 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. (B)<br />
** Sidewinder X6 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. (B)<br />
** Wireless Comfort Keyboard 5000 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. (B)<br />
* '''Novatech'''<br />
** NOV-KEY2 - Causes kernel panic (B)<ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/keyboard-creates-kernal-panic/page-2</ref><br />
* '''Unbranded'''<br />
** Compuparts<br />
** model no. HK-6106 (B) <ref>http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/keyboard-creates-kernal-panic/page-2</ref><br />
** LK-890 (Multimedia keyboard & Optical Mouse) - kernel panic on Debian Squeeze, ArchLinux and Qtonpi.<br />
* '''PC World Essentials'''<br />
** PKBW11 Wired Keyboard - no power to keyboard, no error messages on both Arch 29-04-2012 and Debian6-19-04-2012, same Pi works with Asda keyboard. Me too, but caused a kernel panic -- tested on powered hub and direct.<br />
* '''Razer'''<br />
** Razer Tarantula gaming keyboard - sticky keys, could be power issue as is programmable with host powered USB hub and audio jacks.<br />
** Razer BlackWidow - Sticky keys, could be a power related issue due to illuminated logo (Blue LED)<br />
* '''Texet'''<br />
** MB-768B standard keyboard (Rated 5V 1.5A(!), so probably too much power drain. Kernel panic, Debian6-19-04-2012)<br />
* '''Trust''' <br />
** TRUST GXT 18 Gaming Keyboard - No power to keyboard, could be a driver issue - no error messages.<br />
* '''Wilkinsons / TEXET'''<br />
** Model MB-768B causes kernel panic on debian6-19-04-2012.<br />
* '''Xenta'''<br />
** HK-6106 - causes kernel panic (on Debian 190412 distro)(B)<br />
* '''Jeway'''<br />
** JK-8170 "The Hunter" - causes kernel oops (Debian6-19-04-2012) (B)<br />
<br />
== USB Mouse devices ==<br />
USB mouse devices that present themselves as a standard HID (Human Interface Device) device should work, however some hardware requires special drivers or additional software, usually only compatible with Windows operating systems. <br />
<br />
===Working USB Mouse Devices===<br />
The following is a list of specific mouse devices known to work and which appear to be fault-free.<br />
<br />
* '''A4Tech'''<br />
** OP-530NU Padless Wired Mouse<br />
<br />
* '''Asda'''<br />
** HM5058 (Smart Price) Wired Mouse<br />
** Wireless Multimedia Deskset (keyboard, mouse and USB dongle) Model: HKM8016B (Note: Shown on Asda Website as HK8016B) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Asus'''<br />
** MS-511U (comes with Asus Vento KM-63 keyboard/mouse combo) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Belkin'''<br />
**F8E882-OPT (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Dell'''<br />
** M-UVDEL1 (B)<br />
** M056U0A (B)<br />
** DZL-MS111-L (B) (100mA)<br />
** MS-111P (100mA)<br />
<br />
* '''Dynex'''<br />
** DX-WMSE (100ma) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Filand'''<br />
** OP-102i Mini Optical Mouse<br />
<br />
* '''Genius'''<br />
** GM-04003A (B)<br />
** Slimstar 8000 wireless mouse (Can be intermitent. Mouse pointer sometimes is irratic.)<br />
<br />
* '''HP'''<br />
** MN-UAE96 (The basic stock HP wired mouse)(B)<br />
<br />
* '''Jenkins'''<br />
** Jenkins Wireless Desktop Set Blue (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Logik'''<br />
** Wired Optical Glow Mouse Model: LGGMO10. (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Logitech'''<br />
** Cordless Pilot Optical Mouse M/N M-RR95 with Cordless Mouse Receiver M/N C-BA4-MSE<br />
** G5 Logitech Gaming Mouse (B)<br />
** G5v2 Logitech Gaming Mouse (B)<br />
** G500 Logitech Gaming Mouse (B)<br />
** G700 Logitech Wireless Gaming Mouse (B)<br />
** LX-700 Cordless Desktop Receiver (B)<br />
** M90 optical mouse<br />
** M185 Wireless Mouse (B)<br />
** M210 (part of the MK260 set) (B)<br />
** M305 Wireless Mouse<br />
** M310 Cordless Mouse<br />
** M325 Wireless Mouse<br />
** M505 USB wireless laser, model no: 910-001324 (B)<br />
** M510 Wireless Mouse (B)<br />
** M705 Marathon Mouse (Unifying receiver, no powered hub) (B)<br />
** M-BJ58/M-BJ69 Optical Wheel Mouse (B)<br />
** M-BJ79 (B)<br />
** MX320/MX400 laser mouse (B)<br />
** MX518 Optical wheel mouse (B)<br />
** Optical USB Mouse (M/N 931643-0403)<br />
** Performance Mouse MX (B)<br />
** MX Revolution (B) (Debian "Wheezy" beta 18-June-2012)<br />
** VX Nano Cordless Laser Mouse for Notebooks<br />
<br />
* '''Microsoft''' <br />
** Comfort Curve Mouse 3000 for Business<br />
** Comfort Mouse 6000<br />
** Compact optical mouse 500 V2.0 (B)<br />
** Wheel Optical Mouse (wheel and additional buttons not tested) (B)<br />
** Microsoft Intellimouse Optical Mouse<br />
** Microsoft Wireless Laser Mouse 8000<br />
** Microsoft Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500<br />
** Microsoft Wireless Mobile Mouse 4000<br />
** Microsoft Wireless Mouse 700 v2.0<br />
** Microsoft Comfort Mouse 4500<br />
** Wireless IntelliMouse Explorer 2.0 (unifying receiver, no hub)<br />
<br />
* '''Novatech'''<br />
** [http://www.novatech.co.uk/products/peripherals/miceandtrackballs/nov-mouser.html|Novatech M1 USB Mouse - Wired](B)<br />
** [http://www.novatech.co.uk/products/peripherals/miceandtrackballs/nov-dl10.html|Novatech DL10 Wireless Mouse] (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Razer'''<br />
** Boomslang Collectors Edition 2007 (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Rosewill'''<br />
** Rosewill RM-C2U<br />
<br />
* '''Saitek'''<br />
** Notebook Optical Mouse (PM46)<br />
<br />
* '''Sun microsystems'''<br />
** Model: FID-638 , SunPN: 371-0788-01<br />
<br />
* '''Sweex'''<br />
** [http://www.sweex.com/en/assortiment/input/optical-mice/MI015/ MI015] Mini Wireless Optical Mouse<br />
<br />
* '''Targus'''<br />
** AMU2701EUK (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Technika'''<br />
** TKOPTM2 (B)<br />
**TKD-211<br />
<br />
* '''Tesco'''<br />
** Wired optical mouse M211 (B)<br />
<br />
*'''TrendingUK'''<br />
** USB Mouse for Raspberry Pi ([http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/330741942074 eBay ])<br />
** Super Slim Keyboard & Mouse Set (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/usb-keyboard--mouse-bundle-for-the-raspberry-pi.html TrendingUK ]) (and [http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/330730092277 eBay ])<br />
<br />
* '''Trust'''<br />
** Trust Nanou Wireless Micro Mouse http://trust.com/products/product.aspx?artnr=17087<br />
<br />
* '''Verbatiam'''<br />
**Mini Nano Optical Mouse 97470 (wireless on non-powered 3 usb dongle hub) (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Xenta'''<br />
** MOW0810 (B)<br />
** Multimedia Wireless Keyboard and Mouse Set (Mouse Model: HM-3301) (B)<br />
** Wired Optical Mouse (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/usb-mouse-for-the-raspberry-pi.html TrendingUK ])<br />
<br />
* '''Generic'''<br />
** Generic 2.4GHz Wireless Mouse (ID 040b:2013 Weltrend Semiconductor) (B)<br />
<br />
===Problem USB Mouse Devices===<br />
The following is a list of specific mouse devices that have problems working with the Raspberry Pi<br />
<br />
* '''Logik'''<br />
** Logik IMF Blue Trace Wired USB mouse (Model LMWBLU11) - disconnects from the USB port every 20 seconds when using the Raspian distro. Always reconnects to the USB port successfully (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Logitech'''<br />
** Logitech G400 Gaming Mouse - 100% CPU load and laggy mouse cursor when the mouse is moved. MX518 works fine on the same setup, so I suspect it's a polling rate issue. [http://tech2.in.com/reviews/mice/logitech-g400-is-it-a-worthy-successor/231012 this] says the mouse is 1000Hz out of the box, whereas the 518 is only 125Hz. Solution found: add usbhid.mousepoll=8 to the kernel commandline.<br />
<br />
* '''Razer'''<br />
** Naga Wired USB mouse - the mouse seems to present itself as a keyboard because the numpad on the left-hand side of the device works but the cursor doesn't move.<br />
<br />
* '''Roccat'''<br />
** Kone[+] Wired USB mouse - Nothing happens when moving the mouse, haven't looked further into the issue (B)<br />
<br />
== USB WiFi Adapters ==<br />
<br />
See also: http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44703/l/raspberry-pi-wifi-adapter-testing<br />
<br />
There is a howto on installing the TL-WN722N adapter [http://elinux.org/RPi_Peripherals#Wireless:_TP-Link_TL-WN722N_USB_wireless_adapter_.28Debian_6.29 here], which also acts as a guide for installing others too.<br />
<br />
===Working USB Wifi Adapters===<br />
<br />
These adapters are known to work on the Raspberry Pi. This list is not exhaustive, other adapters may well work, but have not yet been tried.<br />
<br />
'''Note:''' A WiFi adapter will probably need more power than the Raspberry Pi USB port can provide, especially if<br />
there is a large distance from the WiFi adapter to the WiFi Access Point. Therefore, you may need to plug the WiFi adapter into a powered USB hub.<br />
<br />
* '''3COM'''<br />
** 3CRUSB10075: ZyDAS zd1211rw chipset (!)<br />
<br />
* '''7DayShop'''<br />
** W-3S01BLK, W-3S01BLKTWIN : Unbranded product available from 7DayShop, in a single or twin pack. [http://www.7dayshop.com/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=777_9&products_id=112046], [http://www.7dayshop.com/catalog/product_info.php?&products_id=112527]. Tested on Debian Wheezy, with the dongle attached directly to the RPi along with the wireless keyboard receiver. Shows up as a Ralink RT5370 device, and no drivers or additional software downloads required. Created wpa.conf, edited 'interfaces' file and restarted the networking. The manufacturer portion of the MAC address (7cdd90) is assigned to "Shenzhen Ogemray Technology Co., Ltd."<br />
<br />
* '''Alfa'''<br />
** AWUS036NEH: Tested on Debian Squeeze (with Ralink firmware package)<br />
** AWUS036NH: Tested on Arch Linux ARM using the rt2800usb module.<br />
<br />
