Fedora 18 for ARM
BeagleBoard-xM
A modified version of the popular BeagleBoard, the BeagleBoard-xM is a very small, low powered ARM device designed with open source software development in mind. The Beagleboard-xM is produced by Texas Instruments and Digikey and offers a showcase for TI's OMAP3730 system-on-a-chip(SoC).
Technical Specifications
- TI DM3730 Processor - 1 GHz ARM Cortex-A8 core
- 512 MB LPDDR RAM
- Imagination Technologies PowerVR SGX 2D/3D graphics processor
- DVI-D (HDMI connector chosen for size - maximum resolution is 1400x1050)
- 10/100Mbit/s Ethernet
For more information on the BeagleBoard-xM visit their website.
Running Fedora on a BeagleBoard-xM
This page will give you detailed instructions for running Fedora 18 on your BeagleBoard-xM. The provided images will boot to a serial console.
Download the image
The first step is to download the prebuilt Fedora 18 image, which includes everything you will need to boot your system. It will require a minimum of 4GB for the root filesystem. There two images available for the Beagleboard, a hardware floating point (armhfp) image, and a software floating point(arm) image. If you are unsure of which to choose, the hard floating point image is recommended, and will be used in the provided examples below (adjust accordingly for 'arm'):
Writing the Image
Linux Users
You can write the image to an SD card of your choosing but it does have to meet the minimum size requirements noted above (2GB for the serial image, 4GB for the XFCE Desktop). Connect the SD card to your computer and make note of the drive. To write the image to your SD card run the following command, changing the drive to the location of your SD card.
For the HFP Image:
xzcat Fedora-18-beagle-armhfp.img.xz > /dev/<location-of-your-SD-card>
For the SFP Image:
xzcat Fedora-18-beagle-armhfp.img.xz > /dev/<location-of-your-SD-card>
Once completed run the below command to ensure the entire image is written to the card:
sync
Windows Users
- You will need to download Win32 Image Writer as well as a tool to extract the image such as 7-Zip.
- Once downloaded and installed right click on the disk image and select "7-Zip->Extract files here"
- Launch Win 32 Disk Imager and select the extracted disk image and the SD card you would like to write the files to. Click "Write". Be very careful during this step - all data on the selected drive will be lost!
Mac Users
- Please note that the Default Archive Utility.app will not extract the .xz file. A third party app will have to be used to decompress it. There are multiple options for that
- There is a Free App available in the App Store called Unarchiver.
- If mac homebrew or macport is already installed, then the xz utility can be downloaded and installed using one of those.
- The xz utils .pkg for mac can be downloaded and installed directly from xz utils
- Once the xz utility is installed, open a terminal and make a note of the current drives.
ls /dev/disk?
- Connect the SD card to the mac and make a note of the drive.
- Open Disk Utility and make sure that the card and all the partitions in the card (if any) is unmounted
- In the terminal change to the directory where the .xz file is located
- If xz was installed from the .pkg or macport or homebrew then run the following command
xzcat Fedora-18-beagle-armhfp.img.xz > /dev/<location-of-the-SD-card>
- If the Unarchiver app from App Store was used then just click and decompress the .xz file and then run the following (may require sudo)
dd if=Fedora-18-beagle-armhfp.img of=/dev/<location-of-the-SD-card>
- Click and eject the SD card
Using Fedora on the BeagleBoard-xM
Connect the newly created media to your BeagleBoard-xM and power on. No further steps are required and your system should boot to a text based log in prompt. The default root password is "fedoraarm". This should be changed immediately.
Known Issues
- BeagleBoard-xM generates a kernel warning on reboot and requires use of the reset button to actually reboot.
- Images are designed to be written to 2GB (console) or 4GB (xfce) SD cards. On first boot the partition will be resized to the maximum allowable amount. On the second boot the filesystem will be resized to fill the expanded partition. This works for SD cards, SATA Disks, and SSD drives.
- Known release issues
Additional Support
There are Fedora ARM users all around the globe - if you need assistance, would like to provide feedback or contribute to Fedora ARM please visit us on the IRC - we can be found in #fedora-arm[?] on Freenode. You can also contact us on the mailing list - arm