Date: Mon, 1 Jan 2024 04:11:17 -0800 From: "Fred G. Finster" <fred@thegalacticzoo.com> To: freebsd-arm@freebsd.org Subject: memstick image for FreeBSD.org/where. I have built my own image using GhostBSD.org sources Message-ID: <33b5f348-4cf1-f688-8b02-7d96498b66ee@thegalacticzoo.com>
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> */From:/* John Kennedy <warlock_at_phouka.net> > */Date:/* Sun, 31 Dec 2023 19:37:33 UTC > On Fri, Dec 29, 2023 at 06:05:25PM +0100, Jesper Schmitz Mouridsen wrote: > > On 29.12.2023 05.55, ykla wrote: > > > Hi, When will FreeBSD support RPI5 > > https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/raspberry-pi-5-status.91406/ > > Having ordered my RPI5 ~11/28, I think it has a shipping guesstimate in late > Jan/early Feb. It looks like someone is working on uboot, which FreeBSD seems > to favor (I think the argument I retained was "it works for lots of things, > piggyback on those efforts rather than have some RPI-unique thing). Then once > you start getting things properly enumerated to where you can load the kernel, > then you work on the kernel drivers. > > RPI seems to favor linux support first, and I suspect that there is a fair > amount of GPL issues that you might have to worry about creeping into the BSD > kernel. So not as simple as reimplement from what you see in linux. I know > there are a lot of strong opinions on video drivers, for example, but for that > to even ben an option it'd have to be something that could be a module that > could be packaged outside of the BSD base. I only bring that up because I've > had garbage luck trying to get serial consoles to work properly on RPIs when > they're competing for things like cooling fans and such, so graphics console > is nice, even if it is just very basic. > > How have people been chicken-n-egging the initial setup? I know there have > been uboot issues in the past. Seems like you basically have to build memstick > style images and see if they boot. Is there a bhyve/QEMU setup that is a > generic test setup that is used? > And attached to a Pi 400 works like any i7 CPU? ( a Ugreen case for a 10Gbps NVMe drive 2280 size Fred Finster, [1/1/24 3:11 AM] like an i3+ maybe. I just looking to build , create an inexpensive method to have a real FreeBSD based, desktop computer with keyboard and mouse connected to the HDMI input on your 1920x1080 TV Monitor screen with sound speakers http://ghostbsdarm64.hopto.org/packages/ http://ghostbsdarm64.hopto.org/packages/gh14_jan01_arm64_create_disk.tar.xz Here is a compressed file to download. There is a README.txt file inside there. use command to uncompress tar xvzf gh14_jan01* you can install X and run XFCE 4.18 with a simple pkg install xorg xfce xfce4-goodies lightdm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ https://freebsd.org/where https://download.freebsd.org/releases/ISO-IMAGES/14.0/ https://download.freebsd.org/releases/ISO-IMAGES/14.0/ https://download.freebsd.org/releases/ISO-IMAGES/14.0/FreeBSD-14.0-RELEASE-arm64-aarch64-RPI.img.xz Look GhostBSD is downstream from FreeBSD. I have built from sources github.com/ghostbsd/ghostbsd-src and github.com/ghostbsd/ghostbsd-ports source code. I have one image to burn into a USB flash drive and boot up. From that image you can transfer to a USB SSD drive using ZFS boot on root technology. i am interested to learn how much of the Raspi4B, 400 source code will just work on the Raspberry Pi 5 without changes, and how much is quite different from RPI 1 one chip interfaces. -- Fred Finster GhostBSD-Arm64.blogspot.com t.me/ghostbsd Telegram Channel GhostBSD.org website
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