* '''Asus'''<br />
** [http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44703 USB-N10] USB ID 0b05:1786, r8712u staging driver, included on Fedora Remix & Arch, must [http://www.element14.com/community/servlet/JiveServlet/download/44948-8-97488/r8712u_ko.zip download] for Debian and install firmware-realtek from non-free squeeze repo (B) (not needed with latest Raspbian “wheezy” 2012-07-15: this Asus works N10 out of the box)<br />
** [http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44703 USB-N13] USB ID 0b05:17ab, [http://www.electrictea.co.uk/rpi/8192cu.tar.gz download] compiled manufacturer driver for RTL8192CU per [http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/troubleshooting/trying-to-get-an-rtl8188cus-wireless-usb-nic-working instructions] (B)<br />
** WL-167G v1 USB ID 0b05:1706, Ralink RT2571 working out-of-the-box on Debian image from 2012-04-19. Requires powered hub, otherwise it is detected by OS but will not function.<br />
<br />
* '''Belkin'''<br />
** Belkin Components F5D7050 Wireless G Adapter v3000 [Ralink RT2571W]. On Debian requires the firmware-ralink package from the non-free repository. The usbcore module needs to be added to /etc/modules [http://www.penguintutor.com/blog/viewblog.php?blog=6281 install instructions].<br />
** Belkin Components F7D1101 v1 Basic Wireless Adapter [Realtek RTL8188SU] USB ID 050d:945a, r8712u staging driver, included on Fedora Remix & Arch, must [http://www.element14.com/community/servlet/JiveServlet/download/44948-8-97488/r8712u_ko.zip download] for Debian and install firmware-realtek from non-free squeeze repo (B)<br />
**Belkin Components F6D4050 V1 [Realtek RT3070] USB ID: 050d:935a Driver: RT3572STA(recommended),RT2800USB,RT2870STA. Tested under Arch using [https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Setting_Up_Belkin_F6D4050_Wireless_USB_Dongles this] guide.<br />
<br />
* '''BlueProton'''<br />
** [http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44703 BT3] USB ID: 0bda:8187; tested on Debian, Fedora & Arch; rtl8187 driver (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Conrad'''<br />
** WLAN Stick N150 mini. Works out of the box in OpenELEC, [http://www.t3node.com/blog/sempre-wireless-usb-stick-wu300-2-on-raspberry-pi/ requires firmware-realtek and r8712u kernel module on Debian].<br />
** WLAN Stick N150 Nano [Realtek RTL8188CUS]. Requires a powered USB hub. See Micronet SP907NS for installation instructions and script.<br />
<br />
* '''DIGICOM'''<br />
** USBWAVE54 [chipset Zydas ZD1211] . [[http://www.digicom.it/digisit/prodotti.nsf/itprodottiidx/UsbWave54]] Works out of the box in OpenELEC. With Raspbian or Debian squeezy/wheezy works with zd1211-firmware . <br />
** USBWAVE300C [chipset Ralink 2870] . [[http://www.digicom.it/digisit/prodotti.nsf/itprodottiidx/UsbWave300c]] Works out of the box in OpenELEC. With Raspbian or Debian squeezy/wheezy works with firmware-ralink . <br />
<br />
* '''D-Link'''<br />
** AirPlus G DWL-G122 (rev. E). USB ID 07d1:3c0f, Ralink RT2870. On Debian requires the <code>firmware-ralink</code> package from the <code>squeeze-firmware</code> non-free repository.<br />
** AirPlus G DWL-G122 (rev. C). USB ID 07d1:3c03, Ralink RT2571. Working out-of-the-box on Arch image from 2012-04-29.<br />
** AirPlus G DWL-G122 (rev. B1). USB ID 2001:3c00, Ralink RT2571. Working out-of-the-box on Arch image from 2012-06-13.<br />
** DWA-110 (Version A1). Requires the ralink package from the non-free repository on Debian.<br />
** DWA-123 (Version A1). USB ID 2001:3c17, Ralink RT2800. Working out-of-the-box on Arch image from 2012-04-29.<br />
** DWA-131 USB ID 07d1:3303,Realtek RTL8192SU, 802.11n Wireless N Nano. Works out of the box on Raspbian “wheezy” (verified when Nano used in powered USB hub. Also has trouble configuring SSID/Passphrase in etc/network/interfaces file. apt-get install wicd provided gui interface on LXDE for network configuration)<br />
** DWA-140 (Version B1). USB ID 07d1:3c09, Ralink RT2870. On Debian requires the <code>firmware-ralink</code> package from the <code>squeeze-firmware</code> non-free repository.<br />
** DWA-140 (Version B2). USB ID 07d1:3c0a, Ralink RT3072. Workaround for faulty firmware binary: Place file rt2870.bin from [https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/oneiric/+source/linux-firmware/1.53/+files/linux-firmware_1.53.tar.gz linux-firmware_1.53.tar.gz] in /lib/firmware. [https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-firmware/+bug/770232 Explanation].<br />
** DWA-160 (Version B1). USB ID 07d1:3c11, Ralink RT2870. On Debian requires the <code>firmware-ralink</code> package from the <code>squeeze-firmware</code> non-free repository.<br />
** DWA-160 (Version A2). USB ID 07d1:3a09, Atheros AR9170. (NOTE: I can only get it to work through powered USB hub) requires carl9170-fw firmware [http://http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php/packages.php?ID=44102]<br />
<br />
* '''Edimax'''<br />
** [http://www.edimax.co.uk/en/produce_detail.php?pd_id=328&pl1_id=1&pl2_id=44 EW-7811Un] USB ID 7392:7811, RTL8192CU, driver blob [http://www.electrictea.co.uk/rpi/8192cu.tar.gz download] via [http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44703 Element14], works with WPA2-AES-CCMP ([http://www.ctrl-alt-del.cc/2012/05/raspberry-pi-meets-edimax-ew-7811un-wireless-ada.html howto]) (B) - [http://dl.dropbox.com/u/80256631/8192cu-latest.tar.gz Alternative driver download link that works with Raspian]<br />
** The EW-7811Un can be powered directly from the Raspberry Pi if the Raspberry Pi is powered using a well regulated power supply.<br />
** A script-based installation for the [http://www.edimax.co.uk/en/produce_detail.php?pd_id=328&pl1_id=1&pl2_id=44 EW-7811Un] by MrEngman can be found [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=26&t=6256&hilit=edimax on the RasPi forums]. Tested with Debian Squeeze and Raspbian. [http://dl.dropbox.com/u/80256631/install-rtl8188cus.txt An installation guide can be found here.]<br />
** Instructions for getting the [http://www.edimax.co.uk/en/produce_detail.php?pd_id=328&pl1_id=1&pl2_id=44 EW-7811Un] working in Raspbmc (tested RC3) can be found [http://forum.stmlabs.com/showthread.php?tid=780 here].<br />
** Simple step-by-step instructions for [http://www.edimax.co.uk/en/produce_detail.php?pd_id=328&pl1_id=1&pl2_id=44 EW-7811Un] which uses the RTL8192 chipset [[RPi_edimax_EW-7811Un]](B)<br />
** [http://www.edimax.com/en/produce_detail.php?pd_id=8&pl1_id=1&pl2_id=44 EW-7318USg] USB ID 148f:2573, rt73usb. RT2573 chipset. Works with powered usb-hub or shorted polyfuses.<br />
<br />
* '''edup'''<br />
** [[http://www2.buyincoins.com/details/usb-150m-wifi-wireless-lan-network-card-adapter-antenna-product-1916.html Edup 150MBPS wifi adapter]] USB ID: 148f:5370 Ralink Technology, Corp. RT5370 Wireless Adapter. Driver is the RT2800USB module, I had to install the firmware as rt2870.bin in /lib/firmware.([http://raspberry-pi-notes.blogspot.com/2012/05/rt5370-cheap-micro-usb-wireless-dongle.html requires firmware-ralink from wheezy]) (B)<br />
** [http://www.szedup.com/show.aspx?id=1681 edup nano EP-N8508] Use method shown [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?t=7471&p=91736 here] for debian. Powered directly from RPi (B)<br />
<br />
* '''EnGenius'''<br />
** EUB9603 EXT - Realtek r8712u driver <br />
<br />
* '''Gigabyte'''<br />
** Gigabyte GN-WB32L 802.11n USB WLAN Card. Works with the rt2800usb driver.<br />
<br />
* '''IOGear'''<br />
** [http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44703 GWU625] USB ID 0bda:8172, r8712u staging driver, included on Fedora Remix & Arch, must [http://www.element14.com/community/servlet/JiveServlet/download/44948-8-97488/r8712u_ko.zip download] for Debian Squeeze and install firmware-realtek from non-free squeeze repo. No need to download firmware when using Debian Wheezy (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Linksys'''<br />
** Linksys (Cisco) WUSB100 ver.2 1737:0078, tested on raspbian; follow [http://www.brucalipto.org/linux/the-raspberry-diary-wusb100-wireless-n/ Brucalipto.org] instructions; not stress tested but works without issues for light network load.<br />
<br />
* '''Micronet'''<br />
** Micronet SP907NS, 11N Wireless LAN USB Adapter (uses Realtek RTL8188CUS) works plugged directly into R-Pi USB (B) [http://dl.dropbox.com/u/80256631/install-rtl8188cus.txt Debian installation instructions] IMPORTANT: read the instructions first to avoid problems, and [http://dl.dropbox.com/u/80256631/install-rtl8188cus-latest.sh Auto-install script]. The script has been used to install other adapters using the RTL8188CUS chip. [http://dl.dropbox.com/u/80256631/8192cu-latest.tar.gz Updated driver] that handles the latest rpi-updates that kill the original driver, download for manual installation, automatically installed by the Auto-install script.<br />
<br />
* '''MSI'''<br />
** 0db0:6861 MSI-6861 802.11g WiFi adapter (US54G): works with external powered USB hub, requires firmware from [http://sourceforge.net/projects/zd1211/files/zd1211-firmware/ here], power management must be disabled: <code>iwconfig wlan0 power off</code><br />
<br />
* '''Netgear''' <br />
** N150: Reported as WNA1100 device, uses the Atheros ar9271 chipset. On Debian, requires the <code>firmware-atheros</code> package from the <code>squeeze-backports</code> non-free repository (!)<br />
** N150: Some versions reported as Realtek RTL8188CUS device. Read Micronet entry above and use RTL8188CUS script for installation. Works best plugged into powered USB hub.<br />
** WG111v1: Prism54 chipset. Needs powered hub. Follow info for Prism54 chipset on Debian wiki.<br />
** WG111v2: Realtek rtl8187 chipset (!)<br />
<br />
* '''OvisLink'''<br />
** Evo-W300USB: USB ID 148f:2270 Ralink Technology RT2770. apt-get install firmware-ralink<br />
<br />
* '''Patriot Memory'''<br />
