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Blog ODroid - Oh Boy!
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  • Author Author: mconners
  • Date Created: 23 Dec 2014 12:42 AM Date Created
  • Views 11313 views
  • Likes 10 likes
  • Comments 118 comments
  • odroid
  • c1
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ODroid - Oh Boy!

mconners
mconners
23 Dec 2014

I recently picked up one of these little ODROID C1 development boards and i have to say I couldn't be happier!

 

It's a Quad Core ARM dev board based on the Amlogic S805 Cortex A5 processor with a Dual Core Mali 450 GPU. It comes with 1 GB of RAM and can can boot from 2 sources eMMC and Micro SD. $36.95 US.

 

It's layout looks very similar to the Raspberry Pi+, and it is almost the same size. Here is a picture of the 2 side by side:

 

image

 

Some of the features:

4 USB Host Ports

Micro Usb OTG Port

Micro HDMI Port

Gigabit ethernet over RJ45

IR Receiver (I guess that would be handy for a remote control if using as a streaming device)

40 Pin Expansion Port containing

2 - I2C Ports

Serial Port

19 GPIO Pins

2 ADC inputs

1.8V Analog reference

3.3 V Out

2 5V outputs

1 SPI Output

RTC with available battery backup.

 

A quick look at the pinout for both  the ODROID C1 and the Raspberry Pi shows they seem to match up with the exception of pins 37,38, and 40 on the ODroid are used for ADC.

 

It's also missing a few things the B+ has built in, like the camera interface, composite video out, discrete audio outputs, and the Display header.

 

This board will run Android or Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, both available from the Hardkernel site.

Installation of the Ubuntu image was a breeze, simply download it, dd the image to a Micro SD card, and boot. Detailed instructions are available on the Hardkernel site.

 

There is a root user and an odroid user, both seem to use the password odroid.

 

The Hardkernel site (as well as their US distributor) have a wide selection of inexpensive accessories for the odroid.

I was foolish and didn't purchase the power supply, which turned out to require a very small connector which was difficult to find. I was able to cobble together a plug using a Radio Shack Adaptaplug socket, a type A (2.5 mm) Adaptaplug tip, and an old phone charger I had lying around. But it would have been cheaper and easier to have purchased it initially from Ameridroid.

 

I did purchase the tinkerers kit which included a breadboard, a breakout board for the GPIO port, a ribbon cable, a bunch of resistors (like 100 or so, I didn't count), 6 tactile buttons, about a dozen LED's in rd green and yellow,  a Photocell sensor, and a bunch of connection wires.

 

The fact that it runs a modern version of Ubuntu makes me happy, the 14.04 LTS version is from April 2014 and since it is an LTS release it will be supported for several years. I run Ubuntu on my main computer and all my laptops, plus my RIoT Board so this thing will fit right in.

 

In conclusion I just have to say this is a great board, and for $35 US, it's tough to beat. My only words of caution are

1) Buy the power supply, it's worth it, or at least the pigtail connector they sell

2) Look on their site to see the limitations on Micro SD cards, they have some that perform better than others, I had one of the poor performers, it works but it is slow on boot

3) If you need a console, buy their USB uart module, they have a goofy molex connector for serial

 

Other than that, I can't complain.

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Top Comments

  • mconners
    mconners over 11 years ago in reply to mconners +3
    With all four cores blazing, it only got up to about 35C. I'm not sure the heat sink is necessary. Mike
  • Robert Peter Oakes
    Robert Peter Oakes over 11 years ago +3
    Droid-C1 ordered, along with PSU, Serial Cable and HDMI adapter, now the few days of waiting begins , Oh and an LCD display (Why not) I looks like your all getting this thing to perform quite nicely so…
  • Problemchild
    Problemchild over 11 years ago in reply to johnbeetem +3
    Yes you are (H)alting the Odroid rather than also calling the power off so the power remains on to complete your USB transaction no doubt!! good solution ...nice and easy
  • mconners
    mconners over 11 years ago in reply to mconners

    One other thing, the boot.ini file, that's where you change the screen resolution, just comment out (#) the current line and uncomment the resolution you want.

     

    That way you don't have to worry about the odroid utility.

     

    Mike

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  • mconners
    mconners over 11 years ago in reply to mconners

    BTW, when the sd card was corrupt, my normal system wouldn't recognize it.

     

    Once I dd'd the whole image and delete partition 2 via fdisk, i inserted it in my desktop and it mounted it fine. I was able to see all the files in the boot partition, including the boot.ini

     

    Mike

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  • mconners
    mconners over 11 years ago in reply to johnbeetem

    I just set up my system to boot from sd and mount the hd (ssd).

     

    I found a couple of things

    1) I ended up dd'ing the entire image to the sd card and then deleting partition 2

    2) I dd'd the entire image to the hdd (ssd) then deleted partition 1

     

    In both cases I used fdisk.

     

    Once I did that, everything worked fine. I have not done an update yet. Maybe in a little while.

     

    I will say this, the serial port was invaluable in troubleshooting the errors. I found when I followed their instructions, the fat16(boot) partition was corrupt. The serial terminal told me that, it couldn't find the boot.ini file

     

    I tried booting with my existing card and the hdd hooked up, the console told me it was having an issue mounting the boot partition, the system was hung waiting for user input, so it never finished booting

     

    I told it to skip the mount and it finished coming up and I was able to ssh in. It did indeed mount the hdd as root.

     

    Bottom line, get the serial adapter if you are going to try a non standard configuration, it will just make your life easier.

     

    Mike

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  • johnbeetem
    johnbeetem over 11 years ago in reply to johnbeetem

    johnbeetem wrote:

     

    But at this point I don't care!  I was able to get v1.2 to boot by re-programming the SD card (a 2 GB Numonyx I got free at an Embedded Systems Conference), being careful to sync several times after each dd to the SD card.  Then it came up fine at 720p, which I was able to change to 1440x900 using ODROID utility on the initial desktop.  It all works -- 1440x900 display, with file system on 2.5" hard drive.  It's fast enough, and silent.  And it's running only slightly warm.  I may get a small heat sink for the CPU.

    Well, now I'm having trouble with software updates.  Like a good user, I requested the software updates with the button at the bottom of the screen.  That managed to screw up both the hard drive and my 2GB boot SDcard.  So I re-imaged them and tried again.  1440x900 came up fine this time, so I ran ODROID utility as I did yesterday.  Well, that screwed up the hard drive (but not the boot SDcard).  So once more I re-imaged the hard drive and now it's OK.  I suspect I updated with unstable software.  I'm going to see what they have about this at the ODROID forum.

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  • clem57
    clem57 over 11 years ago in reply to mconners

    @johnbeetem

    With linux, there is the capability to automount any USB connected at boot time or later! Just an FYI...

    Clem

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