WolframOS

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Revision as of 11:27, 5 January 2023 by Andy (talk | contribs) (Created page with "WolframOS is an operating system based on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS. Its primary feature is running the OnTakt Daemon (ontaktd), which is responsible for running services such as OnTakt and Inspection, managing system settings and updates, and providing a landing page. == Hardware requirements == {| class="wikitable" !'''Specification''' !'''Minimum''' !'''Recommended''' !'''Notes''' |- |'''Chipset''' |BIOS |UEFI | |- |'''CPU''' |1.5 GHz × 2 cores |2.0 GHz × 4 cores |64-bit x...")
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WolframOS is an operating system based on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS. Its primary feature is running the OnTakt Daemon (ontaktd), which is responsible for running services such as OnTakt and Inspection, managing system settings and updates, and providing a landing page.

Hardware requirements

Specification Minimum Recommended Notes
Chipset BIOS UEFI
CPU 1.5 GHz × 2 cores 2.0 GHz × 4 cores 64-bit x86 only (32-bit x86 or ARM will not work)
Memory 4 GB 8 GB
Storage 100 GB HDD 128 GB SSD
Network interface 100 Mb/s Ethernet 1000 Mb/s Ethernet
Internet connection Not required 100 Mb/s down For downloading updates
USB ports 1 1 For installation and backups

Installation instructions

  1. Download the WolframOS ISO
  2. Use Etcher (or another ISO image writer) to write it to a USB flash drive that is at least 2GB. Anything else on the flash drive will be erased!
  3. Make sure the IPC is powered off. Unplugging it is an easy way to do this and will not hurt anything because we are about to wipe it anyway.
  4. Insert the flash drive into the IPC. DO NOT leave this flash drive plugged into any other PC. Rebooting a computer with this drive plugged in can erase its hard drive with very little time to stop it.
  5. Connect IPC to network and then power. A monitor and keyboard are optional, but the IPC must have a network connection for the OS installation to succeed.
  6. Boot from the flash drive. For new PCs, this will usually happen by default. If it doesn't, check your PC's manual for instructions for booting from USB devices. This may involve a keypress during boot to select a temporary boot device, or changing the BIOS configuration.
  7. Wait about 20 minutes. When the installation stops, the system will shut down. If this takes longer than half an hour, connect a monitor to the IPC to see if there are any error messages. Sometimes trying the installation again can fix them.
  8. The IPC is now ready, but shut down. Remove the flash drive.
  9. Continue to first-time setup

Virtual machine support

These instructions should also work for deployment as a virtual machine. VirtualBox and VMware ESXi have been tested and found to work. Keep in mind the necessary port forwarding settings when setting up the virtual machine.