** [http://patriotmemory.com/products/detailp.jsp?prodline=6&catid=69&prodgroupid=163&id=1198&type=20 PCUSBW1150] Wireless 11N USB adapter (uses Realtek RTL8188CUS) Install using Micronet script. Works only through powered usb hub.<br />
** [http://www.patriotmemory.com/products/detailp.jsp?prodline=6&catid=69&prodgroupid=163&id=973&type=20 PCBOWAU2-N] Wireless 11N USB adapter (uses Realtek RTL8191SU chip) Installed using r8712u Kernel module<br />
<br />
* '''Ralink'''<br />
** inner 02 joggler wifi usb RT2770F USB-ID 148f:2770 (firmware-ralink required) (only got dhcp on powered hub)<br />
** [http://www.dx.com/p/24688 RT2070] USB-ID 148f:2070 ([http://wiki.debian.org/rt2870sta requires firmware])<br />
** [http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44703 RT2501/RT2573] USB-ID 148f:2573 (firmware-ralink required) (B)<br />
** RT5370 USB-ID 148f:5370 ([http://raspberry-pi-notes.blogspot.com/2012/05/rt5370-cheap-micro-usb-wireless-dongle.html requires firmware-ralink from wheezy]) [[RPi_Ralink_WLAN_devices]](B)<br />
<br />
* '''Rosewill'''<br />
** RNX-N180UBE Wireless B/G/N Adapter<br />
*** Realtek RTL8191SU chipset, USB-ID 0bda:8172<br />
*** Tested in Arch, works out of box. USB hub required.<br />
** RNX-G1 Wireless B/G Adapter<br />
*** Realtek RTL8187 chipset, USB-ID 0bda:8187<br />
*** Tested in Arch, works out of box. USB hub required.<br />
<br />
* '''Sagem'''<br />
** Sagem Wireless USB stick XG-760N : USB ID 079b:0062, Module is not shipped in Debian image, but can be "sudo apt-get install zd1211-firmware"<br />
<br />
* '''Sempre'''<br />
** Sempre Wireless USB stick WU300-2: USB ID 0bda:8172, Realtek r8712u driver + firmware-realtek package. Module is shipped in Raspbian image. If you need to build it for other distros, read this: http://www.t3node.com/blog/sempre-wireless-usb-stick-wu300-2-on-raspberry-pi/<br />
<br />
* '''Tenda''' <br />
** USB 11n adapter on a G network: Ralink 2870/3070 driver (!)<br />
** Tenda W311U Mini 11N Wireless USB Adapter (USB-ID 148f:3070): Ralink 2870/3070 driver; needs powered hub. [http://blog.modmypi.com/2012/06/installing-tenda-w311u-mini-wireless.html Debian installation instructions]<br />
<br />
* '''TP-Link'''<br />
** TL-WN422G v2 (ath9k_htc) Works OOTB in Debian Wheezy Beta. Runs without powered Hub when plugged into running RasPi, but the RasPi won't boot while the stick is plugged in.<br />
** TL-WN721N (ath9k_htc device with htc_9271.fw file from http://linuxwireless.org/download/htc_fw/1.3/htc_9271.fw); needs powered USB Hub (B)<br />
** TL-WN722N (ath9k_htc device with htc_9271.fw file from http://linuxwireless.org/download/htc_fw/1.3/htc_9271.fw); needs powered USB Hub (B)<br />
** TL-WN821N v3 (ath9k_htc, htc_7010.fw); works out of the box on ArchLinuxARM and on OpenElec (>r11211), Problems with prior OpenElec; needs powered USB Hub (B) <br />
<br />
* '''ZyXEL'''<br />
** [http://www.element14.com/community/message/50015#50015/l/re-installing-kernel-headers-on-the-pi NWD2105] USB ID: 0586:341e, RT3070 chipset, rt2800usb driver (B)<br />
<br />
===Problem USB Wifi Adapters===<br />
<br />
These adapters were tested and found to have issues the Raspberry Pi. Note [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=6928] as a possible solution/explanation for errors while running LXDE.<br />
<br />
* '''LogiLink'''<br />
** WL0085 tested under debian (squeeze, wheezy, raspbian); no stable connection can be established. This gets even worse when X is running.<br />
<br />
* '''MicroNEXT'''<br />
** MN-WD152B (Debian image) modprobe hangs when plugged in, lsusb hangs. udevd errors in the logs. [http://www.element14.com/community/thread/17632] [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?t=6737]<br />
<br />
* '''Realtek'''<br />
** RTL8188CUS USB-ID 0bda:8176, kernel oops in dmesg and freeze when pulled from USB. (B)<br />
<br />
* '''Trendnet'''<br />
** [http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44703 TEW-424UB] USB ID: 0bda:8189; tested on Debian, Fedora & Arch; rtl8187 driver; errors with LXDE running (B)<br />
<br />
* '''TP-Link'''<br />
** [http://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-44703 TL-WN821N] USB ID: 0cf3:7015; tested on Debian; requires [http://linuxwireless.org/download/htc_fw/1.3/htc_7010.fw htc_7010.fw] firmware; ath9k_htc driver; errors with LXDE running (B)<br />
** TL-WN723N USB ID: 0bda:8176; tested on Arch without a powered hub; it seems to draw too much current.<br />
<br />
== USB Bluetooth adapters ==<br />
===Working Bluetooth adapters===<br />
* Cambridge Silicon Radio, Ltd Bluetooth Dongle (HCI mode) - (USB ID 0a12:0001)<br />
** Example of above is; TOPDIGI UA01 Bluetooth USB Dongle Plug and Play (install bluez package from std repos)<br />
** Tesco own brand 'Technika' Nano Bluetooth Adaptor has the Cambridge Silicon Radio chipset and works fine, cost £5.97 at time of posting.<br />
===Problem Bluetooth adapters===<br />
* '''Belkin'''<br />
** Belkin F8T017. Tested with Raspbian 2012-07-15 and bluez installed with apt-get. When dongle is inserted into Pluscom powered USB hub, my remote PuTTY session scrolls incredibly slowly (testing with ls -R to generate text). Suspect network issue. Lots of errors on dmesg too. Pi itself is responsive when using directly. On removal of the device everything goes back to normal.<br />
<br />
== USB Ethernet adapters ==<br />
<br />
* Wintech<br />
** USB 2.0 LanCard Model: LAU-15 (CK0049C) using the mcs7830 driver. Probably needs more than 100 mA current. [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=46&t=8708#p106136]<br />
* LogiLink<br />
** USB 2.0 UA0144: AX88772 chipset using the asix kernel driver. Tested only on powered USB hub so far.<br />
<br />
== USB Sound Cards ==<br />
You will usually want the <code>alsa</code> package for sound. In the Debian image for Raspberry Pi (and possibly other distributions) USB sound cards are prevented from loading as the first sound card, which can be an annoyance if it's the only device you have. To disable this behaviour edit <code>/etc/modprobe.d/alsa-base.conf</code> and comment out the last line; <code>options snd-usb-audio index=-2</code><br />
<br />
* '''Creative'''<br />
** [http://asia.creative.com/products/product.asp?category=1&subcategory=207&product=17892 Sound Blaster Play!]<br />
* '''Edirol'''<br />
** [http://www.roland.com/products/en/UA-1A/ UA-1A]<br />
* '''Logilink'''<br />
** [http://www.logilink.de/showproduct/UA0053.htm?seticlanguage=en UA0053 USB Soundcard with Virtual 3D Soundeffects LogiLink]<br />
<br />
==USB 3G Dongles==<br />
* Huawei E220<br />
* Franklin U600 from Sprint / VirginMobile<br />
** Use usb_modeswitch and vendor 0x1fac and product 0x0150/0x0151<br />
* Digicom Internet Key 7.2 HSUPA '''MU372-L01''' [http://www.digicom.it/digisit/prodotti.nsf/itprodottiidx/MU372L01]<br />
Tested on Raspbian and Archlinux. Detected as 230d:0001. Works with cdc_acm driver. Install usb_modeswitch.<br />
There are 2 "com ports"( /dev/ttyACM0 and /dev/ttyACM1 ) . Tested with Network Manager.Works also perfectly with SAKYS3G [http://www.sakis3g.org/] tools (!! led is always off !!) and wvdial. A working wvdial.conf : http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=10361881&postcount=28 . (for example for Vodafone IT , replace Init3 with this : Init3 = AT+CGDCONT=1,"IP","web.omnitel.it" and replace line Modem = /dev/ttyUSB0 with Modem = /dev/ttyACM1 ) and run with wvdial voda .<br />
<br />
== USB IR Receivers==<br />
SMK Manufacturing, Inc. eHome Infrared Receiver (Works out of the box with OpenELEC)<br />
<br />
== USB Radio devices==<br />
*FM Radio<br />
** ADS InstantFM Music - FM radio tuner works fine under debian.<br />
<br />
== USB TV Tuners and DVB devices==<br />
*August<br />
**DVB-T205, based on rtl2832u chipset, working with [https://github.com/ambrosa/DVB-Realtek-RTL2832U-2.2.2-10tuner-mod_kernel-3.0.0 this driver]. Tested with Saorview (Irish DTT service), both HD & SD.<br />
*DVBSky<br />
**[http://dvbsky.eu/Products_S860.html Mystique SaTiX-S2 Sky USB]: Scanning/watching SD and HD works via vdr and streamdev plugin, watching on the Pi directly is laggy as hell. DVB-USB and I2C support must be enabled in the kernel. Needs drivers/firmware from [http://dvbsky.eu/Support.html here]. <br />
*Technisat<br />
**Technisat_SkyStar_USB_HD. Instructions: http://www.linuxtv.org/wiki/index.php/Technisat_SkyStar_USB_HD Used the Pi to receive and redirect it via network to another host. Didn't try to play back the stream on the Pi itself. Tested with Astra 19.2E radio and SD-TV channels<br />
*Hauppauge<br />
** Hauppauge NOVA-T Stick (Revision 70xxx) DiBcom DiB0700 chipset, requires powered hub.<br />
** Hauppauge NOVA-TD Stick (Revision 52xxx) DiBcom DiB0700 chipset, requires powered hub.<br />
*Generic<br />
** [http://www.onsources.com/product_images/a/757/watch_and_record_digital_tv_dongle__44323_zoom.jpg DVB-T USB Dongle (Silver casing)], based on AF9015 chipset.<br />
** [http://www.electrodepot.fr/media/catalog/product/cache/1/image/500x/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/P926993.jpg DVB-T USB Dongle], based on RTL2832 FC12 (HD/SD), IR detected but not tested<br />
<br />
== USB Webcams ==<br />
<br />
Debian image is missing v4l kernel modules, so video devices are not available. Kernel and firmware upgrade can possibly be used to fix this[http://blog.pixelami.com/2012/06/raspberry-pi-firmware-update-for-debian-squeeze/].<br />
<br />
===Working USB Webcams===<br />
*'''Creative'''<br />
**Creative VF0470 Live! (works out of the box on ArchLinux)<br />
**Webcam Notebook PD1170 (detects, untested)<br />
<br />
*'''HP'''<br />
**Webcam HD-2200 [http://www.amazon.com/HP-Webcam-HD-2200-BR384AA-ABA/dp/B004UR9P9Q/ (Amazon)] [http://shopping.hp.com/en_US/home-office/-/products/Electronics/Webcams/BR384AA?HP-HD-2200-Webcam (HP)] [http://www.walmart.com/ip/HP-Webcam-HD-2200/16775645 (Walmart)] <br />
**Webcam HP-3100 - UVCVideo /dev/video0 Needs chmod to 666 to operate. Will work without hub if only device in USB ports. Works with both Arch and wheezy out of the box<br />
<br />
