Rock3/Debian
ROCK 3 > Debian
Contents
- 1 Work with ROCK 3 Debian
- 1.1 Introduction to ROCK 3 Debian
- 1.2 List of boards supported
- 1.3 Access from the Host PC/Laptop
- 1.4 Debian Default User Account
- 1.5 Desktop
- 1.6 Radxa APT
- 1.7 Upgrade necessary packages
- 1.8 NPU
- 1.9 Network Connection
- 1.10 Bluetooth
- 1.11 General purpose input-output (GPIO)
- 1.12 Common Hardware Interfaces, I2C, PWM, SPI, UART, CAN, etc
- 1.13 Check DDR size
- 1.14 Storage device
- 1.15 Test RTC Device
- 1.16 Test Audio Player
- 1.17 Test USB Host
- 1.18 Test fan on / off
- 1.19 Ethernet
- 1.20 3A
- 1.21 3B
- 1.22 CM3 IO
- 1.23 Changelogs
Work with ROCK 3 Debian
Introduction to ROCK 3 Debian
This guide is available for official ROCK 3 Debian images.
ROCK 3 Debian is an easy to use desktop system. While working with ROCK 3 Debian, you will find it do well on playing music, Internet, Bluetooth, AI and so on.
ROCK 3 Debian uses systemd to manage system.
Command prepended by $ means the command may be executed by an unprivileged user. And command prepended by # means the command may be executed by an privileged user. But the symbol, $ or #, is not part of the command.
List of boards supported
- ROCK 3A
- ROCK 3B
- Radxa E23
- Radxa E25
- Radxa CM3 IO
Access from the Host PC/Laptop
Option 1: Serial console
See Serial Console
Option 2: SSH
SSH server is enabled on port 22 of ROCK 3 default image.
Please use angryip to find your board IP address.
$ ping ip-of-device $ ssh rock@ip-of-device
Debian Default User Account
Non-root User:
User Name : rock Password : rock
Desktop
Desktop Xfce4 | Server |
---|---|
* ROCK 3A * ROCK 3B * Radxa CM3 IO |
* Radxa E23 * Radxa e25 |
Radxa APT
Radxa APT source includes stable one and testing one. Stable source includes stable packages while testing source includes latest but maybe unstable packages.
Radxa APT stable source is added by default while testing source is not added.
You can uncomment line like "deb http://apt.radxa.com/buster-testing/ buster main" in file /etc/apt/sources.list.d/apt-radxa-com.list to add testing source.
See file /etc/apt/sources.list.d/apt-radxa-com.list
deb http://apt.radxa.com/buster-stable/ buster main deb http://apt.radxa.com/buster-testing/ buster main
After adding testing source, you need to update APT and install your needed packages.
$ sudo apt-get update
For more detail about Radxa APT, please see Radxa APT.
Upgrade necessary packages
Here is the example of upgrading rockchip-overlay and kernel packages. Pakcage linux-4.19-rock-3-latest provides the latest ROCK 3 kernel packages.
$ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install -y rockchip-overlay $ sudo apt-get install -y linux-4.19-rock-3-latest
NPU
SoC RK3566/RK3568 is equipped with 0.8TOPS NPU. See NPU Run Test to test it on your ROCK 3 boards.
Network Connection
There are two methods for network connection. One is Ethernet and the other is WIFI.
Ethernet Connection
You can use a network cable (one end connected to the external network port or route) to connect your ROCK 3 to the network. The ROCK 3 will automatically configure the network for your surfing on the Internet.
To test the Ethernet, we need to follow the steps:
- Switch to super user mode by command
$ sudo su
- Check whether the Ethernet is normal by command, ifconfig, which would show us a network card, eth0, and the Ethernet IP address. Also, use tool, ping, to connect to a normal domain.
$ ifconfig $ ping www.baidu.com
- If failed to connect to a normal domain. , try
$ sudo dhclient eth0
WIFI Connection
When there is not a network cable for your ROCK 3 the WIFI connection is another good choice. See Supported WiFi Cards list.
