The firmware partition holds a copy of the initramfs and the kernel and
over the years we have seen a steady increase in its sizes.
Resizing the firmware partition later on is cumbersome as the root
partition follows directly, so it's better to make the firmware
partition not too small. A size of 508MB should be enough to accommodate
4-5 kernels+initramfs, which seems desirable.
Previously one had to calculate how large the /boot/firmware partition
would be, but expressing it directly in MiB units is much clearer.
This also has the benefit that the /boot/firmware partition's size would
not change if the total image size would be changed.
Such a change should be a deliberate decision and not some side-effect.
As that 'side-effect' did happen since first submitting this patch,
revert the /boot/firmware partition's size back to 300MB.
Signed-off-by: Diederik de Haas <didi.debian@cknow.org>
The wireless firmware is in the firmware-brcm80211 package, but that is
still in 'non-free', so add 'non-free' back to the sources until all
the needed firmware packages are in 'non-free-firmware'.
https://salsa.debian.org/kernel-team/firmware-nonfree/-/merge_requests/36
is where the move to non-free-firmware is proposed, but not yet merged.
Previous commit not only replaced 'non-free' with 'non-free-firmware',
it also removed the 'contrib' archive area from the sources.list.
It added a note about it in the code comments, which I think is the
wrong place. The 'why' of a change belongs in a git commit message,
where one can be as verbose as needed.
Code comments should be used to clarify the 'what' (it does) in case it
would not be immediately obvious.
The removal of 'contrib' totally makes sense though.
We did not use it and 'contrib' and 'non-free' are not part of
(official) Debian, whereas 'non-free-firmware' is now part of Debian
(official media) as a consequence of the change to the Debian Social
Contract following the GR vote.
With this change, we only use what Debian itself would only use.
Fixes: 1ffce8e6bb
When the image was build also determines which package versions got
installed in the generated image and could help explain why a user has
problems with the downloaded image.
Signed-off-by: Diederik de Haas <didi.debian@cknow.org>
Regression introduced in f89f71560d2ca1bd60d97dbb26b89782657d56ae:
the sed call modifies /etc/default/raspi-firmware, which used to be
/etc/default/raspi3-firmware; while not ideal, working on
/etc/default/raspi*-firmware shouldn't interfere on unrelated files.
It used to be pulled this way (up to Bullseye), via systemd:
Depends: […] systemd-timesyncd | time-daemon […]
Starting with Bookworm, this was downgraded to:
Recommends: […] systemd-timesyncd | time-daemon
Install it all the time: NTP support is important on Raspberry Pi
devices, which usually don't feature an RTC.
But be careful since Buster had systemd itself provide that feature (no
separate systemd-timesyncd package yet).
Thanks, David Tomaschik!
See 3f9e671fed in the boot-consistency
branch, later adjusted in 2b2bb9d6d7 for
the master branch and the new bookworm builds.
With the pythonize approach, a single change is needed.
Commit 422a0d60 fixed the img.sha256 target itself, but it didn't update
the corresponding clean variant, so add that too.
Signed-off-by: Diederik de Haas <didi.debian@cknow.org>
(cherry picked from commit 60513d46f6)
Signed-off-by: Cyril Brulebois <cyril@debamax.com>
Commit 26a7de63b0 in master:
/etc/machine-id needs to exist and be empty on buster, while bullseye
needs this file not to exist at all. For now, treat both bullseye and
bookworm the same way.
See https://salsa.debian.org/raspi-team/image-specs/-/issues/57 for
detailed background.
Summary, e.g. on the Pi 4:
- fresh build and first boot means:
console=ttyS1,115200 console=tty0
- after dpkg-reconfigure raspi-firmware has run, with the default
settings:
console=tty0 console=ttyS1,115200
Having some consistency across boots seems desirable (esp. when the Pi
fails to boot and the hints are on a serial console which might not be
wired), so insert the console= parameter for the serial console right
before the root= parameter.
Currently, the /etc/kernel/postinst.d/z50-raspi-firmware hook uses:
${pre_cmdline} root=$ROOTPART […]
and console= parameters are inserted via ${pre_cmdline}, so inserting
the serial console before root= should get us the same results.
Without this, the block device holding the root filesystem would be
resolved at the first boot when reconfiguring raspi-firmware (e.g.
/dev/mmcblk1p2) which would then make the system fail to boot if it
ever shows up under a different name (e.g. /dev/mmcblk0p2).