*'''Logitech'''<br />
**c270 (using external power)<br />
**Webcam C200<br />
**QuickCam Orbit/Sphere USB webcam (ext. power) <br />
**QuickCam Pro 9000 - powered by Raspi, working on debian wheezy<br />
**Webcam Pro 9000 (046d:0809), powered by RPi (measured ~120 mA capturing at ~5 fps), works on Arch<br />
<br />
*'''Microsoft'''<br />
**Xbox Live Vision camera (045e:0294), powered by Raspi, working on Arch<br />
**LifeCam NX-6000 - powered by Raspi, working on debian wheezy<br />
**LifeCam VX-3000, on "raspbian" wheezy (though there do appear to be some issues with image quality and getting partial frames and such, with fswebcam)<br />
<br />
*'''Sony'''<br />
**PlayStation Eye (for PlayStation 3)<br />
<br />
*'''Trust'''<br />
** 2MP Auto Focus Webcam (works out of the box on ArchLinux)<br />
<br />
===Problem USB Webcams===<br />
*'''Sony'''<br />
**Eye Toy (PlayStation 2) model SLEH 00030 - (OV519 camera). Picture constantly breaks up on xawtv and wxcam under Arch Linux. Noted there were ISOC data error len=0 status=-4004 errors in dmesg. This happens when powered from the Pi and when powered from a Pluscom USB hub. Arch was updated on 17th July 2012<br />
<br />
*'''Trust'''<br />
**SPACEC@M 200 - (OV511 camera). Picture stops after a few seconds in xawtv under Arch Linux and xawtv reports libv4l2 errors. This happens when powered from the Pi and when powered from a Pluscom USB Hub. Arch was updated on 17th July 2012<br />
<br />
== USB GPS devices ==<br />
*Royaltek<br />
**Royaltek RGM 2000 SiRF2 using the included serial (TTL) to USB - converter. That uses a Profilic pl2303-chip so you'll need to compile the module or the kernel manually<br />
*Garmin<br />
**Garmin eTrex Vista HCx: Works but may draw much power. To get it working (software part): https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/USB_Garmin_on_GNU/Linux<br />
*Wintec<br />
**WBT-200: No problem on Debian<br />
*Holux<br />
**Holux M-215: Works fine on Arch, uses Silicon Labs CP210x RS232 serial adaptor driver<br />
*Bluenext<br />
**Bluenext BN903S: No problem on Debian image (19-04-2012).<br />
<br />
== USB UART adapters ==<br />
The USB UART adapter is used to access the serial console of the Raspberry Pi from a development host such as a laptop or desktop PC. The USB end connects to the PC and the UART header end connects to the USB. While it is possible to connect the USB end to another Raspberry Pi, this configuration has not been tested unless explicitly mentioned against an individual entry below.<br />
<br />
*'''FTDI'''<br />
**FT232 chip based adapters work, module ftdi_sio<br />
<br />
*Prolific<br />
**PL2303 chip based adaptors works fine on latest Debian tested with minicom and gtkterm<br />
<br />
== Other, exotic USB devices ==<br />
=== CAN Bus ===<br />
*PEAK-System (www.peak-system.com)<br />
**PCAN-USB using the driver (kernel module) from http://www.peak-system.com/fileadmin/media/linux/index.htm<br />
=== Home automation ===<br />
*Tellstick (www.telldus.com)<br />
**Depends on libftdi1<br />
=== Touch Screen ===<br />
*ACER T230H touch screen [http://support.acer.com/acerpanam/monitor/2009/acer/t230h/t230hnv.shtml]<br />
**USB TS identifies as "Quanta Computer, Inc. Optical dual-touch panel", module hid_quanta<br />
**Seems to draw over 200 mA from USB!<br />
=== Floppy Disk Drive ===<br />
*Samsung USB Floppy Drive SFD-321U/HP<br />
**I suppose a floppy drive might be considered exotic nowadays!<br />
**LSUSB lists it as Samsung Electro-Mechanics Co. Floppy Disk Drive<br />
**Only tried connected to a powered USB hub, as the drive is labelled 5V at 0.5A on a Raspberry Pi running Debian Wheezy.<br />
**tail -f /var/log/syslog looking for mount device when plugged in, came up as SDA in testing.<br />
**sudo mkdir /media/floppy<br />
**sudo mount /dev/sda /media/floppy<br />
**Contents of floppy now available in /media/floppy<br />
**To remove drive, ensure no sessions have the floppy directory as the current working directory.<br />
**sudo umount /media/floppy<br />
=== USB Missile Launcher ===<br />
*USB Missile Launcher / Rocket Launcher sold in UK by Marks and Spencer but also sold under a range of other names.<br />
**USB ID 1130:0202 Tenx Technology, Inc. Use apt-get install pymissile (python code) and there is C code at [http://sourceforge.net/projects/usbmissile/ usbmissile from Source Forge]<br />
<br />
== PS2 / AT to USB Converters ==<br />
<br />
* Unbranded active converter known as the "blue cube". Based on the Cypress CY7C63723C 8 bit RISC. Please see http://geekhack.org/showwiki.php?title=PS2-to-USB+adapters for more information.<br />
Note that although the adapter might work, PS/2 keyboards were not designed to be low power USB devices, so they might not meet the requirement to work with conquerable lowered supply voltage (4.4 volt) provided by the USB ports of the raspberry PI. These keyboards should work when powered by a powered hub. <br />
<br />
'''Tested PS2/AT keybords'''<br />
<br />
All above tested with the famous "blue cube" on a powered USB hub.<br />
<br />
*IBM Model F (please note requires an aditonal AT to PS2 converter)<br />
*Dell AT101w<br />
*Northgate Ominikey Ultra T (please note requires an aditonal AT to PS2 converter)<br />
<br />
''more to come soon''<br />
<br />
* 04d9:1400 Holtek Semiconductor, Inc. PS/2 keyboard + mouse controller<br />
** Working: Ipex RT215KTW PS/2 keyboard<br />
** Not working: HP SK-2502 PS/2 keyboard (gets power but does not init - three LEDs remain permanently lit. Keyboard + Holtek converter work on a Linux PC, although this keyboard doesn't work with some native PS/2 ports.)<br />
<br />
== Power adapters ==<br />
The Raspberry Pi uses a standard Micro USB (type B) power connector, which runs at 5v. Generally you can use a MicroUSB to USB cable and then either power the Raspberry Pi directly from your main computers USB ports (if they provide enough power), or by using a USB to Mains adaptor. A number of mobile phones use MicroUSB power cables, and these are compatible with the Raspberry Pi in most cases. Below is a list of power adaptors known to work.<br />
<br />
===Working power Adapters===<br />
* '''AlcaPower'''<br />
** 5V 2.5A Model AP5A - Charger/switching with 7 connectors(also Microusb)<br />
* '''Apple'''<br />
** 5V 2.1A USB charger for iPad2, model A1357<br />
** 5V 1.0A USB Charger for iPod<br />
** 5V 1.0A USB Charger for iPhone 4<br />
* '''Amazon'''<br />
** 5V 0.85A USB charger for Kindle<br />
** 5V 2A Mains to USB A adaptor, Branded "CostMad" <br />
* '''Belkin'''<br />
** 5V 2.6A 4 port Ultra-Slim Desktop hub (Model F4U040) (RPi running from USB Hub port)<br />
** 5V 2.5A 4 port USB Hub (Model F5U404) (RPi running from USB Hub port)<br />
** 5V 3.5A 7 port USB Hub (Model F5U706) (RPi running from USB Hub port)<br />
* '''Blackberry'''<br />
** Charger for Pearl Flip 8220, Bold 9600 (B)<br />
** 5V 0.7A Model PSM04R-0500CHW1(M), RIM Part Number HDW-17957-003 (B)<br />
** 5v 750mA Model RIM-C-0004aDUUUC-001, RIM Part Number HWD-24481-001 (comes with Blackberry 9300)<br />
* '''Dell'''<br />
** USB Hub integrated in Dell monitors (B)<br />
* '''Garmin'''<br />
** 5V 1A charger (Model: PSA105R-050Q) supplied with Garmin Edge 800 GPS. Requires a USB-A to MicroUSB-B cable. Belkin 6ft cable (F3U151B06) works.<br />
* '''Griffin'''<br />
** Power Block Model P2417. 5V 2.1A<br />
** Power Block Model P1190R2 Two USB 5V Outputs, 1Amp each<br />
* '''HP'''<br />
** 5.3V 2A Charger for HP Touchpad (B)<br />
* '''HTC'''<br />
** 5V 1A TCP-300 USB phone charger (B)<br />
** 5V 1A TC B250 USB charger (HTC R/N: 79H00096-00M)<br />
** 5V 1A TC E250 USB charger (HTC R/N: 79H00098-02M)<br />
* '''i-box (Philex Electronic Ltd)'''<br />
** 5V 1A USB charger, 1 USB socket, no USB lead supplied, Model: 76971HS/02 (available from ASDA and others in the UK) (B).<br />
* '''IDAPT'''<br />
** [http://www.idaptweb.com/universal_chargers/i4/ i4 multi device charger] - 3 interchangeable device tips + USB A socket ([https://twitter.com/andrewmk/status/226057302879375361 see it in use])<br />
* '''LG'''<br />
** 4.8V 1A Travel Adapter<br />
**5.1V .7A Travel Adapter (Model: STA-U34WVI)<br />
* '''Logic'''<br />
** 4 port USB Hub (Model LP4HUB10). (RPi running from USB Hub port, red power line (+5v) inside hub cut) (B)<br />
* '''Logitech'''<br />
** 5V 1A SDC115-USB Remote Control Charger and cable<br />
* '''Maplin Electronics'''<br />
** 5V 1A dual USB power supply, model number H25B-MT-K2<br />
** Micro USB Power Supply N19HX<br />
* '''Medion'''<br />
** 5V 1A USB power supply for OYO ebook reader<br />
* '''Motorola'''<br />
** [http://www.amazon.com/Motorola-Micro-USB-Home-Travel-Charger/dp/B004EYSKM8/ 5V 0.85A SPN5504 Charger with Cable]<br />
* '''Nokia'''<br />
** 5V 1.2A AC-10E Charger<br />
* '''Noname'''<br />
** 5V 2.1A KMS-AC09 4 port USB charger (B) [http://www.miniinthebox.com/kms-ac09-universal-ac-adapter-for-ipad-ipad-2-iphone-white_p208568.html]<br />
** 5.2V 1A MW-3NU10GT - no cable, but this one works well (1m): [http://www.amazon.de/gp/product/B005L8VELA]<br />
* '''Novatel Wireless'''<br />
** 5V 1.05A Charger, model number SSW-1811, packaged with Verizon Wireless MiFi device<br />
* '''Orange'''<br />
** 5V 0.7A Charger for Orange San Francisco<br />
* '''Palm'''<br />
** 5V 1A Charger for Palm Pixi+ (B)<br />
* '''Pantech'''<br />
** 5.0V 1A CNR USB with LG DLC100 micro usb cable<br />
* '''PortaPow'''<br />
** PortaPow UK Mains Wall Power Supply<br />
* '''RS Components'<br />
** HNP06UK (RS 7263069) Switching Adapter 5.0V 1200mA<br />
* '''Samsung'''<br />
** 5V 0.7A Charger for Galaxy S model ETA0U10EBE<br />
** 5V 0.7A Charger for Galaxy SII<br />
** 5V 0.7A Charger for Galaxy S Vibrant (SGH-T959)<br />
* '''Sony Ericsson'''<br />
** 5V 0.7A Charger CST-80<br />
* '''Travel Charger'''<br />
