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Broadcomreader is a software application that can be installed on Linux systems to scan for IEEE 1394 universal serial bus devices. The packages included in the application are broadcom-wl, broadcom-wl-utils, libftdi1, and bcm2835 libraries. The open source project used in this release is avr32. This release was made possible by the contributors who brought it together through 5 years of effort to make this latest version available for users around the world. Millions of versions have been tested against many platforms including desktop Linux distributions such as Ubuntu, SuSE, Fedora and Debian, BSD variants such as FreeBSD and OpenBSD, Windows XP/2000/2003/Vista/7 too. Broadcomreader works with the following distributions: It is designed to scan the ports that other utilities like: dmesg, lsusb and lshw do not scan. Broadcomreader has the capability to work on a wide range of embedded Linux systems; it can be used as a USB device or as a character device. After downloading the source package, it is possible to compile and run this software using the following commands: Depending on your Linux distribution, if you have installed all necessary packages it should run without issues or require some additional steps from you. The scanned devices will be shown in red because they are not configured at this time. Or they can be green too if your kernel support them. Some of the known issues are:This table shows the number of hit per kernel version. The current version is 0.8.0.0, codename "Chernobyl". It was released on April 15, 2014 after 2 years since the last version 0.7, codename "Fukushima". The new release contains some improvements like: There are 5 different types of builds available on their website for various architectures like ARM, PPC32/64 and x86_64 systems; some includes source code too for developers to test new features on their hardware. The latest release is bcm2835-0.8. 0.0 with firmware for Raspberry Pi and BeagleBone Black. The latest release was focused on: This application is included in the Ubuntu repositories since the AMD64 release (April 2008) and also available as a package on Fedora (January 2008). The project's website is at: http://freecode.com/projects/broadcomreader Downloads, documentation and source code are available at Sourceforge: http://sourceforge.net/projects/broadcomreader/files/BRdCAM2Linux-0.8.0.0-Final_Source_Code_Release-VIA_BRdCAM2Linux-20140115-amd64.tar. gz/download The mailing list is at: https://launchpad.net/~broadcom-listThe following table compares features from two of the most used alternatives in the Linux community: lsusb and dmesg. It will be obvious to software developers that some of these tools are more usable than others. The major advantage of a programmer's menu is its ability to locate a device using a vendor and product IDs or a simple search term, while all other tools require you to have this information on hand beforehand. The major disadvantage of these programs, however, is their inability to determine the operating speed of the connected device. cfa1e77820
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