VMDB2-Wrapper is a simple wrapper for vmdb2
, to build armhf & arm64 board images for SD-card using u-boot
Debian packages, flash-kernel
and Debian kernels.
Source code for vmdb2
can be found on Lars Wirzenius' Gitlab or his own Gitano server.
The Raspberry Pi different models are already supported by Debian.
FYI these images are also build using vmdb2
.
- Supported Platforms
- TL;DR Getting started
- How to build an image
- Writing the image to an SD-card
- Customizing the image by using an Ansible-playbook
- Needed packages
- FAQ
- Potential issues
FIXME
You can either download an already built image from the projetct's Github Releases or the projetct's Github Actions (nigthly builds) (needs to be logged-in) and then skip to the Writing the image to an SD-card section.
You can build the image yourself using a Debian (or an Ubuntu, you'll need to adapt the Debian procedure).
On a freshly installed minimalist Debian (with sudo installed), use this command to install needed packages:
sudo apt install vmdb2 curl ansible python3-distutils qemu-user-static binfmt-support
The purpose behind each of those packages is explained in the Needed packages section.
At the moment, the vmdb2
version in Debian Buster lacks a critical feature which forces the installation of Bullseye's version.
Either add the Bullseye repository to your sources.list
(be carefull to limit the package to vmdb2) or retrieve and install the Bullseye package manually.
For example (manual install):
wget http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/pool/main/v/vmdb2/vmdb2_0.22-1_all.deb
sudo dpkg -i vmdb2_0.22-1_all.deb
Each Yaml file corresponds to a single board using the naming convention BOARD_RELEASE_ARCH_vmdb2-MINVERSION.yaml where:
- BOARD is the board's name.
- RELEASE is the expected Debian release.
- ARCH is the expected architecture (armhf or arm64 for example).
- MINVERSION is vmdb2's minimum required version for the Yaml file to work.
FYI versions ofvmdb2
are retro-compatible with older yaml files versions (0.14.1 yaml files will work with version 0.14.1+).
For the time being vmdb2
needs to be run as root, see Why must the build be run as root ? for more details.
Use head
on the file corresponding to your board and run the command present in the comment on the first line.
vmdb2
command generic example:
sudo vmdb2 BOARD_RELEASE_ARCH_vmdb2-MINVERSION.yaml --output BOARD_RELEASE_ARCH.img --rootfs-tarball RELEASE_ARCH_rootfs.tgz --log=stderr
You can run the following oneliner if you prefer:
eval $(head -n1 BOARD_RELEASE_ARCH_vmdb2-MINVERSION.yaml | sed 's/^.*: \(.*\)$/\1/g')
The resulting image will be called BOARD_RELEASE_ARCH.img
To write img to sdcard, use dd
.
For example:
sudo dd bs=64k status=progress oflag=dsync if=cubietruck_buster_armhf.img of=/dev/mmcblk1
Make sure /dev/mmcblkN
is the correct SD-card (by using lsblk
for example).
In case the image comes from Github Releases or Github Actions you could use something like that:
zcat cubietruck_buster_armhf.img.bz2.zip | bunzip2 -c -d | sudo dd bs=64k status=progress oflag=dsync of=/dev/mmcblk1
For Ansible use vmdb2-ansible.yaml.exemple
as a starting point, create a file named vmdb2-ansible.yaml
to write an Ansible-playbook that will be used by vmdb2
.
Why do I need thoses packages on my system to run a image build ?
curl
is needed to fetch some binaries from the internet.
ansible
is needed for the build to support customizing the image with an ansible playbook.
In some cases the needed package python3-distutils
might not be installed, which can trigger an error in the ansible part.
Make sure it is installed.
You can always comment or remove the call to ansible roles in the yaml files if you don't want to install it.
Extra packages needed for cross-compile build (use of qemu-debootstrap in yaml, default):
qemu-user-static
and binfmt-support
You can always remplace qemu-debootstrap
by debootstrap
to build natively without needing qemu-user-static
& binfmt-support
, but in case you don't want to change the yaml files and you don't mind having qemu-user-static
& binfmt-support
on your system, qemu-debootstrap
will also work for native builds with almost no overhead.
For the time being it is easier to be root for the abilities to create /dev/loops and mount/unmount them.
An alternative could be available later.
The best starting point is the cubieboard2_buster_armhf_vmdb2-0.14.1.yaml
file which is the simplest.
FIXME
Is the card supported by flash kernel ?
If not, ..., comment the rm of /etc/flash-kernel/machine, if not kernel update wont work
Same if flash-kernel cannot retrieve the card's name by looking in /proc/device-tree/model
For example in case something else than U-Boot is used as bootloader
FIXME
If you face any issue when running the built image, try removing the corresponding cache file RELEASE_ARCH_rootfs.tbz
and rebuilding the image.