** 5V 2.0A USB Power Adapter, [http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0065JCIPU/ Amazon Link]<br />
* '''Technika'''<br />
** 5V 1A USB Power Adapter, model MPASS01 (B)<br />
* '''TrendingUK'''<br />
** Micro USB Power Supply for the Raspberry Pi. 5V 1000mA (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/micro-usb-power-supply-for-the-raspberry-pi.html TrendingUK ]) (also from [http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/330757401271 eBay ])<br />
** Can also power from 7 Port USB 2.0 Powered HUB for Raspberry Pi with 3A Power Supply <br />
* '''TruePower'''<br />
** [http://u-socket.com/ U-Socket] 5V 2.1A AC Receptacle with Built-in USB ports (2.1A per USB port) model ACE-7169<br />
* '''Voltcraft'''<br />
** SPS5-12W, 2500 mA, requires additional USB <-> miniUSB adapter/cable, works perfectly (bought from [http://www.conrad.de/ce/de/product/512660/VOLTCRAFT-SPS5-12W-Steckernetzteil-Steckernetzgeraet-5-VDC-2500-mA-12-Watt Conrad Shop])<br />
<br />
===Problem power Adapters===<br />
* '''Monoprice'''<br />
** 5v, 2A 3 Outlet Power Surge Protector Wall Tap w/ 2 Built-In USB Charger - some display artifacts, sometimes unable to find mouse, some failures to boot. Measured less than 4.75v between TP1 and TP2 when used with a Monoprice cable.<br />
<br />
===External Battery packs (with 5V regulated output)===<br />
* ''' New Trent'''<br />
** iCurve IMP70D 7000mAh (Approx 12hrs from full charge)<br />
* ''' Sinoele'''<br />
** Movpower - Power Bank 5200mAh (8hrs with Wifi active)<br />
* ''' TeckNet'''<br />
** iEP387 Dual-Port 7000mAh External Power Bank (The charging lead can be used to connect the Tecknet to the RPi. Ran the RPi with wifi dongle and wireless keyboard receiver for over 9 hours of light use.)<br />
** iEP392 Dual-Port 12000mAh External Power Bank (1A port, ~16.5 hours)<br />
* '''Energizer/XPAL'''<br />
** XP18000 18000mAh Power Pack<br />
* '''Anker Astro3'''<br />
** Anker Astro3 10000mAh with Dual 2A USB Output<br />
* '''Duracell'''<br />
** PPS2 Instant USB Charger<br />
<br />
== Display adapters ==<br />
Note that active converter boxes may draw power through the HDMI port, and thus will put an extra load on your PSU, and also increase the current running through the PI's primary input fuse. HDMI ports (and the raspberry PI) are designed so that they deliver a very limited amount of power (50mA) to the TV/Monitor/display-adapter and much more isn't in theory allowed. In fact there is a diode (D1) in series with the power line which can only handle 200mA, if the adapter tries to draw much more than that the diode might fail. Therefore only externally powered adapters are to be recommended. Despite this, many people report success with these high powered devices.<br />
<br />
===HDMI->DVI-D===<br />
There are three kinds of DVI. There is DVI-D, a digital signal fully compatible with HDMI, so a passive cable can be used. There is DVI-I, which is a connector with both analog pins and digital pins. An HDMI to DVI-D adapter fits in a DVI-I female connector. Finally, there is DVI-A. This a fairly rare connection, but occasionally it will be found on some monitors and is an analog interface, in fact the same as VGA!<br />
<br />
Some adapters like Farnell part AK-CBHD03-BK are HDMI to DVI-I, which, while not fitting in a DVI-D monitor, are still compatible. The analog pins simply must be bent.<br />
<br />
The HDMI to DVI-D cable provided by Apple with the 2010 Mac Mini worked. It does not appear this adapter can be purchased separately.<br />
<br />
* AmazonBasics HDMI to DVI Adapter Cable (model SK231) works and is inexpensive.<br />
<br />
===HDMI->VGA converter boxes===<br />
Most will require use [[RPi_config.txt]]. Start off with hdmi_safe=1.<br />
<br />
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B007KEIRNG -- "Neewer" HDMI to VGA -- some issues discussed below:<br />
However, according to user "Tom1989" the same Neewer HDMI to VGA adapter burned out BAT54 Schottky diode D1 on the RasPi and broke its HDMI output: [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=9819 Serious HDMI Problems. What's that smell? Burning Raspberry!]. On that thread, "mahjongg" suggested the NXP (or equivalent) PMEG2010AET as a high-current replacement for D1. The PMEG2010AET has 1A max forward current, much greater than the BAT54's 200 mA limit which may be exceeded by your HDMI -> VGA converter. Remember that the converter's current must come from your RasPi power supply and go through the Micro USB cable and polyfuse F3, so you may get extra voltage drops and/or cause F3 to trip depending on how much current the converter uses. As always with board modifications, YMMV. Also on the "Burning Raspberry!" thread, user "pwinwood" reported the Neewer's current to be 400 mA, which is twice the limit of BAT54 diode D1. "pwinwood" also took the Neewer apart and added its own +5V connection adapted from a USB cable, which bypasses RasPi's Micro USB cable and polyfuse F3.<br />
<br />
http://www.amazon.co.uk/KanaaN-Adapter-Converter-Cable-Resolutions/dp/B007QT0NNW -- "Kanaan" HDMI-VGA<br />
<br />
http://www.ebay.com/itm/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=130699741793 -- eBay is swarming with $16 converters all like this one.<br />
<br />
This adapter -- http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/300692770623 -- works from 640x480 up to 1920x1080, audio over HDMI works too.<br />
Sadly the IC's on the PCB have all been scrubbed.<br />
Requires HDMI boost and overscan, [[RPi_config.txt|config.txt]] settings for 640x480@60Hz:<br />
<br>hdmi_drive=2<br />
<br>hdmi_group=2<br />
<br>hdmi_mode=4<br />
<br>config_hdmi_boost=4<br />
<br>overscan_top=-30<br />
<br>overscan_bottom=-30<br />
<br>overscan_left=-30<br />
<br>overscan_right=-30<br />
<br />
According to user "Mortimer" -- HDFuryPro HDMI to YPbBr/VGA Converter found on Amazon -- http://www.amazon.co.uk/Inputs-Component-Video-YPbPr-Converter/dp/B00797ZZ4S/ -- Works with Raspberry Pi. Tested against a Philips 170B 1280x1024 LCD monitor, producing a full native resolution image. Not tested against a Component Video TV yet, and audio has yet to be got working.<br />
The [[RPi_config.txt|config.txt]] settings used are:<br />
<br>hdmi_drive=2<br />
<br>hdmi_group=2<br />
<br>hdmi_mode=36<br />
<br>disable_overscan=1<br />
<br />
<br />
According to user "Mortimer" -- HDFury1 1080p HDMI to VGA Converter from HDFury.com. I'm not sure the HDFury1 can be got a hold of easily nowadays, I happened to have access to one to try out. HDFury2, 3 and 4 are available as far as I can tell, but are very pricey compared to alternatives. HDFury1 was around £80 when we bought one for a project at work. HDFury2 seems to be around £130, 3 and 4 are getting on towards £200 or more. So not to be recommended as a solution unless you happen to have one lying around. I don't believe there is any relationship between the company that produces these and the HDFuryPro I bought for myself (See above). I didn't alter any config settings, just plugged it in. It doesn't work without having its external power supply connected, as it requires 0.4A, which is too much draw for the 5V supply available from the HDMI socket on the Raspberry Pi. Its power LED lights, but no picture is produced. In comparison to the HDFuryPro this picture from this device is sharper, but not enough to justify the extra cost.<br />
The [[RPi_config.txt|config.txt]] settings used are:<br />
<br>hdmi_drive=2<br />
<br>hdmi_group=2<br />
<br>hdmi_mode=36<br />
<br>disable_overscan=1<br />
<br />
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B007SM7O2U/ref=oh_details_o02_s00_i00 - "Cable Matters"<br />
<br />
Here It is another option: http://www.dealextreme.com/p/hdmi-v1-4-male-to-vga-female-converter-adapter-cable-white-15cm-130458, is cheap (it's free shipping from china) and works perfectly, I tested it with an Acer VGA monitor (AL1511), without no change in my XBMC distribution.<br />
The config.txt for Raspbian (Flatron VGA monitor 1024 * 768):<br />
<br>hdmi_drive=2<br />
<br>hdmi_group=2<br />
<br>hdmi_mode=16<br />
<br>hdmi_force_hotplug=1<br />
<br>disable_overscan=0<br />
<br />
===DVI-D -> VGA active adapters===<br />
None are currently listed<br />
<br />
===Composite->SCART===<br />
None explicitly mentioned<br />
SCART adapters (SCART plugs with three RCA connectors in the back), will probably work when used with the yellow RCA plug connected to the R-PI's RCA video output. Additionally using a splitter cable (3.5mm jack plug on one end, and re-white RCA plugs on the other end) will probably work when plugged into the red and white (left and right audio channels) of the SCART adapter.<br />
<br />
===Composite->VGA converter boxes===<br />
* [http://www.extron.com/product/product.aspx?id=dvs204| Extron DVS-204] - works no problem!<br />
<br />
== SD cards ==<br />
<br />
Note that manufacturers change their designs over time, even as the specs stay the same. (E.g. an ACME 8 GB class 4 card manufactured in 2011 might work, while one manufactured in 2012 might not.)<br />
For this reason, please specify product numbers in the lists below, when possible.<br />
<br />
You can also attach the following fields from your card's CID :<br />
<pre><br />
cd /sys/class/mmc_host/mmc?/mmc?:*<br />
echo "man:$(cat manfid) oem:$(cat oemid) name:$(cat name) hwrev:$(cat hwrev) fwrev:$(cat fwrev)"<br />
</pre><br />
<br />
please merge with http://elinux.org/RPi_Performance#SD_card<br />
<br />
===Working SD Cards===<br />
* '''7DAYSHOP.COM''' <br />
