Difference between revisions of "Sd boot rootfs"

From ElphelWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Format micro SD card (command line))
(Format micro SD card (command line, can be done in the booted from NAND flash camera))
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 26: Line 26:
 
* Insert, power on
 
* Insert, power on
  
==Format micro SD card (command line, can be done in the booted from nand camera)==
+
==Format micro SD card (command line, can be done in the booted from camera's NAND flash)==
 
Example for '''/dev/sdX''':
 
Example for '''/dev/sdX''':
 
* create partitions with fdisk , gparted or any other program:
 
* create partitions with fdisk , gparted or any other program:

Latest revision as of 10:47, 12 January 2017

Notes

  • The micro SD card/adapter has to be modified or the USB cable with appropriate host computer driver is needed to boot from the uSD card - see Tmp_manual#Boot for instructions.
  • EXT4 partition mounted as /.

Prepare the card

PC:

  • After all of the targets are built in poky use files from .../poky/build/tmp/deploy/images/elphel393/mmc/:
    • boot.bin
    • u-boot-dtb.img
    • devicetree.dtb
    • uImage
    • rootfs.tar.gz
  • Partition table: msdos (gpt won't work) Format into 2 partitions: FAT32 and EXT4 (use gparted or command line instructions below), the order of partitions is important or change bootargs in the device tree accordingly.
  • FAT32: copy the following files:
      • boot.bin
      • u-boot-dtb.img
      • devicetree.dtb
      • uImage
  • If EXT4 is not empty - format it or delete old contents
  • Mount EXT4 to some <mountpoint>
    • unpack the rootfs.tar.gz, console:
tar -C <mountpoint> -xzpf rootfs.tar.gz

Boot

  • Insert, power on

Format micro SD card (command line, can be done in the booted from camera's NAND flash)

Example for /dev/sdX:

  • create partitions with fdisk , gparted or any other program:
    • the 1st partition is to be formatted to FAT32 - 1GB is more than enough
    • the 2nd partition is to be formatted to EXT4 - 2+GB

formatting with mkfs:

  • mkfs.vfat -F 32 /dev/sdX1

  • mkfs.ext4 /dev/sdX2