Radxa APT includes broadcom-wifibt-firmware package for Broadcom wireless modules and intel-wifibt-firmware package for Intel wireless modules. Take a look at your module and download the corresponding packages.
Please note that make sure kernel version is at least 4.19.193-16.
For example:
root@rock3a:~# apt-get update root@rock3a:~# apt-get install broadcom-wifibt-firmware root@rock3a:~# apt-get install intel-wifibt-firmware
To test the WIFI performance, we need to follow the steps:
- Switch to super user mode
$ sudo su
- Open the WIFI
$ nmcli r wifi on
- Scan WIFI
$ nmcli dev wifi
- Connect to WIFI network
$ nmcli dev wifi connect "wifi_name" password "wifi_password"
- Test WIFI perpormance by tool iperf3.
Bluetooth
See Supported WiFi Cards list to get tested wireless modules.
Radxa APT includes broadcom-wifibt-firmware package for Broadcom wireless modules and intel-wifibt-firmware package for Intel wireless modules. Take a look at your module and download the corresponding packages.
For example:
root@rock3a:~# apt-get update root@rock3a:~# apt-get install broadcom-wifibt-firmware root@rock3a:~# apt-get install intel-wifibt-firmware
Below is the example of testing Broadcom modules bluetooth.
- Check Bluetooth service.
root@rock3a:~# systemctl status bluetooth
- Run Bluetooth service if the Bluetooth service is inactive.
root@rock3a:~# systemctl start bluetooth
- Check Bluetooth device.
root@rock3a:~# hciconfig hci0: Type: Primary Bus: UART BD Address: 10:2C:6B:49:D5:53 ACL MTU: 1021:8 SCO MTU: 64:1 UP RUNNING RX bytes:850 acl:0 sco:0 events:58 errors:0 TX bytes:2814 acl:0 sco:0 commands:58 errors:0
- Example: Connect to Bluetooth Speaker.
- Install pulseaudio packages.
root@rock3a:~# apt-get install -y pulseaudio-module-bluetooth pulseaudio
- Run pulseaudio.
root@rock3a:~# pulseaudio --start
- Connect using bluetoothctl.
root@rock3a:~# bluetoothctl [bluetooth]# default-agent [bluetooth]# power on [bluetooth]# scan on [bluetooth]# trust 41:42:1A:8D:A9:65 #BT-280 [bluetooth]# pair 41:42:1A:8D:A9:65 [bluetooth]# connect 41:42:1A:8D:A9:65
- Play songs and enjoy it.
General purpose input-output (GPIO)
- ROCK 3 A has one 40-pin expansion header. To control them, see ROCK 3 A GPIO .
Common Hardware Interfaces, I2C, PWM, SPI, UART, CAN, etc
The ROCK 3 system images use configuration file /boot/uEnv.txt.
Warning: Remember there is only one line including item "overlays=" in file /boot/uEnv.txt.
To enable I2C, PWM, SPI, UART, CAN, etc, please see RK3566/RK3568 Available Overlay (ROCK 3 A, ROCK 3 B, Radxa CM3) part of Device Tree Overlays.
Check DDR size
ROCK 3 has several different DDR sizes, such as 2G, 4G, 8G, etc. Here it is 8G.
$ free -h total used free shared buff/cache available Mem: 7.4Gi 72Mi 7.1Gi 16Mi 182Mi 7.2Gi Swap: 0B 0B 0B
Storage device
- eMMC: /dev/mmcblk0
- uSD Card: /dev/mmcblk1
- NVME M.2 SDD: /dev/nvme0n1
Test RTC Device
Firstly, plug in RTC battery and power on.Check the rtc device:
root@rock3a:~# dmesg | grep rtc [ 0.749597] rk808-rtc rk808-rtc: registered as rtc0 [ 0.751404] rk808-rtc rk808-rtc: setting system clock to 2017-08-04 09:00:02 UTC (1501837202)
Secondly, use the following commands to set the system time and synchronize it to rtc.
root@rock3a:~# date -s "2021-08-17 20:00:00" root@rock3a:~# hwclock -w root@rock3a:~# hwclock -r 2021-08-17 20:00:04.745124+00:00 root@rock3a:~# poweroff
and then disconnect the power supply
Finally, 10 minutes later we power on ROCK 3 A via Type-C Port and check the rtc clock.
root@rock3a:~# hwclock -r 2021-08-17 20:10:14.745124+00:00
We see that rtc runs about 10 minutes also. That's good.
