Difference between revisions of "NanoPi"
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2) You need to add an LCD variable in U-boot. For example if you want to connect your NanoPi to an S70 LCD you can do it this way:<br /> | 2) You need to add an LCD variable in U-boot. For example if you want to connect your NanoPi to an S70 LCD you can do it this way:<br /> | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
− | + | Firstly list the current environment variables: | |
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
fw_printenv bootargs | fw_printenv bootargs | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
− | + | Here is the list<br /> | |
bootargs=root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootfstype=ext4 init=/sbin/init console=ttySAC0,115200<br /><br /> | bootargs=root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootfstype=ext4 init=/sbin/init console=ttySAC0,115200<br /><br /> | ||
− | + | Append "lcd=S70" to "bootargs=" and reset the list with "fw_setenv" | |
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
fw_setenv bootargs root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootfstype=ext4 init=/sbin/init console=ttySAC0,115200 lcd=S70 | fw_setenv bootargs root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootfstype=ext4 init=/sbin/init console=ttySAC0,115200 lcd=S70 | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
− | + | Reboot your board you will see Debian on the LCD | |
===Connect Matrix DIY Modules=== | ===Connect Matrix DIY Modules=== |
Revision as of 04:30, 11 August 2015
Contents
1 Introduction
The NanoPi is a low power consumption, Samsung S3C2451 based ARM SOC that FriendlyARM developed for Linux hackers, Hobby makers and hobbyists. Its size is only half of the Raspberry Pi(RPi) and its GPIO pin is compatible with the RPi’s. The NanoPi integrates both the WiFi and Bluetooth 4.0,and has MiPi sockets for cameras and LCDs. It is easy to run and install Linux/Debian from a TF card. These features make it a good platform for applications in IOT, unmanned vehicles, drones and intelligent devices.
2 Hardware Features
- CPU: Samsung S3C2451, 400Mhz
- RAM: 64M DDR2
- Integrated SDIO WiFi and Bluetooth
- USB Type A x1
- Debugging Serial Port x1
- microSD Slot x1
- microUSB x1: for power and data transmission. It can be configured as a serial port or Ethernet
- LCD Interface: 0.5mm spacing FPC socket, full color LCD (RGB:8-8-8)
- DVP Camera interface:0.5mm spacing FPC socket. It includes ITU-R BT 601/656 8-bit, I2C and IO
- GPIO1: 2.54mm spacing 40pin, compatible with Raspberry Pi's GPIO. It includes UART, SPI, I2C, IO etc
- GPIO2: 2.54mm spacing 12pin. It includes I2S, I2C, UART etc.
- PCB dimension: 75 x 30 mm
- Power: DC 5V
- Bootloader and OS: u-boot, Linux-4.1, Debian8 jessie, Rabbit linux
3 Diagram, Layout and Dimension
3.1 Layout
- GPIO1 Pin Spec
- GPIO2 Pin Spec
Pin# Name Pin# Name 1 VDD_5V 2 VDD_SYS_3.3V 3 TXD2 4 RXD2 5 SDA0 6 SCL0 7 IISSDO0 8 IISSDI0 9 IISSCLK0 10 IISLRCK0 11 IISCDCLK0 12 DGND
- Debug Port CON1(UART0)
Pin# Name 1 DGND 2 VDD_5V 3 TXD0 4 RXD0
- DVP Camera IF Pin Spec
Pin# Name 1, 2 VDD_SYS_3.3V 7,9,13,15,24 DGND 3 SCL0 4 SDA0 5 GPH13 6 GPJ12 8 XCLK 10 NC 11 VSYNC 12 HREF 14 PCLK 16-23 Data bit7-0
- RGB LCD IF Pin Spec
Pin# Name 1, 2 VDD_5V 11,20,29 DGND 3-10 Blue LSB to MSB 12-19 Green LSB to MSB 21-28 Red LSB to MSB 30 GPG12 31 GPG2 32 XnRSTOUT Form CPU 33 VDEN 34 VSYNC 35 HSYNC 36 LCDCLK 37,38,39,40 XM,XP,YM,YP
- Note:
- VDD_SYS_3.3V: 3.3V power output
- VDD_5V: 5V power input/output. When the external device’s power is greater than the MicroUSB’s the external device is charging the board otherwise the board powers the external device. The input range is 4.7V ~ 5.6V
- 3. For more details please refer to the document:NanoPi-1507-Schematic.pdf
3.2 Board Dimension
- 3. For more details please refer to the document:NanoPi-1507-Dimesions(dxf).zip
4 Get Started
4.1 Stuff You Need
Before play with your NanoPi please get the following items ready
- NanoPi
- microSD card/TF card: > 64M
- microUSB cable
- a Host running Ubuntu and connected to the internet
4.2 Make an Installation MicroSD Card
- 1) Insert your microSD card to your host running Ubuntu and check your SD card's device name
dmesg | tail
Search the messages output by "dmesg" for similar words like "sdc: sdc1 sdc2". If you can find them it means your SD card is recognized as "/dev/sdc". Or you can check that by commanding "cat /proc/partitions".
