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Fedora 20 Alpha per ARM

Il team di Fedora ARM ha il piacere di annunciare che Fedora 20 Alpha per le architetture ARM è ora disponibile per il download al link:

http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/test/20-Alpha/Images/armhfp/

Fedora 20 Alpha per ARM include due tipi di immagine - il primo per piattaforme che richiedono partizioni VFAT (come i processori basati su AM335x Beaglebone Black della Texas Instruments), altri per l'uso con dispositivi avviati su partizioni EXT3/4 (come quelli basati su Tegra2 TrimSlice della ComputerLab). Per ognuna di questi tipi di immagine, ce ne sono varie a scelta in base al tipo di desktop (includendo MATE, KDE, XFCE, LXDE, SOAS), così come immagini di sistemi minimali che invece non includono il desktop. Qualsiasi immagine di quelle proposte possono essere usate con QEMU su desktop x86_64 per emulare un ARM penamente funzionale.

I processi d'installazione basate su immagine prevede il download del file immagine (a seconda del tipo di destinazione desktop/non-desktop desiderata), l'inserimento di un supporto rimovibile nel sistema "host" (ad esempio un ARM o un PC x86_64, laptop, etc.) e dei semplici comandi per la masterizzazione sul supporto. Quest'ultimo verrà poi usato dal sistema "target" per avviare Fedora 20 Alpha.

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Nota
Gli esempi forniti qui sono di una Fedora 19 e potrebbero servire degli aggiustamenti in base al proprio host.

For the CompuLab TrimSlice

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IMPORTANT
You must use the latest Device Tree enabled U-Boot to boot the Fedora 20 Trimslice image, which you can find here. And environmental variables described here. Failure to do so will result in a non-booting system.

Download the image of your choice for use with the TrimSlice:

TYPE= # options include KDE, LXDE, XFCE, SoaS, Mate and Minimal
wget http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/test/20-Alpha/Images/armhfp/Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw.xz

Copy the image to the intended media:

xzcat Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw.xz > /dev/<location-of-your-media> 

Insert into the TrimSlice and boot. Fedora will boot to an initial setup screen allowing you to create your user, set the root password and timezone.

For the Wandboard (Freescale i.MX6)

The Fedora kernel currently does not support a display on the Wandboard, for this reason the Minimal image is recommended.

wget http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/test/20-Alpha/Images/armhfp/Fedora-Minimal-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw.xz
xzcat Fedora-Minimal-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw.xz > /dev/<location-of-your-media>
sync

Remove and reinsert the media into the host PC to automatically mount the image.

The Wandboard includes a Solo, Dual and Quad core configurations, determine you hardware and use the appropriate value. While the Wandboard Quad has been tested and confirmed working, the Solo and Dual core models should also work as well.

USER= # your username
cd /run/media/$USER/__boot
ln -sf dtb-3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl dtb

Create the extlinux.conf file manually (from the current directory 'vi extlinux/extlinux.conf):

  • Note - You may need to edit the extlinux.conf file and add the UUID of your root filesystem. To check this use 'blkid /dev/<location-of-your-media>'. Make note of the Root filesystem UUID.
# extlinux.conf generated by anaconda

#ui menu.c32

menu autoboot Welcome to Fedora. Automatic boot in # second{,s}. Press a key for options.
#menu title Fedora Boot Options.
#menu hidden

timeout 60
#totaltimeout 9000

label Fedora (3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl) 20 (Heisenbug)
        kernel /vmlinuz-3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl
        append console=ttymxc0,115200 root=UUID=04e54c55-4d1e-4db7-b8df-5bd9defdc4ee ro rhgb quiet LANG=en_US.UTF-8
        fdt /dtb/imx6q-wandboard.dtb
        initrd /initramfs-3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl.img

Copy the U-boot for the hardware in use:

BOARD= # Choose 'solo', 'dl' or 'quad'
sudo cp /run/media/$USER/__/usr/share/uboot-imx6$BOARD/u-boot.imx /home/$USER/
sync

Unmount the media and copy the U-boot file:

 
sudo umount /run/media/$USER/__boot
sudo umount /run/media/$USER/__
/home/$USER/
dd if=u-boot.imx of=/dev/<location-of-your-media> bs=1k seek=1
sync

Remove the media and insert into the Wandboard and boot.

