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Revision as of 13:14, 12 February 2018 by Pbrobinson (talk | contribs)

The Raspberry Pi is now supported in Fedora 25 and later. Fedora 25 final release support is still very new so please report issues to the ARM mailing list or IRC channel

Introduction

The Raspberry Pi is a credit card-sized ARM based single board computer (SBC). Fedora supports the the Raspberry Pi Model B versions 2 and 3 in Fedora 27 without any requirement of third party kernels or scripts to adjust offical images. This documentation describes how to get started, and includes a Fequently Asked Questions (FAQ) about what is supported and what isn't.

Supported Hardware

We currently only support the Raspberry Pi Model B versions 2 and 3.

Prerequisites

  • A Raspberry Pi 2 or 3
  • Good quality SD Card (eLinux hosts a compatibility list)
  • HDMI Monitor or TV, a USB keyboard and mouse
  • A decent power supply. You'll want at least 2A for the RPi2 and 2.5A for the RPi3 details here

For preparation of the SD card:

  • Computer running Windows/MacOS/Linux
  • SD card reader

Downloading the Fedora ARM image

Official support for the Raspberry Pi 2/3 is available in Fedora! Please read the FAQ for the current status of various features.

Fedora 27 images can be downloaded here:

Preparing the SD card

You can quite easily prepare the image on the SD card on Fedora or any Linux distribution, MacOS or Windows. The default settings will provide the user interface on a HDMI monitor with keyboard and mouse support. If you wish to have output over a serial console please see Section in the FAQ.

Fedora or other Linux Distributions

Scripted

  • Use the fedora-arm-installer

To install arm-image-installer:

dnf install -y fedora-arm-installer

To write the image out use the following:

$ sudo arm-image-installer

Usage: arm-image-installer <options>

   --image=IMAGE    - xz compressed image file name
   --target=TARGET  - target board
   --media=DEVICE   - media device file (/dev/[sdX|mmcblkX])
   --selinux=ON/OFF - Turn SELinux off/on as needed
   --norootpass     - Remove the root password
   -y		    - Assumes yes, will not wait for confirmation
   --version	    - Display version and exit
   --resizefs	    - Resize root filesystem to fill media device
   --addconsole     - Add system console to extlinux.conf
   --addkey=        - /path/to/ssh-public-key

Example: arm-image-installer --image=Fedora-Rawhide.xz --target=Bananapi --media=/dev/mmcblk0

For list of supported boards please check SUPPORTED-BOARDS file.

For the Raspberry Pi 2 use

--target=rpi2

and for the Raspberry Pi 3 use

--target=rpi3

.

Manual

 xzcat Fedora-IMAGE-NAME.raw.xz | sudo dd status=progress bs=4M of=/dev/XXX # Location of your media (will be sdX or mmcblkX depending on hardwae)

MacOS

The Raspberry Pi foundation provides some nice instructions for image copying using a Mac here. Simply replace any image file references with the name and path of the image downloaded in the step above.

Microsoft Windows

The Raspberry Pi foundation provides some nice instructions for image copying using a Windows here. Simply replace any image file references with the name and path of the image downloaded in the step above.

Resizing the root partition

The root partition is shrunk to the smallest size possible to ensure a small download. You currently need to resize it manually. Ideally we would like this to happen automatically (great community project idea!).

Resize before first boot

The easiest way to do this before boot on a Linux system is with gparted:

gparted /dev/XXX

Resize after initial-setup

The other mechanism for doing it is once you've booted the Raspberry Pi and completed the initial setup to create accounts.

# enlarge the 4th partition (this example uses mmcblk0)
growpart /dev/mmcblk0 4
# grow the fileystem to fill the available space
resize2fs /dev/mmcblk0p4
# resize root partition for the server image (which uses xfs)
xfs_growfs -d /

Booting Fedora on the Raspberry Pi for the first time

  • Insert the SD card into the Raspberry Pi.
  • Make sure you have a keyboard, mouse, network cable and monitor connected.
  • Power on the Raspberry Pi.
  • You will see Fedora booting and eventually the "Initial setup wizard" will appear.
  • Follow the wizard to set language, timezone and create users.
  • You should be presented with a login prompt or a getting started guide (depending on which Desktop/SPIN you're using).

Applying updates and installing software

There are no special ways or procedures necessary to install or update the software so you just use standard Fedora installation and update mechanisms such as dnf, gnome-software or any of the other GUI update systems as supported in the various desktop environments.

Getting help and reporting issues

So where can you get help if it’s not working? The usual Fedora support forums are:

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do I get a rainbow display when I try and power on my Raspberry Pi?

There's a number of different reasons you might get rainbow output on the display when you're trying to boot as Raspberry Pi. The three common ones we see are:

  • The power supply isn't strong enough. See Prerequisites above.
  • There's no OS installed. Check the SD card is properly in place and you've followed the instructions to write out the card.
  • Wrong edition of the Raspberry Pi. If you try and use Fedora on a Raspberry Pi 1 or Zero you'll get this as we don't support ARMv6 SoCs.

What desktop environments are supported?

Both 3D/2D work out of the box and all desktops as shipped in Fedora should work just fine. There is an open source fully accelerated driver for the Video Core IV GPU.

Will there be more enhancements to the hardware support

Yes. New enhancements will be delivered when, and as soon as, they are ready via the standard Fedora updates mechanism. New significate features will be blogged about as they arrive either via Fedora Magazine or the Fedora Planet.

What about support for the Raspberry Pi Models A/A+, B/B+ (generation 1), Zero/ZeroW and Compute Module?

THESE ARE NOT SUPPORTED!!!

Fedora doesn't, and NEVER will, support ARMv6 processors. There's been a number of attempts to support these over the years. The current best effort is Pignus based on Fedora 23. More information can be found at the Pignus site. We will support the new Compute Module 3 based on the same SoC as the Raspberry Pi 3 when it starts to ship.