- 2) Flash Firmware to MicroSD Card
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/sd-fuse_nanopi.git cd sd-fuse_nanopi su ./fusing.sh /dev/sdx
(Note: you need to replace "/dev/sdx" with the device name in your system)
4.3 Run System
Insert this MicroSD card to your NanoPi, connect it to a PC via a MicroUSB cable the NanoPi will be automatically powered on. If you can see the blue LED flashing it means your board is running now. By default we install Debian.
4.4 Log on NanoPi via MicroUSB
After connecting your NanoPi to you PC host (running Ubuntu) please type "dmesg" in your PC's command line. If you can find the following messages it means your NanoPi is correctly connected to your host and runs well:
[12601.100339] usb 2-1.7: Product: FriendlyARM Gadget v2.4 [12601.100343] usb 2-1.7: Manufacturer: Linux 4.1.2-FriendlyARM with s3c-hsudc [12601.103192] cdc_acm 2-1.7:2.0: This device cannot do calls on its own. It is not a modem. [12601.103368] cdc_acm 2-1.7:2.0: ttyACM0: USB ACM device [12601.105300] cdc_ether 2-1.7:2.2 usb0: register 'cdc_ether' at usb-0000:00:1d.0-1.7, CDC Ethernet Device, 46:a1:e7:6d:5c:32
If you command "ifconfig" and find a "usb0" device you can SSH to 192.168.100.1 to log on your NanoPi:
ssh root@192.168.100.1
After it prompts you to input your password you can try "fa"
4.5 Setup Wi-Fi
After SSH to your NanoPi please check the WiFi interface first. The "wlan" device is WiFi.
ifconfig -a
By default the WiFi device is "wlan0". You need to create a configuration file under "/etc/network/interfaces.d/" for WiFi:
vi /etc/network/interfaces.d/wlan0
Here is a sample wlan0 file:
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
auto wlan0
iface wlan0 inet dhcp
wpa-driver wext
wpa-ssid YourWiFiESSID
wpa-ap-scan 1
wpa-proto RSN
wpa-pairwise CCMP
wpa-group CCMP
wpa-key-mgmt WPA-PSK
wpa-psk YourWiFiPassword
Please replace "YourWiFiESSID" and "YourWiFiPassword" with your WiFiESSID and password. After save and close the file you can connect to your WiFi source by running the following command:
/etc/init.d/networking restart
After you power on your board it will automatically connect to your WiFi source.
Please note that if you use one TF card to boot multiple boards the WiFi device name will likely be named to "wlan1", "wlan2" and etc. You can reset it to "wlan0" by deleting the contents of the following file and reboot your board:
/etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules
The steps above are for Debian. For Rabbit you can run the following commands:
wpa_passphrase YourWiFiESSID 'YourWiFiPassword' >> /etc/wpa.conf wpa_cli -iwlan0 reconfigure
4.5.1 Scan Wireless AP
You can scan your surrounding wireless APs by running the following commands:
wpa_cli -iwlan0 scan wpa_cli -iwlan0 scan_result
4.6 Install Debian Packages
We provide a Debian jessie image. You get install Jessie's packages by commanding "apt-get". If this is your first installation you need to update the package list by running the following command:
apt-get update
You can install your preferred packages. For example if you want to install an FTP server you can do this:
apt-get install vsftpd
Note: you can change your download server by editting "/etc/apt/sources.list". You can get a complete server list from [1]. You need to select the one with "armel".
