notices about d16/d8/kfsn4-dre removal

hslick-master
Leah Rowe 2022-11-19 03:59:02 +00:00
parent 2d0bdd7b73
commit 1f0b6545eb
7 changed files with 25 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -255,6 +255,9 @@ The <https://www.gnu.org/> and <https://www.fsf.org/> websites now run on
Librebooted ASUS KGPE-D16 based servers, on a fully free GNU+Linux distro. This
means that the FSF now has full software freedom for their hosting infrastructure.
**NOTE: D16/D8 and KFSN4-DRE boards were removed from Libreboot on November
19th, 2022.**
The FSF also provides access to this infrastructure for many other projects
(besides GNU projects); for example, Trisquel uses a D16 provided by the FSF
for their development server used for building Trisquel releases and testing
@ -403,8 +406,10 @@ Ported the ASUS KGPE-D16 board to coreboot for the company Raptor
Engineering of which Timothy is the CEO.
Timothy maintains this code in coreboot,
helping the project with the libreboot integration for it. This person's
contact details are on the raptor site, or you can ping **tpearson** on
the Libera IRC network.
contact details are on the raptor site.
**D16 support was removed on 19 November 2022. You can still use older
revisions of Libreboot, and older release versions.**
vitali64
--------

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@ -38,9 +38,9 @@ libreboot currently supports the following systems in this release:
### Servers/workstations (AMD, x86)
- [ASUS KCMA-D8 motherboard](kcma-d8.md)
- [ASUS KGPE-D16 motherboard](kgpe-d16.md)
- [ASUS KFSN4-DRE motherboard](kfsn4-dre.md)
- [ASUS KCMA-D8 motherboard](kcma-d8.md) (removed on 2022-11-19)
- [ASUS KGPE-D16 motherboard](kgpe-d16.md) (removed on 2022-11-19)
- [ASUS KFSN4-DRE motherboard](kfsn4-dre.md) (removed on 2022-11-19)
### Laptops (Intel, x86)

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@ -6,6 +6,9 @@ x-toc-enable: true
Introduction
============
**D16 support was removed on 19 November 2022. You can still use older
revisions of Libreboot, and older release versions.**
This is a server board using AMD hardware (Fam10h *and Fam15h* CPUs
available). It can also be used for building a high-powered workstation.
Powered by libreboot. The coreboot port was done by Timothy Pearson of

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@ -3,6 +3,9 @@ title: KGPE-D16 external flashing instructions
x-toc-enable: true
...
**D16 support was removed on 19 November 2022. You can still use older
revisions of Libreboot, and older release versions.**
Initial flashing instructions for KGPE-D16.
This guide is for those who want libreboot on their ASUS KGPE-D16

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@ -597,6 +597,9 @@ SPI flash is memory mapped and the maximum (in practise) that you can use is a
ThinkPad X200S, X200 Tablet and T400S, all of which have WSON8 where the best
course of action is to replace it with a SOIC8 flash chip.
**D16 support was removed on 19 November 2022. You can still use older
revisions of Libreboot, and older release versions.**
In all such cases, flashing a new chip should be done using a breadboard, not
a test clip. You will use 2.54mm dupont leads to connect your Raspberry Pi.
For data lines, make sure that all wires are the same length, and about 10cm

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@ -21,6 +21,9 @@ release; use an older release, unless these are re-added in future releases.
You can still compile ROM images for these boards yourself, from the latest
version of Libreboot in the Git repository.
**D16 support was removed on 19 November 2022. You can still use older
revisions of Libreboot, and older release versions.**
### NEW KEY
Full key fingerprint: `98CC DDF8 E560 47F4 75C0 44BD D0C6 2464 FA8B 4856`

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@ -78,6 +78,9 @@ configuration)
My KCMA-D8 or KGPE-D16 doesn't boot with the PIKE2008 module installed
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
**D16 support was removed on 19 November 2022. You can still use older
revisions of Libreboot, and older release versions.**
Loading the option ROM from the PIKE2008 module on either ASUS KCMA-D8
or KGPE-D16 causes the system to hang at boot. It's possible to use
this in the payload (if you use a linux kernel payload, like linuxboot),