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Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news
From: |
Christopher Waid |
Subject: |
Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news |
Date: |
Thu, 25 Aug 2016 14:24:27 -0400 |
On 2016-08-25 05:01 AM, Paul Kocialkowski wrote:
Hi,
Le jeudi 25 août 2016 à 04:42 -0400, Christopher Waid a écrit :
The laptops we sell currently @ ThinkPenguin are not RYF'd and
shouldn't
be RYF'd, but we are working on something better than LibreBoot in
that
it solves the free software problems in a more permanent long term
way:
EOMA68. X86 is dead and we do not need LibreBoot for non-X86 systems.
I'm very surprised to read this. How do we not need Libreboot in
general?
Having a fully free bootup software distribution is IMO crucial to pave
the road
for free software support. Note that U-Boot includes proprietary
software and
should not be included as-is in or recommended by any FSDG-compliant
dsitros.
Also, Libreboot is currently based on Coreboot (which, by the way,
supports an
increasing number of ARM devices, with Chromebooks) but there's not
reason it
can't handle U-Boot in the future too, or whatever other free bootup
software.
So with upcoming ARM Chromebooks, the very large number of ARM devices
that can
boot up with free software and other interesting platforms such as
POWER8 and
POWER9, Libreboot still has a bright future ahead.
We already have completely free versions of Uboot for various ARM and
MIPS devices. All of our routers have shipped with the complete set of
source code for the OS and bootloader. The devices are RYF certified and
do not contain any proprietary bits in the version of Uboot run on our
routers.
https://www.thinkpenguin.com/gnu-linux/free-software-wireless-n-mini-vpn-router-tpe-r1100
I want to make it clear that I don't dislike LibreBoot and I'm not
saying it has no value. It's value right now to me is clear. It's 100%
free software for what is otherwise proprietary. I value that. As we
move away from X86 the value in it from a freedom-perspective will
diminish as alternatives exist. In that position I would begin to think
about alternative projects to work on if my primary focus was advancing
software freedom.
What I believe will make it valuable to people down the line will be
functionality (within the free software community and maybe even
beyond). I don't know what this functionality is right now and I simply
know that it's got value to some use case still. If I had to take an
educated guess I'd probably say it has functionality which is useful to
system administrators in server environments. From what I understand of
CoreBoot from which LibreBoot is derived that functionality was what has
in the past spurred CoreBoot's adoption by those outside the free
software world.
If servers were a high priority for us (they aren't) I'd probably be
pushing/sponsoring LibreBoot. I was the first person to suggest
LibreBoot add a donation option. Right now our focus is on laptops,
desktops, and typical end-user hardware. I want to see GNU/Linux and
free software adopted by the masses. It's largely won in the server
arena and there is a huge market opportunity here for free software
servers to anyone who wished to pursue it.
The reason this issue hasn't been solved by us is because it's simply
not possible given Intel's hostility and refusal to cooperate. Reverse
engineering is a non-trivial task and the resulting code would not run
on modern Intel systems due to digital signatures.
Of course, we all agree that x86 is a dead-end, at least in the long
run. There
are still possibilities with somewhat old Intel and AMD hardware, but
these will
be outdated eventually. Also, note that most of these old x86 platforms
are
much, much faster than the A20.
Of course. The solution isn't intended to outperform. It's intended to
solve a problem. That problem is X86 doesn't work for us and it's too
costly to have to design and manufacture our own non-x86 hardware (which
is critical given all newer non-X86 hardware is dependent on other
proprietary components such as 802.11ac wifi chips). The solution to
that is modularization. This has a side benefit of making it easy and
cheap (relatively speaking, and therefore feasible) to manufacture new
'models' in addition to giving us inroads to obtain source code for
higher end CPUs [moving forward]. Even ones that aren't yet on the
market! That's a huge change to the two steps forward one step back we
were doing before. Right now we are several years behind because of our
dependence on X86 and companies who won't cooperate. By moving away and
modularizing we can let companies designing CPUs cater to our demands.
This is what you get from competition.
We can do a lot more than what is feasible with LibreBoot, but it has
taken
years. Now that EOMA68 crowd funding campaign has succeeded though or
is about
to succeed we can do a 100% free software system
Note that the level of free software support brought by the EOMA68 is
not really
something new.
This is incorrect or a misunderstanding of the value here. Its taken
years and a lot of reverse engineering to get the Allwinner A20
supported. While the first computer card is in part built off the work
of others at a component level it's not the value for which I'm
referring that EOMA68 adds in relation to free software. The value is in
the modular standard and what it is enabling us to do in the free
software world. To look at the CPU and components individually is to
misunderstand the value in this project. It was not essential that we
utilize the Allwinner A20. It just made a lot of sense given the work
others have already done including the work of Luke (for which we
sponsored). The value is we get to pick and choose each part that goes
into a system and when one company upstream doesn't cooperate we can
look elsewhere. We don't have to spend years reverse engineering parts
thereof when we can work in collaboration with the companies upstream
doing the design of these CPUs/SOCs. To achieve that we need control
over the design and manufacturing process. This is not something we had
before. This is not something most companies have. Most companies build
off of reference designs and the product designs are little different
than the reference designs in many if not most cases. A tweak or two at
best.