5 Make OS Image
5.1 Install Cross Compiler
Download and untar cross compiler file:
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/prebuilts.git tar xvzf prebuilts/gcc/arm-linux-gcc-4.4.3.tar.gz -C /
It will ease your future development work if you add compiler's path to "PATH". You can do it by first opening "~/.bashrc" and then appending the following lines:
export PATH=/opt/FriendlyARM/toolschain/4.4.3/bin/:$PATH
Run "~/.bashrc" to make your changes in effect right away:
. ~/.bashrc
We assume you would use a 32-bit compiler. However if your host runs a 64-bit Linux you need to install some extra packages. For example if your host runs a Debian 8 Jessie desktop 64 bit system you will need to install the following packages:
dpkg --add-architecture i386 apt-get update apt-get install build-essential gcc-multilib rpm libstdc++6:i386 libgcc1:i386 zlib1g:i386 libncurses5:i386
5.2 Compile U-Boot
Download U-Boot source code and compile it. Please note it is in the branch "nanopi":
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/uboot_nanopi.git cd uboot_nanopi git checkout nanopi make nanopi_config make
After your compilation succeeds a u-boot.bin will be generated. If you want to test it please flash it to your MicroSD card by running the "fusing.sh" script.
If your SD card's device name is "/dev/sdd" please run the following command as "root":
su ./fusing.sh /dev/sdd
Note: this operation will remove all the data in the SD card.
5.3 Compile Linux kernel
5.3.1 Compile Kernel
Please download kernel source code and compile it
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/linux-4.x.y.git cd linux-4.x.y git checkout nanopi-v4.1.y make nanopi_defconfig touch .scmversion make
The kernel that the NanoPi uses is "nanopi-v4.1.y". Please make sure you get the correct branch. After your compilation succeeds a new file "arch/arm/boot/zImage" will be generated
5.3.2 Compile Kernel Modules
In general kernel compilation generates kernel modules such as ipv6, netfilter and etc. If you want to add your own modules to the kernel or you changed your kernel configurations you need to recompile these new modules and pack them as a new "kernel-modules.tgz" to replace the corresponding file "basefs/kernel-modules.tgz" in "Rootfs"
please run the following commands as root to install ".ko" to /tmp/nanopi-modules:
make INSTALL_MOD_PATH=/tmp/nanopi-modules modules_install
Please strip your kernel modules and create a new package
cd /tmp/nanopi-modules/lib/ find . -name \*.ko | xargs arm-linux-strip --strip-unneeded tar czvf kernel-modules.tgz modules/
If you want to test your newly generated kernel modules you can copy them to your MicroSD card's "rootfs/lib": We assume your MicroSD card was already mounted to "/media/fa/NANOPI" please run the following commands as root:
rm -rf /media/fa/NANOPI/lib/modules/ tar xzvf kernel-modules.tgz -C /media/fa/NANOPI/lib/
5.4 Make File System
5.4.1 File System for Debian
By default we install a Debian system to the NanoPi, which can be obtained from the following repository:
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/sd-fuse_nanopi.git cd sd-fuse_nanopi/prebuilt/ ls -l rootfs.tgz
If you want to customize it you can uncompress "rootfs.tgz", edit its components and tar it. Here is an example showing how you can do it:
tar xzf rootfs.tgz dpkg -i --force-all --root=./rootfs /tmp/qtembedded-4.8.5_armel.deb tar czf rootfs.tgz rootfs
5.4.2 File System for Rabbit Linux
Another Linux system we provide is Rabbit Linux which is open source. You can work on it as "root" by following the steps below:
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/rootfs_nanopi.git cd rootfs_nanopi git checkout nanopi su make && make install && make strip
If the compilation is successful you will observe the following messages:
RootFS (core) successfully installed to: /tmp/FriendlyARM/nanopi/rootfs Copyright 2015 FriendlyARM (http://www.arm9.net/)
The information above indicates that the generated file system is located under "/tmp/FriendlyARM/nanopi/rootfs". We will make it a package by running the following commands:
cd /tmp/FriendlyARM/nanopi tar czvf rootfs.tgz rootfs/
5.5 Make an Installation MicroSD Card with Your Own Files
5.5.1 Make Your Own System
Please download the SD card fuse utility and switch to the correct "master" branch:
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/sd-fuse_nanopi.git cd sd-fuse_nanopi git checkout master
Under "sd-fuse_nanopi" there is a "prebuilt" which contains the files that a system needs:
Bootloader: u-boot.bin
Kernel Command Parameters: sdenv.raw
Linux Kernel: zImage
File System Package: rootfs.tgz
You can replace one or multiple of these files with the ones you generated on your own in the previous steps and then run the following command to flash them to your MicroSD card. Please note that you need to run these commands under the "sd-fuse_nanopi" directory.
