NixOS on ARM/PINE64 ROCK64: Difference between revisions

From NixOS Wiki
imported>Lopsided98
No edit summary
imported>Lopsided98
Fix RAM size
Line 22: Line 22:
The ROCK64 is a single board computer built around the Rockchip RK3328 SoC.
The ROCK64 is a single board computer built around the Rockchip RK3328 SoC.


There are two models of the board, with 2 or 4 GB of RAM. It can boot from an microSD card or an eMMC. It also has a 128 Mbit SPI flash that can be used to store the bootloader.
There are three models of the board, with 1, 2 or 4 GB of RAM. It can boot from an microSD card or an eMMC. It also has a 128 Mbit SPI flash that can be used to store the bootloader.


== Status ==
== Status ==

Revision as of 05:23, 3 February 2019

PINE64 ROCK64
A PINE A64-LTS with eMMC.
Manufacturer PINE64 (Pine Microsystems Inc.)
Architecture AArch64
Bootloader Downstream (ayufan) U-Boot[1]
Boot options SD, eMMC, SPI NOR Flash

The ROCK64 is a single board computer built around the Rockchip RK3328 SoC.

There are three models of the board, with 1, 2 or 4 GB of RAM. It can boot from an microSD card or an eMMC. It also has a 128 Mbit SPI flash that can be used to store the bootloader.

Status

It is possible to run NixOS on this board using a downstream U-Boot and kernel. This can be done with manual partitioning and nixos-install or possibly by building an SD image with the correct kernel and bootloader, but the latter has not been tested.

The upstream aarch64 SD image may boot if U-Boot is placed at the correct location as described below, but this has not been tested. There may be issues with ethernet and USB with the mainline kernel.

U-Boot for this board is packaged in nixpkgs, and Hydra builds can be found here: https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixpkgs/trunk/ubootRock64.aarch64-linux This bootloader is not entirely open, incorporating a blob for the tertiary program loader (TPL).

Board-specific installation notes

U-Boot needs to be copied to sector 64 on the microSD card or eMMC with dd. Download/build U-Boot for the board, and copy idbloader.img to the correct location with (replace /dev/mmcblkX with the correct path to the SD card device):

sudo dd if=idbloader.img of=/dev/mmcblkX bs=512 seek=64

On many kernels, the ethernet driver cannot handle hardware check-summing of large packets, therefore this feature must be disabled for the ethernet to be stable. This can be done with the following NixOS configuration:

networking.localCommands = ''
  ${pkgs.ethtool}/bin/ethtool -K eth0 rx off tx off
'';

Serial console

The ROCK64 uses a GPIO pinout compatible with the Raspberry Pi 2 and newer. This means that the following pins can be used to connect a serial adapter:

Pi-2 Bus
Pin Function
6 GND
8 UART0_TX
10 UART0_RX

The serial console runs at 1500000 baud in the bootloader.

Compatibility notes

Mainline kernel
Ethernet
  • Works on 4.20, if hardware check-summing is disabled (see above)
USB
  • As of 4.20, USB 3.0 does not work
ayufan-rock64/linux-mainline-kernel
Ethernet
  • Works if hardware check-summing is disabled (see above)
USB
  • USB hot plugging does not work

Downstream kernel

To use all hardware functionality, it is currently necessary to use a downstream kernel:

Note: Keep in mind that using non-upstream forks of the kernel always incurs some security risk.

Resources