There have been dozens of computers, some of which come with a
free board design, using platforms that are as good for freedom,
especially with
Allwinner (but there are lots of others). The linux-sunxi community has
been
working hard on those for years and years, so this is nothing new or
specific to
the EOMA68.
Many ARM Chromebooks even go a step further, with a free software
embedded
controller firmware.
I'm in many cases referring to laptop designs. This isn't totally
correct though particularly as it relates to laptops. All of the ARM
Chromebooks have fundamental problems in one way or the other. There are
no free software friendly 802.11ac wifi chips and these wifi chips are
integrated on every single modern Chromebook that is readily available
[last I checked]. You can't easily replace these chips like you can with
X86. To solve this problem and many others in the process is to gain
control over the overall design and what you can utilize as your
building blocks. With the laptop housing that is part of this crowd
funding campaign you'll be able to get an Allwinner dual-core A20 on the
Libre Tea Computer Card today and upgrade to a quad-core CPU tomorrow.
It won't cost $500 either. It'll be under $100.
(that is LibreBoot doesn't magically make a computer 100% free, there
are
other problematic components).
Of course, but nobody claimed that it does. It is only a very
significant piece
in the software freedom puzzle.
It's one of many pieces. It's not quite as significant as people think.
If it were gone it wouldn't really make any difference.
There are many components for which we are dependent and there are no
alternative options. Wifi firmwares are a great example. We have only
one driver and chip for modern 802.11n that we can utilize (AR9271) and
nothing for 802.11ac (in any format, PCIE/M.2/USB). It won't be the case
that we can get AR9271 adapters manufactured forever and at some point
it will become critical that we work on obtaining sources [another
project we're working on].
Wifi cards are fundamental to modern computers. You can still get away
without 3D acceleration, but good luck with a system that doesn't have
internet connectivity.
There are zero good options for graphics right now too. Graphics are not
quite critical because we can ship without it for the moment and the
user experience is still "good enough", but it is certainly more
important than LibreBoot.
LibreBoot is a duplication of effort as far as critical components are
concerned and we should try to avoid duplication of efforts given the
limited resources available.
We've got the source code for LCD/Keyboard controller firmware,
Regarding LCD: are you talking about a MIPI interface done in software
with a
MCU? Please feel free to share details about this LCD controller
firmware, I'd
be very interested to learn more about it, it sounds unusual!
I know a little bit about it, but not enough to give you details. The
details are readily available though.
Unlike many 'free' projects everything has been and is being documented.
There is one piece that hasn't been published yet (schematics, but this
isn't a libre issue, you can have a libre system and a non-libre design,
however full schematics will be released shortly, there is almost no
libre-designs that are actually libre because most are dependent on
non-free components like wifi chips that depend on proprietary
drivers/firmware), but its coming. Luke was a bit concerned of attacks
on our efforts before the campaign was finished. With good reason. There
was already one effort to undercut the project that failed. Someone Luke
had talked to began a crowd funding campaign to raise funds for a
modular computer. They did not care about freedom nor did they have an
actual prototype. If it wasn't a fraud they would have had to have
designed it after the fact. They created fake drawings/mock ups and
similar. Unlike the many crowd funding efforts out there we actually
have working prototypes because we funded his work.
This said contact lkcl at lkcl.net and he can get you hacking on it if
you want to help out. This is a community endeavor and there are other
people working on adding support for different language keyboards and
similar (a French layout).
bootloaders, CPU micro code
Huh? Again, please share details about the CPU microcodes. I am not
aware of any
ARMv7 implementation using a microcode at all, nor of any that was
liberated.
Overgeneralized. As far as the A20 goes you are correct. I can confirm
that there is no micro code in this particular CPU.
I'll throw out some other words that may make more sense here:
SPL uboot in mainline 2015-10- ddr3 timeings initialization and pll
clocks.
and similar for the EOMA68 laptop housing and Libre Tea Computer Card.
That's
huge. And there are more significant developments coming including the
release
of schematics and higher end CPUs.
I fully agree that this is great and I support your project. However,
keep in
mind that this is nothing new or groundbreaking (not to undermine the
project
and the efforts associated with it).
I disagree. There is simply nothing you can compare this project to. We
are achieving results that can't be demonstrated via any other means. If
we could get here some other way at a lower cost with the same long term
impact I would have gone that route.
The issue is your looking at one thing. A few specs. It's not the specs
that matter. It's the standard, it's the modularization, it's the
response and cooperation we are getting already as a result of our
actions here, etc. Intel and AMD are not going to cooperate and building
off of other companies products (higher up the chain) is not a reliable
long term solution.
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Adonay Felipe Nogueira, 2016/08/23
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Paul Kocialkowski, 2016/08/24
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Christopher Waid, 2016/08/24
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Tiberiu-Cezar Tehnoetic, 2016/08/25
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Christopher Waid, 2016/08/25
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, André Silva, 2016/08/25
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Tiberiu-Cezar Tehnoetic, 2016/08/25
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Christopher Waid, 2016/08/25
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Daniel Pimentel, 2016/08/25
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Tiberiu-Cezar Tehnoetic, 2016/08/25
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, Christopher Waid, 2016/08/25
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, John Sullivan, 2016/08/25
- Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news, John Sullivan, 2016/08/25