Raspberry Pi Fedora Remix Installation
Revision as of 00:01, 22 May 2013 by Chris Tyler (talk | contribs) (→SD Card Installation Using the Installer)
SD Card Installation Using the Installer
The easiest way to install the Remix is to use the installer program.
For the most up to date information on using the Installer, please visit the Fedora ARM Installer Wiki Page
Needed:
- A computer with at least 5 GB of free disk space, running one of these operating systems:
- Fedora
- Windows Vista or Windows 7
- Other Linux
- An SD or SDHC card, with a capacity of 2GB or more. (Good-quality class 4 cards usually work well). Do not use a MicroSD card with an adapter -- it will not be recognized by the Raspberry Pi.
- An SD/SDHC card writer, either built in to the computer or connected to a USB port.
- An Internet connection.
Steps:
- Download the installer:
- On a Fedora 18 (or higher) system:
yum install fedora-arm-installer
- For other operating systems, see the Fedora ARM Installer wiki page.
- On a Fedora 18 (or higher) system:
- Run the installer.
- Click the refresh (circle-arrow) button beside the Download list to retrieve a list of available images.
- Select the image you wish to install ("Raspberry Pi Fedora Remix 14") -- or, if you have already downloaded the image file, browse to that file's location.
- Click the refresh (circle-arrow) button beside the Device list to retrieve a list of possible target devices for the installation.
- Select the device on which you wish to install the image (WARNING: all data on this device will be deleted! - be sure you have selected the correct device).
- Click "Install".
- Wait until the program states that the installation is complete before removing the card.
SD Card Installation Using the dd Command
The image can also be installed using the Unix/Linux dd command.
Needed:
- A computer with at least 5 GB of free disk space, running some form of Unix or Linux.
- An SD or SDHC card, with a capacity of 2GB or more. (Good-quality class 4 cards usually work well). Do not use a MicroSD card with an adapter -- it will not be recognized by the Raspberry Pi.
- An SD/SDHC card writer, either built in to the computer or connected to a USB port.
- An Internet connection.
Steps:
- Download the image - see the Downloads page on the Raspberry Pi site.
- Decompress the image with a Zip-compatible program such as "unzip" (Linux) or WinZip (Windows).
- Insert your SD/SDHC card into the card reader, and attach to the computer if necessary.
- Identify the device node of the SD card (this will be something like
/dev/sdc
or/dev/mmcblk0
).- Do not use a partition device node (for example: use
/dev/sdc
or/dev/mmcblk0
, not/dev/sdc1
or/dev/mmcblk0p1
). - An easy way to identify the card is to list the device nodes (
ls -l /dev/sd* /dev/mmcblk*
) before and after inserting the SD card. Device nodes that that appear when the card is inserted correspond to the card.
- Do not use a partition device node (for example: use
- Ensure that the device is unmounted.
- Copy the image file to the card:
dd if=NameOfImageFile of=/dev/DeviceNode
- Ensure that the image is fully written onto the card:
sync
- Remove the card.