Cubieboard

Cubieboard

Cubieboard is a single-board computer, made in Zhuhai, Guangdong, China. The first short run of prototype boards were sold internationally in September 2012, and the production version started to be sold in October 2012.[1] It can run Android 4 ICS, Ubuntu 12.04 desktop,[2] Fedora 19 ARM Remix[3] desktop, Armbian, Arch Linux ARM,[4] a Debian-based Cubian distribution,[5] FreeBSD,[6] or OpenBSD.[7]

Quick Facts Release date, Operating system ...
Quick Facts Release date, CPU ...

It uses the AllWinner A10 SoC, popular on cheap tablets, phones and media PCs. This SoC is used by developers of the lima driver, an open-source driver for the ARM Mali GPU.[8] At the 2013 FOSDEM demo it ran ioquake 3 at 47 fps in 1024×600.[9]

The Cubieboard team managed to run an Apache Hadoop computer cluster using the Lubuntu Linux distribution.[10]

Technical specifications

A Cubieboard cluster running Apache Hadoop

Cubieboard1

The little motherboard utilizes the AllWinner A10 capabilities[11]

Cubieboard2

The second version, sold since June 2013, enhances the board mainly by replacing the Allwinner A10 SoC with an Allwinner A20 which contains 2 ARM Cortex-A7 MPCore CPUs and a dual fragment shader Mali-400 GPU (Mali-400MP2).[12]

This board is used by Fedora to test and develop the Allwinner SoC port of the distribution.[13]

There is also a version available with two microSD card slots.[14]

Cubieboard cluster using Aiyara cluster

Cubietruck (Cubieboard3)

The third version has a new and larger PCB layout and features the following hardware:[15]

There is no LVDS support any longer. The RTL8211E NIC allows transfer rates up to 630–638 Mbit/s (sending while 5–10% idle) and 850–860 Mbit/s (receiving while 0–2% idle) when simultaneous TCP connections are established (testing was done utilising iperf with three clients against Cubietruck running Lubuntu)

To connect a 3.5" HDD the necessary 12 V power can be delivered by a 3.5 inch HDD addon package which can be used to power the Cubietruck itself as well.[16] Also new is the option to power the Cubietruck from LiPo batteries.

Cubieboard 4

On May 4, 2014 CubieTech announced the Cubieboard 4, the board is also known as CC-A80.[17] It is based on an Allwinner A80 SoC (quad Cortex-A15, quad Cortex-A7 big.LITTLE), thereby replacing the Mali GPU with a PowerVR GPU. The board was officially released on 10 March 2015.[18]

Cubietruck Plus (Cubieboard 5)

The fifth version has the same PCB layout and almost the same features as the CubieTruck.

  • SoC: Allwinner H8
  • 2 GiB DDR3
  • 8 GB EMMC flash built-in, 1x microSD slot, 1x SATA 2.0 port (Hard Disk of 2,5") via USB bridge.
  • 10/100/1000M RJ45 Gigabit Ethernet
  • 2x USB Host, 1x USB OTG, 1x CIR.
  • S/PDIF, headphone, and HDMI audio out, mic and line-in via 3.5mm jack, and onboard mic.
  • Wi-Fi (dual-radio 2.4 and 5 GHz) and Bluetooth on board with PCB antenna
  • 70 extended pins including I²C, SPI
  • Dimensions: 11 cm × 8 cm

See also


References

  1. "Ready to ship". cubieboard.org. 30 October 2012.
  2. "Cubie Board". fedoraproject.org/wiki/.
  3. "Cubieboard". archlinuxarm.org.
  4. "OpenBSD/armv7". openbsd.org.
  5. "Lima: An open source graphics driver for ARM Mali GPUs". Archived from the original on 2012-02-07. Retrieved 2014-12-09.
  6. "Cubieboard". linux-sunxi.org.
  7. Cubie, Tom (19 June 2013). "cubieboard2 is here". cubieboard.org. Retrieved 2014-12-09.
  8. "Model". cubieboard.org. Retrieved 2014-12-09.
  9. "Cubietruck". linux-sunxi.org.
  10. "CubieTech Will Promote A80 High-performance Mini PC". cubieboard.org. Retrieved 2014-12-09.
  11. Lee, Ahha (10 March 2015). "CubieBoard4/CC-A80 Released". cubieboard.org. Retrieved 2015-03-15.

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