Test Audio Player
Download a wav audio file, and use the command to test the HP player.
$ amixer -c 1 cset numid=1 3 numid=1,iface=MIXER,name='Playback Path' ; type=ENUMERATED,access=rw------,values=1,items=11 ; Item #0 'OFF' ; Item #1 'RCV' ; Item #2 'SPK' ; Item #3 'HP' ; Item #4 'HP_NO_MIC' ; Item #5 'BT' ; Item #6 'SPK_HP' ; Item #7 'RING_SPK' ; Item #8 'RING_HP' ; Item #9 'RING_HP_NO_MIC' ; Item #10 'RING_SPK_HP' : values=3 $ aplay -D plughw:1,0 test.wav Playing WAVE 'test.wav' : Signed 16 bit Little Endian, Rate 44100 Hz, Stereo
To test the Mic recording, please follow:
$ amixer -c 1 cset numid=2 1 $ arecord -Dhw:1,0 -d 10 -f cd -r 44100 -c 2 -t wav ./mic_test.wav #this is a record command Recording WAVE './mic_test.wav' : Signed 16 bit Little Endian, Rate 44100 Hz, Stereo $ aplay -D plughw:1,0 mic_test.wav
Test USB Host
Plug in the U dish and use the command by serial console.
$ dmesg | tail [ 133.773558] usb 2-1: SerialNumber: CCYYB18M1CFKO4H4 [ 133.774332] usb-storage 2-1:1.0: USB Mass Storage device detected [ 133.774657] scsi host0: usb-storage 2-1:1.0 [ 134.841096] scsi 0:0:0:0: Direct-Access aigo U350 1100 PQ: 0 ANSI: 6 [ 134.846394] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] 30720000 512-byte logical blocks: (15.7 GB/14.6 GiB) [ 134.847554] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Write Protect is off [ 134.847635] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Mode Sense: 43 00 00 00 [ 134.848824] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Write cache: enabled, read cache: enabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA [ 134.858173] sda: sda1 [ 134.861161] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Attached SCSI removable disk
$ sudo mount /dev/sda1 /mnt $ lsblk root@linaro-alip:~# lsblk NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT sda 8:0 1 14.7G 0 disk └─sda1 8:1 1 14.7G 0 part /mnt
If /dev/sda1 is successfully mounted, this usb host is working properly.
Test fan on / off
Please execute with root permission
echo 0 > /sys/class/pwm/pwmchip0/export echo 10000 > /sys/class/pwm/pwmchip0/pwm0/period echo 5000 > /sys/class/pwm/pwmchip0/pwm0/duty_cycle echo normal > /sys/class/pwm/pwmchip0/pwm0/polarity echo 1 > /sys/class/pwm/pwmchip0/pwm0/enable // on echo 0 > /sys/class/pwm/pwmchip0/pwm0/enable // off
Ethernet
3A
3B
CM3 IO
Changelogs
2021.11.15
rock3a_debian_buster_xfce4_arm64_20211113_0127-gpt.img
- Kernel version: 4.19.193-16-rockchip-g0cca7bdf9cdb
- U-Boot version: 2017.09-gf95bc56c33d-210525
- Support Intel Wireless 3165 / 7265 modules
- Support boot.scr and dt overlays
2021.09.15
rock3a_debian_buster_xfce4_arm64_20210914_0334-gpt.img
- Kernel version: 4.19.193-10-rockchip-g152e34a538b4
- Package broadcom-wifibt-firmware version: 1.3
- Package rockchip-overlay version: 2.9
- Package rtl8723be-firmware version: 0.1
2021.08.24
rock3a_debian_buster_xfce4_arm64_20210824_0136-gpt.img
- Kernel version: 4.19.193-2-rockchip-g7cf7399ddb5c
- U-Boot version: 2017.09-gbd2fa07970e-210525