  • NOTE - Insert into the MicroSD slot below the heatsink.

For Versatile Express Emulation with QEMU

No ARM hardware? No problem! Even without hardware, it is possible to run the Fedora 20 Alpha for ARM images using the QEMU emulator program. Any image can be used, and you can choose a script method or manual depending on your preference.

Manual Preparation

TYPE= # options include KDE, LXDE, XFCE, SoaS, Mate and Minimal
wget http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/test/20-Alpha/Images/armhfp/Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw.xz

Extract the image:

unxz Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw.xz

Mount the image and extract the kernel and initramfs for use with booting.

sudo kpartx -av Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw

Make a temporary mount point

mkdir /tmp/boot
sudo mount /dev/mapper/loop0p1 /tmp/boot
sudo cp /tmp/boot/initramfs-3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl.img .
sudo cp /tmp/boot/vmlinuz-3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl .
sudo umount /tmp/boot
sudo kpartx -dv Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw

To boot:

sudo qemu-system-arm -machine vexpress-a9 -m 1024 -nographic -net nic -net user \
 -append "console=ttyAMA0,115200n8 rw root=/dev/mmcblk0p3 rootwait physmap.enabled=0" \
 -kernel vmlinuz-3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl \
 -initrd initramfs-3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl.img \
 -sd Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw \

For convenience you can also download a script for booting the system here. To run the script:

chmod 755 boot-vexpress
./boot-vexpress -h
Usage: ./boot-vexpress [--gui] --kernel=vmlinuz... --ramfs=initramfs --image=fsimage [--dtb=vexpress.dtb]

To boot the image:

sudo ./boot-vexpress --kernel=vmlinuz-3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl --ramfs=initramfs-3.11.0-300.fc20.armv7hl.img --image=Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw

Booting with device tree is possible, although passing --gui for graphics will not work at this time (this is due to ongoing platform reword occurring within the Versatile Express kernel code). Booting without device tree is recommended for F-20, as it will work in both serial and graphics mode, whereas passing a DTB will only work with serial.

livemedia-modifier

The livemedia-modifier tool written by Jon Chiappetta can be used to perform the above steps and is available here. After installing you can run the script using the following example:

# Extract the image
unxz Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw.xz
# Run livemedia-modifier
livemedia-modifier --image=Fedora-$TYPE-armhfp-20-Alpha-4-sda.raw --platform=vexpress --nocompress

The modifier will create a copy of the original image, all changes will be made on the copy preserving the original image integrity.

Additional usage instructions can be found here.

Resize the Root Filesystem

By default the root partition should be re-sized to fill the media in use on first boot. To use this additional space run:

resize2fs /dev/sda3

Calxeda EnergyCore (HighBank)

Fedora 20 Alpha for ARM includes support for systems that are able to perform a network installation using a kickstart, including enterprise hardware such as the Highbank. A working kickstart can be found here.

For more detailed instructions on setting this up, please visit this page.

Booting for the First Time

Initial-setup

  • During the first boot the system will launch the 'initial-setup' utility. For graphical images this will occur on the display, for minimal images this will occur on the serial console. Failure to complete the initial-setup will prevent logging into the system. To log in to the root account without completing the initial-setup you will need to minimally edit '/etc/passwd' file and remove the 'x' from the line beginning with 'root' (this will allow you to log into the root account without entering a password).

Known Issues

  • The Beaglebone Black will boot the Fedora 20 Alpha VFAT images, however there is currently no network or USB. This is actively being worked on, if you would like to contribute please visit #fedora-arm on Freenode.