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<p>OK folks sorry for the late follow up, but I finally got a chance to tinker with this some more and was able to serve up a website from the raspberry pi using node.js, running of course on a battery rather than solar panels as it was about midnight by that time. Big thanks to The Doctor who recompiled node on his B+ over the better part of a day. I recommend following this link and using this package if you want to set node up on your RPi. Once I get a bit further along in terms of functionality, I'll share my whole B+ image and power electronics schematic for other people to use.</p>
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<p>forwarded from the good doctor a few weeks ago:</p>
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<p>>in a bit of a pickle here. trying to get node working on a<br />>raspberry pi B+ for a lightweight solar powered server. anyone<br />>accomplished this?</p>
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<p>Yes, but not easily.</p>
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<p>I followed the tutorial you linked to later in your post, but was<br />unable to get it to work reliably. What did work was compiling libv8<br />and node.js manually and building .deb packages, a process that took<br />most of a day on a RasPi model B. If you want to give the package a<br />try, here's the link to our public repo:</p>
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<p>http://svn.virtadpt.net/byzantium/v0.5b/armel/node_0.10.18-1_armhf.deb</p>
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<p>- -- <br />The Doctor [412/724/301/703] [ZS]<br />Developer, Project Byzantium: http://project-byzantium.org/</p>
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