** 8GB Professional SDHC Class 10 (man:0x000027 oem:0x5048 name:SD08G hwrev:0x3 fwrev:0x0)<br />
* '''Adata''' <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 2 (MMB3F08GWMCA-GE)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4 (MicroSD w/ adapter)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 (MMAGR08GUDCA-DB)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (AUSDH8GCL10-R)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (ASDH8GCL10-R) Tested on 2012-06-18-wheezy-beta.zip<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (P-SDH8G10-EC from BJ's USA tested on Raspbian)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (16GSDHC10)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (microSD w/ adapter AUSDH16GCL10-RA1)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (ASDH32GCL10-R) Tested on wheezy-beta with latest kernel and firmware and raspbian wheezy<br />
* '''AmazonBasics'''<br />
** [http://www.amazon.com/AmazonBasics-SDHC-Class-Secure-Digital/dp/B0058GH0LS 8GB SDHC Class 10 B0058GH0LS]<br />
** [http://www.amazon.com/AmazonBasics-SDHC-Class-Secure-Digital/dp/B0058GH1IK 16GB SDHC Class 10 B0058GH1IK]<br />
* '''Apacer'''<br />
** 8GB microSDHC Class 10 (with adapter)<br />
* '''Centon'''<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 4 (1447 printed on back)<br />
* '''CnMemory'''<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4 (Silver/Black label says 'High Capacity Card') 84209_8GB_SDHC, bought from Maplins. No error messages seen, but operation is much slower than with a SanDisk 4GB Class 4 card.<br />
* '''Dane-Elec''' <br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 4<br />
* '''Dikom'''<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (serial 207H3MD016IBSD)<br />
* '''Duracell'''<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (labelled Pro Photo 200x)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (man:0x00001d oem:0x4144 name:SD hwrev:0x1 fwrev:0x0) (~4.6MB/s read, ~4.4MB/s write on debian6-19-04-2012, following [[RPi_Performance#SD_card]])<br />
* '''Emtec''' <br />
** 2GB SD man:0x000027 oem:0x5048 name:SD02G hwrev:0x2 fwrev:0x0<br />
* '''Extrememory''' <br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (man:0x000012 oem:0x3456 name:F0F0F hwrev:0x1 fwrev:0x0)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (man:0x000003 oem:0x5344 name:SMI hwrev:0x1 fwrev:0x0)<br />
* '''Hama''' <br />
** 2GB SD Class 2<br />
** 8GB SDHC High Speed Pro Class 6<br />
* '''Hema (Dutch dept. store)'''<br />
** 4GB<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4<br />
* '''Goodram''' <br />
** 8GB microSDHC Class 4<br />
** 16GB microSDHC Class 4 (SDU16GHCAGRR10)<br />
* '''HP'''<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4 (doesn't reboot during first time startup process, but restart again and fine after that).<br />
** [http://www.amazon.com/HP-CG790A-AZ-Flash-Memory-Class/dp/B007X7U224 32GB SDHC Class 10] <br />
* '''ICIDU'''<br />
** 8GB microSDHC Class 10<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (image write had issues, might be my inexperience. It boots & shows Xserver)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (had no issues whatsoever, the comment above might be a dud.)<br />
* '''Integral''' <br />
** 4GB SDHC Ultima Pro Class 10<br />
** 8GB SDHC Ultima Pro Class 6 (Works - initial error -110 but boots within 5 seconds with no further errors or issues)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Ultima Pro Class 10 (20MB/s) (Works - initial error -110 but boots within 5 seconds with no further errors or issues)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Ultima Pro Class 6<br />
** [http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0047T6XME 16GB SDHC Class 10 Ultima Pro (20MB/s)]<br />
* '''Joyflash''' <br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (LTSD1112016GB)<br />
* '''Kingmax''' <br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 2<br />
** 4GB microSDHC Class 4 (KM04GMCSDHC4) won`t reboot when it`s hot<br />
* '''Kingston''' <br />
** 2GB SD<br />
** 4GB microSD Class 4<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (SD4/4GB)<br />
** [http://img341.imageshack.us/img341/1619/dsc0253y.jpg 8GB SDHC Class 4] ([http://img833.imageshack.us/img833/2028/dsc0254br.jpg SD4/8GB]) (does not work with current build of raspbmc)<br />
** [http://img600.imageshack.us/img600/3849/dsc0251et.jpg 8GB microSDHC Class 4] ([http://img707.imageshack.us/img707/363/dsc0252ld.jpg SDC4/8GB])<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 (SD6/8GB) (errors on boot, boots Debian ok, does not work with raspbmc rc2)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (SD10G2/8GB, SD10V/8GB, ultimateX 100X, ultimateX 120X)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 4 (SD4/16GB)<br />
** 16GB microSDHC Class 10 (SDC10/16GB)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (SD10G2/16GB, ultimateX 100X)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (SD4/16GBET)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (SD10V)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (SD10G2/32GB, ultimateX 100X)<br />
* '''Kodak''' <br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 2<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4<br />
* '''Kruidvat''' <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4<br />
* '''Lexar''' <br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (Boots consistently and no error messages in log after 1/2 hour use ) (works with Raspbmc)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 Platinum II (from [http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0350735 Microcenter])<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Premium Series<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Platinum II<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6 Platinum II<br />
** 32GB microSDHC HIGH-SPEED Class 10 (from [http://www.amazon.co.uk/Lexar-32GB-Micro-Speed-Reader/dp/B004BR2ZTM Amazon])<br />
* '''Master'''<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 [man:0x000003 oem:0x5344 name:SMI hwrev:0x1 fwrev:0x0]<br />
* '''Microcenter Brand (sold in bins at checkout)'''<br />
** [http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0289508 8GB SDHC Class 4]<br />
** [http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0349728 8GB SDHC Class 10]<br />
** [http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0349729 16GB SDHC Class 10]<br />
* '''Mushkin'''<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (MKNSDHCU1-16GB) [http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820226324]<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (MKNSDHCC10-32GB) [http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820226235]<br />
* '''Mustang'''<br />
** [http://www.mustang-flash.de/Products/Flash%20Products/Secure%20Digital/SD-Card/8GB%20Mustang%20SDHC%20Card%20LeMans%2C%20Class%2010%2C%20Retail|SD8GHCCL10MU-R.html 8GB SDHC Class 10]<br />
* '''MyMemory''' <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (MYMESDH8G10) [http://www.mymemory.co.uk/SDHC/MyMemory/MyMemory-8GB-SD-Card-%28SDHC%29---Class-10 MyMemory 8GB class 10] (Latest batch not working)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (MYMESDH16G10) [http://www.mymemory.co.uk/SDHC/MyMemory/MyMemory-16GB-SD-Card-(SDHC)---Class-10]<br />
* '''OCZ'''<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Gold Series (08110596-8GB-6) tested with Debian Squeeze (official Raspberry Pi distribution debian6-19-04-2012.zip)<br />
* '''Optima'''<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (Pro-Speed)<br />
* '''Panasonic''' <br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 10 UHS-I (~11.2MB/s read, ~6.2MB/s write, following [[RPi_Performance#SD_card]])<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 2 (~11.1MB/s read, ~9.7MB/s write, following [[RPi_Performance#SD_card]])<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 (~4.8MB/s read, ~4.4MB/s write, following [[RPi_Performance#SD_card]])<br />
* '''Patriot''' <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 (PSF8GSDHC10-PC)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 LX Series (PSF8GSDHC10-PC1)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (PSF16GMCSDHC10)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 LX Series (PSF16GSDHC10)<br />
** 16GB microSDHC Class 10 (PSF16GMSHC10) (requires recent kernel update for boot)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (PSF32GSDHC10)<br />
* '''Peak''' <br />
** 4GB microSDHC Class 4 (MMBTR04GUBCA-ME) tested with Arch<br />
* '''Philips'''<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4 (FM08SD35B)<br />
* '''Platinum'''<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6<br />
* '''Play.com''' <br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 (S4E3CD04GEFAA 0907090121106)<br />
* '''PNY''' <br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 Optima (SD-K04G 0834TT1297Y)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4. Micro SD Card with adapter.<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10. Micro SD card with adapter.<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 4<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (P-SDHC16G10-GE)<br />
*** See the note for P-SDHC16G10-EF. Works with Wheezy, does not work with Squeeze, Arch, or Fedora Remix. <br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (P-SDHC16G10-EF) <br />
*** Works with [http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/1435 Debian Wheezy]<br />
*** Does not work with Debian Squeeze (debian6-19-04-2012: mmc0: timeout waiting for hardware interrupt).<br />
*** Does not work with Arch Linux Arm (archlinuxarm-29-04-2012: no video is displayed, solid red power light, tiny green light)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 Pro-Elite (P-SDH16U1-30-GE). Works with raspbmc, haven't tested others.<br />
* '''pqi'''<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 <br />
*** Works with official debian6-19-04-2012<br />
* '''PRETEC''' <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (8DK52-122ME)<br />
* '''Samsung''' <br />
