8b6acd8207 | ||
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vmdb2@65adab0fdd | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
compress.sh | ||
eth0 | ||
fstab | ||
raspi0w.yaml | ||
raspi1.yaml | ||
raspi2.yaml | ||
raspi3.yaml | ||
rpi3-generate-ssh-host-keys.service | ||
rpi3-resizerootfs | ||
rpi3-resizerootfs.service | ||
rules.v4 | ||
rules.v6 |
README.md
Raspberry Pi 3 image spec
This repository contains the files with which the image referenced at https://wiki.debian.org/RaspberryPi3 has been built.
Option 1: Downloading an image
See https://wiki.debian.org/RaspberryPi3#Preview_image for where to obtain the latest pre-built image.
Option 2: Building your own image
If you prefer, you can build a Debian buster Raspberry Pi 3 image yourself. If you are reading this document online, you should first clone this repository:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/Debian/raspi3-image-spec
cd raspi3-image-spec
For this you will first need to install vmdb2
. As of July 2018, this
repository still ships vmdb2, but will probably be deprecated in the
future. You can choose:
-
vmdb2
is available as a package for Debian Testing and Unstable. However, we require at least one feature that has not been included in any of the releases uploaded to Debian.Therefore,
vmdb2
is presented as a submodule in this project. First install the requirements ofvmdb2
:apt install kpartx parted qemu-utils qemu-user-static python3-cliapp \ python3-jinja2 python3-yaml
Note that
python3-cliapp
is not available in Stretch, but as it does not carry any dependencies, can be manually installed by fetching its .deb package and installing it manually.
Then edit raspi3.yaml to select the Debian repository that you want to use:
-
The images now build correctly with the main repository! If you want to build your image following the regular Testing (buster) distribution, leave
raspi3.yaml
as it is- Stable (stretch) is not supported, as we require linux ≥ 4.14 and raspi3-firmware ≥ 1.20171201-1.
-
Testing is, however, constantly changing. You might want to choose a specific point in its history to build with. To do this, locate the line with
qemu-debootstrap: buster
inraspi3.yaml
. Changemirror: http://deb.debian.org/debian
to a known-good point in time. One such point can bemirror: https://snapshot.debian.org/archive/debian/20181204T164956Z/
.- Due to a
missing feature
on snapshots, to make the build work, you have to disable an
expiration check by APT. To do so, edit raspi3.yaml to replace
all
apt-get
invocations withapt-get -o Acquire::Check-Valid-Until=false
- Due to a
missing feature
on snapshots, to make the build work, you have to disable an
expiration check by APT. To do so, edit raspi3.yaml to replace
all
Once you have edited raspi3.yaml, you can generate the image by issuing the following:
umask 022
sudo env -i LC_CTYPE=C.UTF-8 PATH="/usr/sbin:/sbin:$PATH" \
./vmdb2/vmdb2 --rootfs-tarball=raspi3.tar.gz --output \
raspi3.img raspi3.yaml --log raspi3.log
Installing the image onto the Raspberry Pi 3
Plug an SD card which you would like to entirely overwrite into your SD card reader.
Assuming your SD card reader provides the device /dev/sdb
(Beware If you choose the wrong device, you might overwrite
important parts of your system. Double check it's the correct
device!), copy the image onto the SD card:
sudo dd if=raspi3.img of=/dev/sdb bs=64k oflag=dsync status=progress
Then, plug the SD card into the Raspberry Pi 3 and power it up.
The image uses the hostname rpi3
, so assuming your local network
correctly resolves hostnames communicated via DHCP, you can log into
your Raspberry Pi 3 once it booted:
ssh root@rpi3
# Enter password “raspberry”
Note that the default firewall rules only allow SSH access from the local
network. If you wish to enable SSH access globally, first change your root
password using passwd
. Next, issue the following commands as root to remove
the corresponding firewall rules:
iptables -F INPUT
ip6tables -F INPUT
This will allow SSH connections globally until the next reboot. To make this
persistent, remove the lines containing "REJECT" in /etc/iptables/rules.v4
and
/etc/iptables/rules.v6
.