Set ROOTPART parameter explicitly to stick to label-based booting.
For starters, the pattern no longer exists since this commit in
raspi-firmware:
commit dd456f4746a800ac85bdf376b5efcdb1fac133de
Author: Gunnar Wolf <gwolf@gwolf.org>
Date: Wed Aug 5 12:02:57 2020 -0500
Don't set CMA in RPi4 unless specified expressly
and there's now a SET_CMA variable instead.
And more importantly, the Pi 4 gets appropriate treatment thanks to this
commit (empty SET_CMA), which the Pi Compute Module 4 might get soon too
(see #996937).
This commit first shipped in debian/1.20200601-2, and we are using one
of those at the moment for the Pi 4 family:
- 1.20210303+ds-2 (bullseye)
- 1.20210303+ds-2~bpo10+1 (buster-backports)
Commit 422a0d60 fixed the img.sha256 target itself, but it didn't update
the corresponding clean variant, so add that too.
Signed-off-by: Diederik de Haas <didi.debian@cknow.org>
The RPi 3 wants an extra firmware file which isn't available in normal
Buster, but is available in buster-backports, so install that version of
firmware-brcm80211.
Note that dmesg shows it as an error, but wifi should work without it.
Signed-off-by: Diederik de Haas <didi.debian@cknow.org>
The logic wrt /etc/machine-id changed between Buster and Bullseye.
While on Bullseye the file should not exist, on Buster the file must
exist, but be empty, in order to generate a new machine-id on first
boot.
It seems that /var/lib/dbus/machine-id is a symlink to /etc/machine-id
on Buster, while a separate file on Bullseye, so nothing needs to be
done with that file/symlink.
Signed-off-by: Diederik de Haas <didi.debian@cknow.org>
For (at least) rpi4 Buster target, it gets replaced (again) by a package
from backports, resulting in <pkgname>/backports, making the sed
statement invalid. That isn't the case when using '#' as separator.
Signed-off-by: Diederik de Haas <didi.debian@cknow.org>
Split dynamic target generation across several lines to make the nested
loops more obvious. Backslashes are needed for make to be happy about
what would otherwise be detected as unfinished foreach function calls.
This means the generated recipes are getting two empty lines if there
are no such commands (that's the case for everyone right now), but this
emphasizes the existence of this placeholder, the same way as for its
__EXTRA_ROOT_SHELL_CMDS__ twin.
Group raspi-firmware and firmware-brcm80211 together, and make the
firmware package a regular list item in the master YAML file (making
editors happy about it).
Of course, this means that in all generated recipes, linux-image and
raspi*-firmware switch places.
This is a proof of concept rather than an ideal, final situation.
It can be used this way:
for v in 1 2 3 4 ; do
for s in buster bullseye; do
./generate-recipe.py $v $s
done
done
and it has been verified to produce very similar results compared to the
existing many-sed approach.
Differences are as follows:
- Missing newline after some backports stanza, due to the removal of
the other APT line. There's already MR#51 that aims at fixing some
newline-related issues anyway, so this can be addressed separately.
- Less schizophrenia in the generated sources.list for buster/4, as we
are now only showing a reason for enabling the backports, instead
of starting by explaining why backports are disabled by default.
- Dropping APT::Default-Release = buster in the buster/4 case, which
is no longer needed as we are pulling things from buster-backports
rather than pulling them from unstable (see 57e90df103).
- No longer trying to fix the firmware package name by throwing a
broken sed at rpi-reconfigure-raspi-firmware.service in the buster/4
case: the syntax was buggy and fixing it would have made us try to
replace raspi-firmware with raspi-firmware/buster-backports, while
the correct thing to do is to not touch it in the first place
(raspi-firmware is the correct name for the firmware package, pulled
from buster-backports).
As a side effect, this transforms the existing __EXTRA_SHELL_CMDS__ into
a slightly more explicit __EXTRA_ROOT_SHELL_CMDS__ which now has its
__EXTRA_CHROOT_SHELL_CMDS__ twin. That's the entry point that was
missing and made 45cb5619d4 necessary in the past.
sfdisk is a bit crusty - it doesn't understand gpt partition tables very well,
for example. By switching to parted, we can handle gpt issues (which may be
useful in the future, and is definitely useful for other boards), and we no
longer have to hardcode that 4M alignment workaround. Parted will tell us
the free space at the end of the disk.
Because we're already using partprobe, there's no additional dependencies
needed.