TS-4900 Yocto getting started: Difference between revisions

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To write this to an SD card, first partition the SD card to have one large ext3 partition.  See the guide [[#Partition i.MX6 SD cards|here]] for more information.  Once it is formatted, extract this tar with:
To write this to an SD card, first partition the SD card to have one large ext3 partition.  Most SD cards include one MBR partition by default.  Cards can also be partitioned with fdisk, cfdisk, or the graphical gparted utility. This should be an MBR partition, not GPT.  Once it is partitioned, format the SD and extract this tar with:
<source lang=bash>
<source lang=bash>
# Assuming your SD card is /dev/sdc with one partition
# Assuming your SD card is /dev/sdc with one partition

Revision as of 16:53, 3 August 2018

Yocto itself is a set of scripts and tools used to build a custom Distribution. In our default images we try to include all the common utilities requested by users. Rebuilding Yocto should not be necessary for many users, but is possible if needed. Once installed the default user is "root" with no password.

Our Yocto rootfs is available here:

Yocto Download Links
Yocto Image Download Link
ts-x11-image Download

To write this to an SD card, first partition the SD card to have one large ext3 partition. Most SD cards include one MBR partition by default. Cards can also be partitioned with fdisk, cfdisk, or the graphical gparted utility. This should be an MBR partition, not GPT. Once it is partitioned, format the SD and extract this tar with:

# Assuming your SD card is /dev/sdc with one partition
mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdc1
mkdir /mnt/sd/
sudo mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt/sd/
sudo tar --numeric-owner -jxf ts-x11-image-tsimx6-latest.rootfs.tar.bz2 -C /mnt/sd
sudo umount /mnt/sd
sync
Note: The ext4 filesystem can be used instead of ext3, but it may require additional options. U-Boot does not support the 64bit addressing added as the default behavior in recent revisions of mkfs.ext4. If using e2fsprogs 1.43 or newer, the options "-O ^64bit,^metadata_csum" must be used with ext4 for proper compatibility. Older versions of e2fsprogs do not need these options passed nor are they needed for ext3.

To rewrite the eMMC, boot to the SD card. You cannot rewrite the eMMC while it is mounted elsewhere, or used to currently boot the system. Once booted to the SD, run:

mkfs.ext3 /dev/mmcblk2p1
mkdir /mnt/emmc
mount /dev/mmcblk2p1 /mnt/emmc
wget -qO- ftp://ftp.embeddedarm.com/ts-socket-macrocontrollers/\
ts-4900-linux/distributions/yocto/morty/ts-x11-image-tsimx6-\
latest.rootfs.tar.bz2 | tar --numeric-owner xj -C /mnt/emmc/
umount /mnt/emmc
sync

The same commands can be used to write SATA by substituting /dev/mmcblk2p1 with /dev/sda1.