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@gbaman
gbaman / HowToOTG.md
Last active April 16, 2024 22:39
Simple guide for setting up OTG modes on the Raspberry Pi Zero

Raspberry Pi Zero OTG Mode

Simple guide for setting up OTG modes on the Raspberry Pi Zero - By Andrew Mulholland (gbaman).

The Raspberry Pi Zero (and model A and A+) support USB On The Go, given the processor is connected directly to the USB port, unlike on the B, B+ or Pi 2 B, which goes via a USB hub.
Because of this, if setup to, the Pi can act as a USB slave instead, providing virtual serial (a terminal), virtual ethernet, virtual mass storage device (pendrive) or even other virtual devices like HID, MIDI, or act as a virtual webcam!
It is important to note that, although the model A and A+ can support being a USB slave, they are missing the ID pin (is tied to ground internally) so are unable to dynamically switch between USB master/slave mode. As such, they default to USB master mode. There is no easy way to change this right now.
It is also important to note, that a USB to UART serial adapter is not needed for any of these guides, as may be documented elsewhere across the int

@tnolet
tnolet / gist:7361441
Last active December 5, 2018 02:48
Install collectd 5.4 on Centos 6.x and make it spit out cool metrics. Copied from http://linuxdrops.com/install-collectd-statistics-collecter-on-centos-rhel-ubuntu-debian/ and tweaked for your and my pleasure. For all other cool options, check the provided link.
#!/bin/bash
# Perform installation as root
# Install prereqs
yum -y install libcurl libcurl-devel rrdtool rrdtool-devel rrdtool-prel libgcrypt-devel gcc make gcc-c++
# Get Collectd, untar it, make it and install
wget http://collectd.org/files/collectd-5.4.0.tar.gz
tar zxvf collectd-5.4.0.tar.gz