Will Fedora 24 be supported?

No. The small team is focused on the Fedora 25 release and rawhide to best focus resources. While possible to do there is reasonably significant amount of work to back port all the fixes that have gone into Fedora 25/rawhide back to stable releases. Fedora 25 is released and is already very stable on the Raspberry Pi.

What USB devices are supported on the Raspberry Pi

You should be able to use most USB-2 compatible devices that are supported in Fedora on other devices. There are some limitations to the USB bus of the Raspberry Pi hardware as documented here.

Is the onboard WiFi and Bluetooth supported on the Raspberry Pi 3?

Wifi:

Wifi on the Raspberry Pi 3 is supported in Fedora.

There's a file we can't currently redistribute which you'll need to retrieve. This can be done either post first boot using onboard ethernet or when setting up the SD card. The command needed when running from a Raspberry Pi 3 is as follows. Once retrieved you just need to reboot and WiFi should be available.

sudo curl https://fedora.roving-it.com/brcmfmac43430-sdio.txt -o /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43430-sdio.txt

Bluetooth:

It's currently untested but as it's attached to a serial port and is accessible it might work. It's only been briefly tested but in practice it tends to crash the entire device so is not currently recommended. Those interested can investigate further and potentially provide more informatin.

For the brave you can test it with this command:

hciattach /dev/ttyAMA0 bcm43xx 3000000 noflow -

Does sound work?

HDMI audio output is included Fedora however the analog port is not yet supported. Audio output via a USB audio interface should also work fine.

Does the add-on camera work?

Not currently. There is still ongoing work to support this upstream and add the appropriated media acceleration support.

Does accelerated media decode work?

No. There's no upstream kernel support and it relies on code from a number of kernel subsystems to be supported.

Does HDMI-CEC work?

Yes. It current is supported using libcec packaged in Fedora.

Is the Raspberry Pi Touch Display supported?

Work on the official Raspberry Pi Touch Display is ongoing upstream and initial support has landed in the 4.10 kernel, being tracked upstream. Fedora will review any missing pieces for support soon. The touchscreen driver isn't yet releases upstream. Support for other displays is not currently planned.

Is the composite TV out supported?

The composite TV out is not currently supported in a stable Fedora release but the core support has landed upstream in the 4.10 kernel. There's some missing enabling patches currently which we will add to the Fedora kernel soon.

Are the expansion HATs supported?

The quick answer here is they are not currently supported.

The long answer is a lot more complex. Most of the hardware interfaces that are exposed by the 40 pin HAT connector are supported with drivers shipped with Fedora. Drivers for the hardware contained on a lot of the common HATs are also enabled and supported in Fedora. The core means of supporting the HAT add-on boards require the use of device tree overlays. The kernel and the u-boot 2016.09 boot-loader supports the loading over overlays manually. Currently there is no upstream consensus on the means of autoloading these overlays by means of an "overlay manager" (also known as Cape Manager and by numerous other names) by reading the EEPROM ID and loading the appropriate overlay automatically. There's also no consensus on the extensions to the dtc (Device Tree Compiler) to build the binary blob overlays, and no consensus of the exact format of the overlay file. There is now a group of people working to resolve this issue which enable Fedora to better support HATs (Raspberry Pi), Capes (BeagleBone), DIPs (C.H.I.P) and Mezzanine (96boards) before long.

The first focus HAT to support will be the official Raspberry Pi Sense HAT. This will be documented using the manual process to build and load the overlay to provide access to the onboard devices as a means of demonstrating how this process works for those wishing to use this manual method in the interim. The link to this documentation will be added here once that is complete.

Are Device Tree Overlays supported?

There's basic support for overlays in u-boot and the linux kernel but an overlay manager isn't yet upstream. There's

Is GPIO supported?

GPIO isn't supported well as they need to be mapped with Device Tree overlays. This will be improved in the F-27 cycle, and in Fedora 28.

Is SPI supported?

Yes, basic SPI is supported.

Is I2C supported?

Yes, basic I2C is supported.

Raspberry Pi 3 aarch64 support

Yes! You can download the AArch64 disk images for the Raspberry Pi 3 below:

Fedora 27 images can be downloaded here:

How do I use a serial console?

The serial console is disabled by default on the Raspberry Pi 2 and 3 because it requires the device to run at significantly slower speeds. To wire up the USB to TTL adapter follow this guide from Adafruit. You'll need a 3.3 volt USB to TTL Serial Cable like this one from Adafruit

To enable the serial console follow the specific steps for the Raspberry Pi 2 or 3 as they both differ slightly:

Raspberry Pi 2:

  • insert the micro SD card into a PC
  • on the VFAT partition edit the config.txt file and uncomment the enable_uart line:
enable_uart=1
  • on the boot partition edit the extlinux/extlinux.conf file adding "console=tty0 console=ttyAMA0,115200" to the end of the append line so it looks similar to:
append ro root=UUID="LARGE UUID STRING OF TEXT" console=tty0 console=ttyAMA0,115200
  • Safely unmount the micro SD card
  • Insert micro SD into Raspberry Pi, connect serial console, power on

Raspberry Pi 3:

  • inset the micro SD card into a PC
  • on the VFAT partition edit the config.txt file and uncomment the enable_uart line:
enable_uart=1
  • on the boot partition edit the extlinux/extlinux.conf file adding "console=tty0 console=ttyS0,115200" to the end of the append line so it looks similar to:
append ro root=UUID="LARGE UUID STRING OF TEXT" console=tty0 console=ttyS0,115200
  • Safely unmount the micro SD card
  • Insert micro SD into Raspberry Pi, connect serial console, power on