su ./fusing.sh /dev/sdx
(Note: please replace /dev/sdx with your SD card's device name)
After it is done you can play with your new OS with this card.
5.5.2 Change U-Boot Environment Variables
After you boot your NanoPi you can check the U-Boot environment variables by running the following command:
fw_printenv bootargs
If you want to change variables (e.g. adding an LCD variable) you can do it this way:
fw_setenv bootargs root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootfstype=ext4 init=/sbin/init console=ttySAC0,115200 lcd=S70
If you want to port an existing SD card's all environment variables you can to insert it to a host and export its environment variables to a new sdenv.raw by running the following commands and then replace the "prebuilt/sdenv.raw" with this new file:
cd sd-fuse_nanopi ./readenv.sh /dev/sdd cp sdenv.raw prebuilt/
5.5.3 Comments on SD Card's "RAW" File
There is a known issue with the S3C2451: when iROM boots with SDHC card, calculated card size is smaller than original card size, exactly 1024 blocks so SDHC card has additional reserved blocks(512Kbyte). The S3C2451's iROM reads a bootloader from the end of an SD card. The results in an issue that when the iROM reads a regular SD card and an SDHC card of the same size it will get different positions. In addition different SD cards have different sizes. Therefore it is impossible to create a universal RAW file for all SD cards.
If you have multiple SD cards of the same size and one of them is flashed with a complete system you can use "dd" under Linux to read its data and save it as a RAW file and then dump it to all the other SD cards.
For an SD card whose size is greater than 8 GB it takes much longer time to write a RAW file to it. On general our rootfs is only about 23 MB it will be much faster to run a script file making an SD card.
6 Related Links
6.1 Connect Camera
6.2 Connect TFT LCD
The NanoPi can work with FriendlyARM's LCDs: H43,S70,A70,W50,A97,L80,G10,A56,W101,W35,P43,P35,TD35.
Please follow the steps below:
1) If you connect your NanoPi to a PC host via a mini USB cable its power may not be enough and you will need to connect an additional 5V 2A power to the board's GPIO's VDD_5V and DGND;
2) You need to add an LCD variable in U-boot. For example if you want to connect your NanoPi to an S70 LCD you can do it this way:
Firstly list the current environment variables:
fw_printenv bootargs
Here is the list
bootargs=root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootfstype=ext4 init=/sbin/init console=ttySAC0,115200
Append "lcd=S70" to "bootargs=" and reset the list with "fw_setenv"
fw_setenv bootargs root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootfstype=ext4 init=/sbin/init console=ttySAC0,115200 lcd=S70
Reboot your board you will see Debian on the LCD
6.3 Connect Matrix DIY Modules
7 NanoPi Applications
7.1 4.3" Mini Computer
7.2 Wireless Intelligent Vehicle
8 Resources
- [Schematic]( NanoPi-1507-Schematic.pdf)
- [Dimensions]( NanoPi-1507-Dimesions(dxf).zip )
- [S3C2451 Datasheet](S3C2451_UM_REV1.1.pdf)
- [RT8059 Datasheet]( RT8059.pdf)
- [XC6209 Datasheet]( XC6209.pdf)
- [DDR2 RAM Datasheet]( K4T51163QI_rev1.1.pdf)
- [AP6210 Datasheet]( AP6210_V1.2_12262012.pdf)