60
edits
(update manjaro-arm) |
(Installation) |
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=Supported Devices= | =Supported Devices= | ||
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| Rock || Pi 4B, Pro 64 | | Rock || Pi 4B, Pro 64 | ||
|} | |} | ||
=Installation= | |||
===Downloading=== | |||
You can find installation images in the downloads section of the [https://manjaro.org/download/#ARM] Manjaro website or at [https://osdn.net/projects/manjaro-arm/ OSDN] | |||
Find the image that matches your target device and desired edition. | |||
===Writing the Installation Media=== | |||
The images are in a .xz file. These files can be burned directly to an SD card with Etcher or with dd directly. | |||
To manually install to your SD card with dd: | |||
Extract the image. | |||
unxz Manjaro-ARM-[Edition]-[Device]-[Version].xz | |||
Get it on the SD card | |||
sudo dd if=Manjaro-ARM-[Edition]-[Device]-[Version].img of=/dev/[device] bs=4M | |||
Where ''[device]'' is your SD card's device, as seen by lsblk. Usually mmcblk0 or sdb. | |||
===Cleanup and First Boot=== | |||
Once you have the image on the SDCard, you should be able to put the card into your device and plug it in. If everything worked correctly, it should boot to the OEM setup. Here you define your username, passwords locales etc. Once that is done, the script will clean up after itself, resize the partition and reboot the device. After that reboot, it should boot to the Operating System Depending on the edition you have installed, this could be a simple TTY login or a graphical desktop environment. | |||
===Resizing the partitions=== | |||
Since 18.09 this is now done automatically. The device will boot to OEM setup, which will handle the resizing, and then reboot before the login screen would appear. When it's booted to the login screen, the filesystem has been resized to fill out the remaining space on the SD card. | |||
===Login=== | |||
Login depends on what you set up during the OEM setup. | |||
There are 1 users by default on the image. root. | |||
And by default it has no password and autologin enabled. | |||
This gets changed when the OEM script is run, to disable the autologin and set the password defined during the setup. | |||
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=== | ===Troubleshooting=== | ||
=====Blocked update workaround===== | =====Blocked update workaround===== | ||
There are device-dependent workarounds if you experience an error similar to: | |||
<pre> | |||
error: failed to prepare transaction (conflicting dependencies) | |||
:: brcm-patchram-plus and pi-bluetooth are in conflict | |||
</pre> | |||
For the '''Pi 3B''': | |||
sudo systemctl disable brcm43438.service | sudo systemctl disable brcm43438.service | ||
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sudo systemctl enable attach-bluetooth-pi3.service | sudo systemctl enable attach-bluetooth-pi3.service | ||
For the '''Pi 3B+''': | |||
sudo systemctl disable brcm43438.service | sudo systemctl disable brcm43438.service | ||
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sudo systemctl enable attach-bluetooth.service | sudo systemctl enable attach-bluetooth.service | ||
For the '''Pi 4B''': | |||
sudo systemctl disable brcm43438.service | sudo systemctl disable brcm43438.service | ||
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sudo systemctl enable attach-bluetooth.service | sudo systemctl enable attach-bluetooth.service | ||
For the '''Pi 400''': | |||
sudo systemctl disable brcm43438.service | sudo systemctl disable brcm43438.service | ||
sudo pacman -S -dd brcm-patchram-plus-pi400 firmware-raspberrypi | sudo pacman -S -dd brcm-patchram-plus-pi400 firmware-raspberrypi | ||
sudo systemctl enable attach-bluetooth-pi400.service | sudo systemctl enable attach-bluetooth-pi400.service | ||
=Tips and Tricks= | =Tips and Tricks= | ||