WIP stuff to get started on the pinebook pro.
Clone this repository somwhere, and in your configuration.nix
{
imports = [
.../pinebook-pro/pinebook_pro.nix
];
}
That entry point will try to stay unopinionated, while maximizing the hardware compatibility.
A whole lot of untested.
You can look at the previous state to see that the basic stuff works. But I find listing everything as working is hard.
What's untested and not working will be listed here at some point. Maybe.
This can be worked around by booting with the efifb=off
kernel command-line.
This is already handled for you by this configuration. If using the generic UEFI AArch64 iso, you will need to add the option yourself to the command-line using GRUB.
When booted using EFI, the system will not power off. It will stay seemingly
stuck with the LED and display turned off.
Power it off by holding the power button for a while (10-15 seconds).
Otherwise you might have a surprise and find the battery is flat!
A workaround exists, and is built in recent Tow-Boot (no prebuilt releases at this time).
NOTE: The previously available customized U-Boot from this repository are not available anymore.
I highly suggest installing Tow-Boot to the SPI Flash.
Having the firmware installed to SPI makes the device act basically like a normal computer. No need for weird incantations to setup the platform boot firmware.
Alternatively, starting from the Tow-Boot disk image on eMMC is easier to deal with and understand than having to deal with U-Boot manually.
Mainline U-Boot has full support for graphics since 2021.04. The current unstable relases of Nixpkgs are at 2021.04 at least.
$ nix-build -A pkgs.ubootPinebookPro
Note that the default U-Boot build does not do anything with LED on startup.
WARNING: Some hardware batches for the Pinebook Pro ship with the wrong chip for the keyboard controller. While it will work with the firmware it ships with, it may brick while flashing the updated firmware. See this comment on the firmware repository.
It is unclear how to identify said hardware from a running system.
To determine which keyboard controller you have, you will need to disassemble the Pinebook Pro as per the Pine64 wiki, and make sure that the IC next to the U23 marking on the main board is an SH68F83.
$ nix-build -A pkgs.pinebookpro-keyboard-updater
$ sudo ./result/bin/updater step-1 <iso|ansi>
$ sudo poweroff
# ...
$ sudo ./result/bin/updater step-2 <iso|ansi>
$ sudo poweroff
# ...
$ sudo ./result/bin/updater flash-kb-revised <iso|ansi>
Note: poweroff must be used, reboot does not turn the hardware "off" enough.