Robert Porter replied to the topic 'Polemaster in KStars' in the forum. 5 years ago

Kevin wrote: I am trying to transition to Indi from Windows and Polemaster is on my critical path...
I have to say the QHY software is great - it takes you step-by-step through capture/solve/adjust sequence so a Linux version would be very welcome. (Its all done in 5 minutes max )
...


Having just got my Polemaster a couple days ago and barely had any time with it. I did want to point out that there is a Linux version.
Download: www.qhyccd.com/index.php?m=content&c=ind...atid=136&id=32&cut=2
Directions: www.qhyccd.com/index.php?m=content&c=ind...atid=136&id=32&cut=2

I have not tried it (YET) so as they say YMMV.

Read More...

Set FSCKFIX=yes in /etc/default/rcS


From the man page - man5/rcS.5.html
rcS - variables that affect the behavior of boot scripts
FSCKFIX
When the root and all other file systems are checked, fsck is invoked with the -a
option which means "autorepair". If there are major inconsistencies then the fsck
process will bail out. The system will print a message asking the administrator to
repair the file system manually and will present a root shell prompt (actually a
sulogin prompt) on the console. Setting this option to yes causes the fsck
commands to be run with the -y option instead of the -a option. This will tell
fsck always to repair the file systems without asking for permission.

Read More...

It's built on Ubuntu right? You should be able to edit /etc/defaults/rcS
And edit/add the line: FSCKFIX=yes

From the man page -- man5/rcS.5.html
FSCKFIX
When the root and all other file systems are checked, fsck is invoked with the -a
option which means "autorepair". If there are major inconsistencies then the fsck
process will bail out. The system will print a message asking the administrator to
repair the file system manually and will present a root shell prompt (actually a
sulogin prompt) on the console. Setting this option to yes causes the fsck
commands to be run with the -y option instead of the -a option. This will tell
fsck always to repair the file systems without asking for permission.

Read More...