Scheduled Maintenance: We are aware of an issue with Google, AOL, and Yahoo services as email providers which are blocking new registrations. We are trying to fix the issue and we have several internal and external support tickets in process to resolve the issue. Please see: viewtopic.php?t=158230

 

 

 

Should/will Debian run on ARM devices?

Here you can discuss every aspect of Debian. Note: not for support requests!
Post Reply
Message
Author
chal
Posts: 20
Joined: 2014-01-27 12:27

Should/will Debian run on ARM devices?

#1 Post by chal »

I'm asking this as a general discussion question, not a "how do I run Debian on my xyz phone/tablet/whatever".

Many years ago I used a mix of PDP11s and super-duper shiny new Sun workstations (then running, pretty much, BSD) at work, and an early PC with DOS on it at home. I really didn't like DOS much and for a while used an old PDP that work chucked out, though overall that wasn't great either. And then along came Linux, and like lots of other people, I thought it was great stuff. I remember early days using X when you had to play with all sorts of tedious configurations, including needing to know stuff like the sync and refresh rates of the monitor, but it was worth it to get a decent OS running on a personal machine. I switched from Slakware to Debian fairly early on and have used the latter for many years now. I still like it for the same reason I liked it back at the beginning: it lets me do things the way I want to do them. Grumbles about not liking new versions of Gnome have never bothered me because I don't have to use it: I install the basic minimum, add X and WM of choice (FVWM) and go from there.

I think, and I might be wrong, that the whole Linux thing snowballed to something enormously bigger than the likes of RMS or LT could ever have expected because of the way the PC did the same thing, equally to IBM's surprise. Suddenly everyone could own a computer, in fact lots of computers, they were so cheap, and although the bulk of them always ran a Microsoft OS, the Linux community was still a pretty substantial one. After a while, laptops came along, and at first it was a bit of a struggle to get Linux to run on them, but it could be done, and Linux adapted, and now you can install the system on most laptops with a few clicks.

And now, maybe, the next big change is happening, and the tablet computer has arrived. And just like laptops opened up an opportunity for mobile computing that did not exist before, tablets have opened up the possibility of having a usable computer (and I personally don't count a mobile phone in that category, they are simply too small for me to be able to use the screen) that you can carry around always and everywhere. And just as when laptops came along, and I wanted to run my OS of choice on them, I'd like to do that now, and that of course is a problem: the vast majority of tablets are based on ARM devices and, for the most part, Linux distros will only run on them in very basic versions, or not at all.

Sorry if all that seemed a bit long winded but I wanted to give some context to this. A bit of googling around reveals that I am not the only person who wants to do this: there are lots of questions about running Linux on tablets. I understand that there are things like hardware/firmware problems, but then there always were, and they got solved. Linux doesn't necessarily have to run on every tablet out there, just like it doesn't run on every PC: there will always be some very new or very cheap models with hardware that is not supported, but there are also many tablets using, I would imagine, pretty standard components.

I now seem to have gone full circle. I use Debian at work and at home, and on the train on my laptop, but out and about with my tablet, I don't. Ok, I can use Android, and I have a Samsung tablet with Cyanogenmod on it so a bit of customisation is possible, but I don't like Android very much. It reminds me of Windows in a way: there are lots of things about it that you simply have to take or leave, the only difference being that Mr Google rather than Mr Gates decided how it was going to be. In fact, I have 2 tablets at the moment, one with Cyanogenmod on, and one with Windows 8 on it. On the Windows one, things like Firefox, which I use a lot, are actually a better experience than they are on Android, because it's the normal desktop version.

If the PC revolutionised computing, maybe the next revolution is the tablet (and smartphone). Should Debian specifically or Linux generally be on board? Will it be? At the moment, many distros seem to regard the ARM platform as a peripheral irritation.

aplistir
Posts: 141
Joined: 2014-03-26 22:11

Re: Should/will Debian run on ARM devices?

#2 Post by aplistir »

I am currently running a debian version on an ARM processor on my "raspberry pi"
Check it out:
http://www.raspbian.org/

So ARM support is available. Dont know how easy/difficult it would be to install to a tablet. Propably would require quite a lot work.

chal
Posts: 20
Joined: 2014-01-27 12:27

Re: Should/will Debian run on ARM devices?

#3 Post by chal »

fair enough, in fact I have a Pi and it is running Rapsbian, but it's not something I'd carry around in my pocket

User avatar
pylkko
Posts: 1802
Joined: 2014-11-06 19:02

Re: Should/will Debian run on ARM devices?

#4 Post by pylkko »

I think that there is some amount of linux designing happening for tablets (which are all not based on arm processors btw). For example, people report that using Gnome on Fedlet can almost work on Baytrail devices (https://www.happyassassin.net/fedlet-a- ... l-tablets/). Also there is the Ubuntu project (http://www.ubuntu.com/tablet) and for phones, I have understood that using Sailfish OS you can have a pretty normal linux experience (that is have a terminal and normal access to filesystem etc).

But of course, you have to say that, if you look at how well these work and function in comparison to Android and win for tablets, it is quite clear that these really don't get as far at the moment. However, it would be almost odd if this were not to change in the near future.

Oh yeah, and Raspbian isn't Debian really, now is it.

sgosnell
Posts: 975
Joined: 2011-03-14 01:49

Re: Should/will Debian run on ARM devices?

#5 Post by sgosnell »

Debian probably has the most complete suite of packages for ARM, and runs on almost any ARM device. Flashing Debian on a phone or tablet can be tricky, because the other hardware usually requires proprietary binary blobs, and because the touchscreen support is usually proprietary. It can be done, though. It's just not usually worth the trouble. ARM-powered laptops are becoming more common, and Debian runs well on those. There are many chromebook models with ARM CPUs, and they run Debian easily, either with a full installation or a chroot in ChromeOS.
Take my advice, I'm not using it.

Post Reply