** 4GB SDHC<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 (MB-SS8GAEU)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (MB-MP8GA, MB-SP8GA/EU, MB-SP8GA/AM)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6 (MB-SSAGAEU)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (MB-SPAGA aka MB-SPAGAEU)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (MB-SSBGA, MBSSBGVEOBGA-SH) fine with [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=8071 Debian Wheezy], but does not work with Debian Squeeze (debian6-19-04-2012: mmc0: timeout waiting for hardware interrupt).<br />
* '''SanDisk''' <br />
** 2GB SD, white "SanDisk for Wii" branded, no class mentioned<br />
** 2GB SD (with a circle 2 --probably class 2), writes at 3.5 Mb/s<br />
** 2GB SD Class 2 (BE0816113150D)<br />
** 2GB SD Class 4 Ultra (15MB/s)<br />
** 2GB SD Class 4 Ultra II<br />
** 2GB SD Ultra II (BE0719111366D)<br />
** 2GB SD Extreme III (BE0715105083B)<br />
** 2GB SD Extreme III (BE0804212046D) - 20MB/s - Class 6<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 - Preinstalled with Raspbian Wheezy Linux. (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/4gb-sandisk-sdhc-card-with-raspbian-wheezy-linux-preinstalled.html TrendingUK ])<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (SDSDB-004G-B35)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (SDSDB-004G-BT35). Confirmed working with stock debian6-19-04-2012.img<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (BH1210821913G)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 Ultra (SDSDH-004G-U46) won`t reboot when it`s hot<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 Ultra II<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra (30MB/s BH1200421822D)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra (SDSDH-004G-U46 - BH1136121837G, BH1130521822D)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (BH10297143382G)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4 - Preinstalled with Raspbian Wheezy Linux. (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/8gb-sandisk-sdhc-card-with-raspbian-wheezy-linux-preinstalled.html TrendingUK ])<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4 (writes at ~1.5MB/s)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 4 Ultra labelled as 15MB/s (BI1024716014G)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 micro - MMAGR08GUDCA-DB<br />
*** also SDSDH-008G-U46 - BI1131222083D see [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?p=88625#p88625 update from andrew.blake]<br />
*** except SDSRH-008G-A11 could be problematic, see below<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra labelled as 20MB/s (BI11321422083D)<br />
** 8GB SDHC-I Class 6 Ultra labelled as 30MB/s (SDSDH2-008G-AC11)<br />
*** requires updated Squeeze or Wheezy beta<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (BI11017514367G)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (B11209116254G) - Managed to get it working with raspbian R3 [http://archive.raspbian.org/images/rpi_pisces_r3.zip rpi_pisces_r3.zip] however does not work with official squeeze nor Arch linux.<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (30MB/s HD Video) - working with new [https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/blob/9308c7ed387e5422883753f7fb71a75506abd1f8/boot/bootcode.bin bootcode.bin]. Confirmed on 2012-07-10 for Debian Squeeze 2012-04-19 and Arch Linux 2012-06-13 images (BI1130916254G).<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 Ultra(30MB/s) (SDSDU-008G-U46) - Work with stock debian6-19-04-2012 or raspbian images but not with OpenELEC r11212<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 4<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 4 - Preinstalled with Raspbian Wheezy Linux. (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/16gb-sandisk-sdhc-card-with-raspbian-wheezy-linux-preinstalled.html TrendingUK ])<br />
** 16GB SDGC Class 4 (SDSDB-016G-B35) - working with [https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/blob/234c19de7cbaaf4997671d61df20a05759066295/boot/bootcode.bin bootcode.bin]. Confirmed on 2012-07-15 for Debian Squeeze 2012-04-19<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra (30MB/s) (BL1133921933G) - Work with OpenELEC r11324<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 Ultra(30MB/s) (SDSDU-016G-U46) - Work with stock debian6-19-04-2012 image. Gave Kernel Panic with stock debian6-19-04-2012 image. Worked fine with Wheezy image.<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (30MB/s HD Video) (SDSDX3-016G-X46) - Works with 2012-06-18-wheezy-beta.img and updated firmware (tested 2012-07-02)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 Ultra (30MB/s) - Works with stock debian6-19-04-2012 image<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (45MB/s U1) (BL1203322025G) - Doesn't work with stock debian6-19-04-2012 image, but does work with freshly compiled kernel<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme Pro (95MB/s UHS-I) (SDSDXPA-016G-A75) - Doesn't work with stock debian6-19-04-2012 image, but does work with freshly compiled kernel<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 4<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 4 - Preinstalled with Raspbian Wheezy Linux. (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/32gb-sandisk-sdhc-card-with-raspbian-wheezy-linux-preinstalled.html TrendingUK ])<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 6<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (45MB/s UHS-I) (SDSDX-032G-X46) - works with arch-04-29-image and latest firmware (booting problems without firmware update)<br />
** 4GB microSDHC Class 2<br />
** 4GB microSDHC Class 4<br />
** 8GB microSDHC Class 2<br />
** 8GB microSDHC Class 4<br />
** 8GB microSDHC Class 6 Mobile Ultra (SDSDQY-008G-U46A) working with the latest firmware, won`t reboot when it`s hot<br />
** 32GB microSDHC Class 4 (SDSDQM-032G-B35)<br />
** [http://img217.imageshack.us/img217/6435/dsc0255uc.jpg 64GB microSDXC Class 6 Mobile Ultra] (SDSDQY-064G-A11A) (boots up much more consistently with latest firmware)<br />
* '''Silicon Power''' <br />
** 4GB microSDHC Class 6 (SP004GBSTH006V10-SP)<br />
** 16GB microSDHC Class 10 (SP016GBSDH010V10)<br />
* '''Sony'''<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (SF-4B4) (Write 6MB/s, Read 20MB/s)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (SF-4N4)<br />
** [http://store.sony.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10551&storeId=10151&langId=-1&partNumber=SF32NX/TQ#features 32GB SDHC Class 10 (SF-32NX/TQ)] (Max read speed of ~94MB/s, min write speed of ~10MB/s) - Works with archlinuxarm-29-04-2012 dd image with latest firmware update (as of 10-06-2012) <br />
* '''Strontium'''<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (SD-T08G 1045 US6923 G (White Shell - SKU 8 886450 703492))<br />
* '''TakeMS'''<br />
** 4GB microSDHC Class 4 (with adapter) [http://www.takems.com/products.php?categ=flash&prod=Micro_SDHC-Card Micro SDHC Class 4 + 1 Adapter(Order No.88662)]<br />
* '''TDK'''<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (1008WW5261B)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (80-56-10275-004G,Debian works '''BUT''' mmc0 errors when booting Fedora)<br />
** 4GB microSDHC Class 4 (80-56-10301-004G)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 (S404G1113) - Works with Debian Wheezy (2012-06-18 beta), not tried latest OpenELEC yet.<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 - Works with Raspbian 2012-07-15<br />
** Sandisk 64GB Class 10 Ultra SDXC UHS-I FFP (3A114807)<br />
<br />
* '''Toshiba'''<br />
** 8GB mircoSDHC SD-C08GJ(BL3A<br />
* '''Transcend'''<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 - we've found these to work without any errors and offer reasonable performance<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (TS4GSDHC4 - BH1130821915G)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 (TS4GSDHC6) - no problems. (does not work with Raspbmc as of 6/1/12)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 10 (TS4GSDHC10E)<br />
** [http://www.mymemory.co.uk/SDHC/Transcend/Transcend-8GB-SD-Card-(SDHC)---Class-4 8GB SDHC Class 4] (TS8GSDHC4) (man:0x000003 oem:0x5344 name:SD08G hwrev:0x8 fwrev:0x0) - works with both Debian "squeezy" and Raspbian "wheezy" distributions.<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 (~5.8 MB/s read/write following [[RPi_Performance#SD_card]])<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 (TS8GSDHC6-P2 - MMBFG08GWACA-M6)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (TS8GSDHC10) [http://www.mymemory.co.uk/SDHC/Transcend/Transcend-8GB-SD-Card-%28SDHC%29---Class-10- Transcend 8G class 10]<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6 (TS16GSDHC6)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (TS16GSDHC10)(TS16GSDHC10E)<br />
** [http://www.transcend.com.es/tarjetas-de-memoria/sd-sdhc/32gb-sdhc-class-10 32GB SDHC Class 10] (TS32GSDHC10)(TS32GSDHC10E)<br />
** 64GB SDXC Class 10 (TS64GSDXC10)<br />
* '''Verbatim'''<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (43962)<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 6 (44032)<br />
<br />
* '''TrendingUK'''<br />
** Sandisk 4GB Class 4 - Preinstalled with Raspbian Wheezy Linux. (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/4gb-sandisk-sdhc-card-with-raspbian-wheezy-linux-preinstalled.html TrendingUK ])<br />
** Sandisk 8GB Class 4 - Preinstalled with Raspbian Wheezy Linux. (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/8gb-sandisk-sdhc-card-with-raspbian-wheezy-linux-preinstalled.html TrendingUK ])<br />
** Sandisk 16GB Class 4 - Preinstalled with Raspbian Wheezy Linux. (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/16gb-sandisk-sdhc-card-with-raspbian-wheezy-linux-preinstalled.html TrendingUK ]<br />
** Sandisk 32GB Class 4 - Preinstalled with Raspbian Wheezy Linux. (from [http://www.trendinguk.co.uk/32gb-sandisk-sdhc-card-with-raspbian-wheezy-linux-preinstalled.html TrendingUK ])<br />
<br />
* '''W Photo (Walgreens photo)'''<br />
** 1GB SD memory card. Works with raspbmc, have not tested others.<br />
<br />
