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GoodKernelAndDriver » History » Revision 3

Revision 2 (Paul M, 2018-09-08 14:25) → Revision 3/8 (Paul M, 2018-09-08 14:25)

h1. Known Good Kernel And Driver Combinations

TV Headend is entirely dependent on a reliable combination of a kernel, drivers and hardware. In order to help people set up their server, this page will provide a list of combinations that people have found to work.

h2. TBS 6982 DVB-S/S2, Kernel 4.8.0, on Ubuntu 16.04-LTS

This combination of kernel and drivers was found to be stable:
* Ubuntu: 16.04.5-LTS
* kernel: 4.8.0-58-lowlatency
* drivers: tbs-linux-drivers_v170330.zip
* TV Headend: 4.3-1292~g9b9ee68~xenial

The key factor in making the TBS card work was to ensure MSI Interrupts were enabled when the kernel module loads.

Firstly, use "dpkg \-l -l | grep linux\-" linux-" to list the linux kernel and associated packages.
Use "dpkg -r" to remove kernel packages, and use "dpkg -P" to then purge everything. Check /boot remove any left over vmlinux and init.rd files etc; then likewise clean out /lib/modules. DO NOT REBOOT at any time when you have no kernel installed!

Then install the kernel and associated packages, to get to the following state
<pre>
ii linux-headers-4.8.0-58 4.8.0-58.63~16.04.1 all Header files related to Linux kernel version 4.8.0
ii linux-headers-4.8.0-58-lowlatency 4.8.0-58.63~16.04.1 amd64 Linux kernel headers for version 4.8.0 on 64 bit x86 SMP
ii linux-hwe-tools-4.8.0-58 4.8.0-58.63~16.04.1 amd64 Linux kernel version specific tools for version 4.8.0-58
ii linux-image-4.8.0-58-lowlatency 4.8.0-58.63~16.04.1 amd64 Linux kernel image for version 4.8.0 on 64 bit x86 SMP
ii linux-signed-image-4.8.0-58-lowlatency 4.8.0-58.63~16.04.1 amd64 Signed kernel image lowlatency
ii linux-tools-4.8.0-58-lowlatency 4.8.0-58.63~16.04.1 amd64 Linux kernel version specific tools for version 4.8.0-58
</pre>

Then install the driver supplied by TBS. Create a script containing this:
<pre>
#!/bin/bash

#VER="180822"
#ZIPFILE="tbs-open-linux-drivers_v$VER.zip"
#TARFILE=media_build-2018-0822.tar.bz2

VER="170330"
ZIPFILE="tbs-linux-drivers_v170330.zip"
TARFILE=linux-tbs-drivers.tar.bz2

DIR=/home/build
mkdir -p "$DIR"
cd "$DIR"

if [ ! -f "$ZIPFILE" ] ; then
wget "https://www.tbsiptv.com/download/common/$ZIPFILE"
fi

mkdir -p "$DIR/tbs_$VER"
cd "$DIR/tbs_$VER"

pwd
ls -la "../$ZIPFILE"
unzip "../$ZIPFILE"

tar jxvf "$TARFILE"
cd linux-tbs-drivers
./v4l/tbs-x86_64.sh
make -j4
make install
</pre>

And execute it.

Finally, set the driver to use MSI Interrupts by creating a file called "/etc/modprobe.d/tbs.conf" containing these lines:
<pre>
options tbs_pcie-dvb tbs_int_type=1
options saa716x_tbs-dvb int_type=1
</pre>

It should now be possible to reboot your computer. Afterwards, check the kernel module is loaded thus:
<pre>$ lsmod | egrep "saa|dvb"
saa716x_tbs_dvb 77824 0
</pre>

And check that the interrupts are MSI by checking the /proc/interrupts, like this:
<pre>
$ egrep -i "saa|dvb" /proc/interrupts
31: 29757 0 0 0 PCI-MSI 1572864-edge SAA716x Core
</pre>

Also see this:
https://tvheadend.org/boards/5/topics/32496?r=34042#message-34042