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RockpiN10/dev/Debian

< RockpiN10‎ | dev
Revision as of 04:31, 9 April 2021 by Stephen (Talk | contribs)

    ROCK Pi N10 >  Development >  Build Debian

Rockchip Debian SDK

Below is the instructions of how to build image for ROCK Pi N10 on a HOST PC.

Get the source code

You need Git to get multiple git repositories to build the image.

Install Git if you don't have it.

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install git

Clone the source code

git clone -b rk3399pro https://github.com/radxa/rockchip-bsp.git
cd rockchip-bsp
git submodule init
git submodule update

You will get

build  kernel  README.md  rkbin  rootfs  u-boot

Directories usage introductions:

  • build:
    • Some script files and configuration files for building u-boot, kernel and rootfs.
  • kernel:
    • kernel source code, current version is 4.4.167.
  • rkbin:
    • Prebuilt Rockchip binaries, include first stage loader and ATF(Arm Trustzone Firmware).
  • rootfs:
    • Bootstrap a Debian based rootfs, support architechture armhf and arm64, support Debian Jessie and Stretch.
  • u-boot:
    • u-boot as the second stage bootloader

Update the source code

cd rockchip-bsp
git checkout rk3399pro
git fetch origin
git rebase origin/rk3399pro
git submodule update

Install toolchain from Linaro

wget https://releases.linaro.org/components/toolchain/binaries/7.3-2018.05/aarch64-linux-gnu/gcc-linaro-7.3.1-2018.05-x86_64_aarch64-linux-gnu.tar.xz
sudo tar xvf gcc-linaro-7.3.1-2018.05-x86_64_aarch64-linux-gnu.tar.xz  -C /usr/local/
export CROSS_COMPILE=/usr/local/gcc-linaro-7.3.1-2018.05-x86_64_aarch64-linux-gnu/bin/aarch64-linux-gnu-
export PATH=/usr/local/gcc-linaro-7.3.1-2018.05-x86_64_aarch64-linux-gnu/bin:$PATH

Check if Linaro toolchain is the default choice:

which aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc
/usr/local/gcc-linaro-7.3.1-2018.05-x86_64_aarch64-linux-gnu/bin/aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc

Install other build tools

sudo apt-get install gcc-aarch64-linux-gnu device-tree-compiler libncurses5 libncurses5-dev build-essential libssl-dev mtools
sudo apt-get install bc python dosfstools

Build u-boot

Need to checkout branch to rk3399-pie-gms-express-baseline.

Build u-boot with default rk3399pro_defconfig.

./build/mk-uboot.sh rockpin10     #For ROCK Pi N10

The generated images will be copied to out/u-boot folder

ls out/u-boot/
idbloader.img  rk3399pro_loader_v1.20.115.bin rk3399pro_npu_loader_v1.02.102.bin trust.img  uboot.img

Build kernel

Need to checkout branch to rk3399pro-toybrick-stable.

Build kernel with default rockchip_linux_defconfig.

./build/mk-kernel.sh rockpin10    #For ROCK Pi N10
Change kernel config(optional)

Optionally, if you want to change the default kernel config

cd kernel
export ARCH=arm64
export CROSS_COMPILE=aarch64-linux-gnu-
make rockchip_linux_defconfig
make menuconfig
cd ..
./build/mk-kernel.sh rockpin10    #For ROCK Pi N10

You will get the kernel image and dtb file

ls out/kernel/
Image  rk3399pro-rockpi-n10-linux.dtb

Make rootfs image

Check out the rootfs source. The repository is https://github.com/radxa/rk-rootfs-build.git and the branch is debian.

To build 32bit rootfs:

export ARCH=armhf

To build 64bit rootfs:

export ARCH=arm64

Building a base debian system by ubuntu-build-service from linaro.

cd rootfs
sudo apt-get install binfmt-support qemu-user-static cpio gdisk
sudo dpkg -i ubuntu-build-service/packages/*        # ignore the broken dependencies, we will fix it next step
sudo apt-get install -f
RELEASE=buster TARGET=desktop ARCH=arm64 ./mk-base-debian.sh

This will bootstrap a Debian Buster image, you will get a rootfs tarball named linaro-buster-alip-xxxx.tar.gz.

Building the rk-debian rootfs.

RELEASE=buster ARCH=arm64 ./mk-rootfs.sh

Creating the ext4 image(linaro-rootfs.img):

./mk-image.sh

Combine everything into one image

build/mk-image.sh -c rk3399pro -t system -r rootfs/linaro-rootfs.img

This will combine u-boot, kernel and rootfs into one image and generate GPT partition table. Output is

out/system.img

Flash the image


FAQs

== 1.I have built one ROCK Pi N10 system image using rockchip-bsp SDK. With an USB to TTL serial cable connected with UART2 pins (pin#10, pin#8, ping#6 on colorful 40-PIN Header) on ROCK Pi N10, the last one line of system logs is shown as follows.

[    1.072493] bootconsole [uart0] disabled

In fact the system starts up. If your ROCK Pi N10 system supports Ethernet/WiFi and SSH, you can access ROCK Pi N10 via SSH.

If you read the kernel command line of system log, you will find that the default console is ttyS2 (1500000n8). But due to uart2 is disabled by default in file rk3399pro-rockpi-n10-linux.dts, there will be no more system logs on the screen.

To enable console ttyS2, you need to enable uart2 node. Add the following lines at the end of file k3399pro-rockpi-n10-linux.dts.

&uart2 {
    status = "okay";
};

Troubleshooting

Check ROCK Pi N10 FAQs first, if it doesn't help, start a new post on the forum https://forum.radxa.com/c/rockpiN10.