Known good (and pre-loaded) cards will be available for sale from RS and element14 at a ''later'' date (TBA).<br />
<br />
===Problem SD Cards===<br />
<br />
Make sure that you buy your card from a reliable source. There are many cheap Chinese copies of (brand name) SD-Cards on the market, [http://www.petapixel.com/2011/05/20/one-third-of-the-sandisk-memory-cards-on-earth-are-counterfeit/] in addition they are often mislabeled as having greater capacity than they really have. For example they might be sold as being 4GB, but are actually 2GB (or even less). <br />
<br />
There were initially issues with most Class 10 SDHC cards, apparently due to a bug in the Broadcom bootloader.[http://www.raspberrypi.org/forum/general-discussion/class-10-sd-cards-on-the-production-boards/page-3/#p39181]<br />
<br />
This seems to have been fixed in sdhci.c: [https://github.com/raspberrypi/linux/commit/7e8ae226fe6e95954df6b0dcdde40a53dbbc1a0b] Further feedback will be useful.<br />
<br />
If you add an SD card here, please also mention the kernel date and the date you tried it. This allows people to estimate how likely it is that a driver-fix in the kernel has been fixed. (i.e. I think some/most of the cards here work fine now, because a problem in the kernel driver has been fixed). <br />
<br />
* '''Acumem'''<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 (many errors on 6/7/2012)<br />
* '''Adata'''<br />
** 2GB Speedy (MMAGF02GWMCA -NA)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 - Sometimes boots<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6 (Possibly SD5MY168G0, label with gold <> black gradient) - Doesn't boot<br />
* '''Amazon Basics'''<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 10 (many errors on 6/7/2012)<br />
* '''Delkin Devices'''<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 "Delkin pro" -- Note: works with Fedora Beefy Miracle 17<br />
* '''GSkill'''<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10<br />
* '''Integral'''<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6 Ultima Pro (SH016GAA2BB)<br />
** 4GB SDHC class 4 (S404G1115)<br />
* '''Kingston''' <br />
** 2GB SD [http://www.geeks.com/details.asp?invtid=KING-SD-M02G-BULK looks like this] - boots the kernel, but damages the filesystem.<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 - Boots kernel but won't run init (times out)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 4 (SDC4/16GB17) - Device does not recognize it <br />
* '''Memory2GO'''<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 (S404G1029) - I/O Errors leading to Kernel Panic on startup.<br />
* '''Micro Center'''<br />
**4GB SDHC Class 4 — hasn't worked with any of the images I've tried; appears to be completely unrecognized<br />
* '''MyMemory.com''' <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10<br />
* '''Panasonic''' <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (RP-SDU08GD1K) mmc0: timeout waiting for hardware interrupt [http://www.mymemory.co.uk/SDHC/Panasonic/Panasonic-8GB-UHS-1-London-2012-Collection-SDHC-Card---Class-10 Panasonic 8GB Class 10]<br />
* '''Patriot''' <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 (PSF8GSDHC10)<br />
* '''PNY'''<br />
** 8GB Optima SDHC 120 HD Class 4 SD-K08G 0928 WF3673 - mmc -110 errors at init time on 6/12/12<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 Professional (P-SDHC32G10-EF) from [http://www.play.com/Electronics/Electronics/4-/18814903/-/Product.html play.com] (mmc0 timeout with Debian, error -84 whilst initialising sd card with Fedora and QtonPi. Arch seems to work, gets to the login prompt)<br />
** 2GB card SD-M02G<br />
* '''Polaroid'''<br />
** 16GB SDHC C10 (P-SDHC16GB10-EFPOL) - mmc0: timeout waiting for hardware interrupt on debian6-19-04-2012<br />
* '''Reekin'''<br />
** 4Gb HighSpeed SH4GC6M16MIN9C0812TE (old) don't boot ! (11/07/2012)<br />
* '''Samsung'''<br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 10 (MB-SSBGA, MBSSBGVEOBGA-SH) does not work with Debian Squeeze (debian6-19-04-2012: mmc0: timeout waiting for hardware interrupt), but works fine with [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=8071 Debian Wheezy]<br />
* '''SanDisk''' <br />
** 2GB Ultra || 15MB/s (BE0828713280D)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 2 - Debian and xbmc boot, but fedora gets a lot of mmc0 note long write sync errors and then hc_xfer_timeout errors at the login prompt.<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 2 "Limited Edition" (8H825413279G) - Error -110 whilst initialising sd card<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (BH1030216016G) - Doesn't boot.<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 4 (BH1031116016G) - Doesn't boot.<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 Extreme (BH0822411730D)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 Extreme III (30 MB/s) (BH0822712362G)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (SDSDX-004G-X46) (30 MB/s HD Video) doesn't boot (also not with new kernel.img and start.elf 17-06-2012 or "wheezy"-beta)<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (30 MB/s HD Video) (Doesn't boot) - Works with new kernel.img and start.elf [https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/tree/master/boot]<br />
** 4GB microSDHC Class 6 Mobile Ultra (tried 15-06-2012 with kernel 19-04-2012) error -84 transferring data, kernel panic: no init found<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra (B11201421964G)<br />
** <del>8GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra (SDSDH-008G-U46 - BI1131222083D) - Boots kernel but won't run init ( mmc timeout waiting for interrupt )</del> see [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?p=88625#p88625 update from andrew.blake]<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra labelled as 30MB/s (BI1208721965G)) - Boots kernel but won't run init ( mmc timeout waiting for interrupt )<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra labelled as 30MB/s SDSRH-008G-A11 - Boots kernel but won't run init ( mmc timeout waiting for interrupt ) <br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra labelled as 30MB/s SDSDH-008G-T11 - Boots kernel but won't run init ( debian6-19-04-2012: mmc timeout waiting for interrupt ) , but works fine with [http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=8071 Debian Wheezy] on 6/22/12<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra I (BI1201221964G) - Boots kernel but won't run init ( mmc timeout waiting for interrupt )<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 6 Extreme (BI1101116253G)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (BI1108716254G)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (BI1201416254G) - Still doesn't work with Debian Wheezy beta (2012-06-18)<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (BI1201516254G) [[http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00422FBJ2 amazon.co.uk]]+amazon.fr<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (BI1200916252D/SDSDX-008G-X46) - Tried with Debian "Squeeze"(19/04/2012), Debian "Wheezy"(18/06/2012) and Arch Linux(13/06/2012). None works. With Debian "Wheezy" Green LED stays ON continuously, with the other two it turns on very faint.<br />
** 8GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme Pro- Works with updated kernel/firmware, stock debian6-19-04-2012 boots kernel but won't run init ( mmc timeout waiting for interrupt )<br />
** <del>16GB SDHC Class 10 Extreme (30MB/s HD Video) (SDSDX3-016G-X46) - Doesn't boot with debian6-19-04-2012.img, or newer firmware (tested 2012-06-17).</del><br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra (BL1202021933G)<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6 Ultra I (BL1205921933G) - Boots kernel but won't run init ( mmc timeout waiting for interrupt )<br />
* '''Silicon Power''' <br />
** 32GB SDHC Class 6 (LS2N732GQON03ASP) - boots debian6-19-04-2012.img, but frequent slow response / system hangs.<br />
* '''TDK'''<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 (S404G1041) - Tried (end May 2012) with new kernel.img and start.elf [https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/tree/master/boot] but still won't run init.<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 (S404G1046) [Barcode: 4 902030 784447] - Tried (4th June 2012) with debian6-19-04-2012.img and with replacement kernel.img and start.elf from github [https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/tree/87a04c0be0c05e20f94f223183a0310b37c9bd89/boot] but still got 'Error -84' and 'Kernel panic - not syncing: No init found'<br />
<br />
* '''Transcend'''<br />
** 2GB MicroSD (MMAGR02GUECA-MB) - reads fine initially after image was written on a PC, gives mmc0 timeout errors reading back data after writing a large amount (in this case with 'pacman -Syu'). Still seems to work, but is *very* slow after this happens, even across reboots.<br />
* '''Veho'''<br />
** 4GB SDHC Class 6 <br />
* '''Verbatim'''<br />
** 16GB SDHC Class 6 (47178) - Raspbian Pisces RC3 - boots, but after login: mmc timeout waiting for interrupt<br />
<br />
The usual warnings against less reputable sellers (such as Ebay merchants) apply.<br />
<br />
<br />
Note that the following error is sometimes accompanied with a non-working SD card after booting (on Debian):<br />
<br />
mmc0: timeout waiting for hardware interrupt<br />
<br />
=== Benchmarks ===<br />
<br />
* http://www.sakoman.com/OMAP/microsd-card-perfomance-test-results.html<br />
* http://usbspeed.nirsoft.net/usb_drive_speed_summary.html?o=11<br />
* http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=4076<br />
* http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1005633 (Doesn't originate from R-Pi, but very related)<br />
<br />
== Foreign Language Translations ==<br />
* [[Ru:RaspberryPiBoardVerifiedPeripherals]]<br />
<br />
== References ==<br />
<references><br />
</references><br />
<br />
{{Template:Raspberry Pi}}</div>Jbracegirdle