**** BEGIN LOGGING AT Wed May 18 02:59:58 2016 May 18 10:37:42 hi I would like to install the latest Ubuntu on a Zynq board (armhf v7 CPU), and I have trouble finding an appropriate tarball May 18 10:39:08 for the 14.04 LTS I used http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-core/releases/14.04/release/ubuntu-core-14.04.4-core-armhf.tar.gz May 18 10:39:28 grab one from http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-base/releases/ May 18 10:39:32 but I have trouble finding something similar for 16.04 May 18 10:39:51 (ubuntu-core got renamed to ubuntu-base) May 18 10:42:41 OK, I will try it, since I had trouble finding this one I tried snappy a bit, for amd64 in kvm, and ARM emulated in QEMU, I currently do not see an advantage using snappy, what would you recommend? May 18 11:06:27 thanks ogra_ the tarball is what I was looking for May 18 11:07:36 wrt snappy, it really dependfs what you plan to do with the board ... if it is a stabndalone headless thing like a NAS ro router, snappy is surely something to try ... if you go after plain server or desktop stuff it is likely not there yet May 18 11:08:04 s/ro/or/ May 18 11:16:44 OK, I will try it, since I had trouble finding this one I tried snappy a bit, for amd64 in kvm, and ARM emulated in QEMU, I currently do not see an advantage using snappy, what would you recommend? May 18 11:16:52 OK, I will try it, since I had trouble finding this one I tried snappy a bit, for amd64 in kvm, and ARM emulated in QEMU, I currently do not see an advantage using snappy, what would you recommend? May 18 11:17:37 not used to IRC clients May 18 11:20:34 our board is a custom server, with development capabilities (compiler), I saw very few packages offered as snaps and I do not know how to get libraries, for snappy they are part of the snap as I understand May 18 11:21:11 for now we will continue with apt/dpkg May 18 21:02:10 I have a few different arm devices (pi3, cubox, hummingboard, wandboard) that i think can all run armhf ubuntu. I want to install the most similar OS I can on all of them (I'm thinking 14.04 LTS). I was thinking the easiest route would be to get latest and greatest offical release for each board, keep the bootloader, kernel, and modules, and just overwrite the rest of the rootfs with a 14.04 rootfs from armhf.org. Is that sane? May 19 01:59:04 On a fresh install of ubuntu server 16.04 on a raspi2, I'm looking to create an identical user to the default "ubuntu" (permissions, sudo ability, etc) **** ENDING LOGGING AT Thu May 19 02:59:59 2016