Difference between revisions of "Quartz64 Software Releases"

From PINE64
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(swapped with table)
(22 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Under construction}}
This page contains a list of all available operating systems for the [[Quartz64]] in alphabetical order, as well as links to other resources.


== Software releases ==
== Software releases ==


{{warning|You are strongly encouraged to procure a 3.3V UART serial adapter capable of running at 1.5 mbauds, such as [https://pine64.com/product/serial-console-woodpecker-edition/ the woodpecker] if you want to use a Quartz64, as some images' u-boot may have no video output on this chip.}}
{{warning|You are strongly encouraged to procure a 3.3V UART serial adapter capable of running at 1.5 mbauds, such as [https://pine64.com/product/serial-console-woodpecker-edition/ the Woodpecker] if you want to use a Quartz64, as some images' U-Boot may have no video output on this chip.}}


{{note|'''Note:''' OS images are provided by the community, not by PINE64. Most community projects currently aim at getting mainline Linux running on the board, not some vendor provided kernel that will never be receiving updates. A mainline-first approach allows for the boards to continue receiving important updates, such as security updates, for years to come, as well as have higher quality code in the kernel as it underwent independent review, but does mean that not all aspects of the hardware work right out of the gate.}}
{{note|'''Note:''' The images are provided by the community, not by PINE64. Most community projects currently aim at getting mainline Linux running on the board, not some vendor provided kernel that will never be receiving updates. A mainline-first approach allows for the boards to continue receiving important updates, such as security updates, for years to come, as well as have higher quality code in the kernel as it underwent independent review, but does mean that not all aspects of the hardware work right out of the gate.}}
 
=== Arch Linux ARM (Unofficial) ===
 
See [[Quartz64 Installing Arch Linux ARM]] for detailed instructions.


=== Armbian ===
=== Armbian ===
Line 47: Line 43:


=== Manjaro ARM ===
=== Manjaro ARM ===
[[File:Manjaro.png|right|100px]]
[[File:Manjaro-logo.svg|right|100px]]


Manjaro ARM is a user friendly rolling release distribution, based on Arch Linux ARM.
'''Manjaro ARM''' is a user friendly rolling release distribution, based on Arch Linux ARM.
 
Download:
 
* Quartz64 Model A: [https://github.com/manjaro-arm/quartz64-a-images/releases Image on GitHub]
* Quartz64 Model B: [https://github.com/manjaro-arm/quartz64-b-images/releases Image on GitHub]
 
{| class="wikitable"
!colspan="2" style="background: #a7d7f9;"| Default credentials
|-
! SSH
| <code>oem/oem</code>
|}


* [https://github.com/manjaro-arm/quartz64-a-images/releases Images for Model A on GitHub]
Notes:
* [https://github.com/manjaro-arm/quartz64-b-images/releases Images for Model B on GitHub]


Most of the hardware support is already available in the mainline kernel. If some devices doesn't work it is possible to swap to the linux-quartz64 kernel <code>pacman -S linux-quartz64</code>.
Most of the hardware support is already available in the mainline kernel. If some devices doesn't work it is possible to swap to the linux-quartz64 kernel <code>pacman -S linux-quartz64</code>.
Line 63: Line 70:
* XFCE
* XFCE
as well as minimal image without desktop.
as well as minimal image without desktop.
=== NetBSD ===
'''NetBSD''' is a free, fast, secure, and highly portable Unix-like Open Source operating system. It relies upon the UEFI support in Tianocore. Before NetBSD 10 is released, the latest version of NetBSD-current should be used.
Download:
* [http://nycdn.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD-daily/HEAD/ NetBSD daily builds top level] from inside here, navigate to a date, and inside the images/ subdirectory are installable images. Use the one called "NetBSD-<version>-evbarm-aarch64-install.img.gz".
Notes:
* This image can be written to a supported device, such as the eMMC interface, any USB storage device, NVMe, and PCIe AHCI SATA are all supported with builds after 2022-01-15.
* Currently this can not be shared with the EDK2 port, ie, microSD for EDK2 and some other media for NetBSD.


=== pgwipeout's Quartz64 CI ===
=== pgwipeout's Quartz64 CI ===
Line 68: Line 86:
pgwipeout provides continuously rebuilt set of images for Quartz64 devices which includes a Debian installer and a buildroot rescue environment. It is aimed at advanced users who generally know their way around a Linux system, and as a baseline for whether something is working or not. Works on both SD cards and eMMC, uses pgwipeout's patched kernel. Kernels aren't auto-updated on the installed system, so the user manually has to do this by mounting the actual correct boot partition.
pgwipeout provides continuously rebuilt set of images for Quartz64 devices which includes a Debian installer and a buildroot rescue environment. It is aimed at advanced users who generally know their way around a Linux system, and as a baseline for whether something is working or not. Works on both SD cards and eMMC, uses pgwipeout's patched kernel. Kernels aren't auto-updated on the installed system, so the user manually has to do this by mounting the actual correct boot partition.


'''Download:''' https://gitlab.com/pgwipeout/quartz64_ci/-/pipelines (Click the three dots on the right, download the merge-job archive.)
Download:
* https://gitlab.com/pgwipeout/quartz64_ci/-/pipelines (Click the three dots on the right, download the merge-job archive.)
 
Notes:


For Quartz64 Model A, flash ''rk3566-quartz64-a.dtb.img.xz''. On Linux, you can for example do this as follows, assuming your target device is ''/dev/sdX'':
For Quartz64 Model A, flash ''rk3566-quartz64-a.dtb.img.xz''. On Linux, you can for example do this as follows, assuming your target device is ''/dev/sdX'':
Line 76: Line 97:
For Quartz64 Model B, use ''rk3566-quartz64-b.dtb.img.xz'' instead.
For Quartz64 Model B, use ''rk3566-quartz64-b.dtb.img.xz'' instead.


For line by line instructions to boot Quartz64 CI on a microSD card and use it to install Debian onto an eMMC follow these instructions https://wiki.pine64.org/wiki/Installing_Debian_on_the_Quartz64
For line by line instructions to boot Quartz64 CI on a microSD card and use it to install Debian onto an eMMC follow these instructions [[Quartz64 Installing Debian]]


=== Plebian ===
=== Plebian ===
Line 84: Line 105:
* [https://github.com/Plebian-Linux/quartz64-images/releases Download Release Images]
* [https://github.com/Plebian-Linux/quartz64-images/releases Download Release Images]
* [https://github.com/Plebian-Linux/quartz64-images/blob/main/RUNNING.md Read The Instructions]
* [https://github.com/Plebian-Linux/quartz64-images/blob/main/RUNNING.md Read The Instructions]
* [https://plebian.org/ Visit plebian.org to learn more]


To flash, run (replace ''/dev/sdX'' with your target block device):
To flash, run (replace ''/dev/sdX'' with your target block device):
Line 95: Line 117:
* NetworkManager is used instead of Debian's interfaces config to be more flexible with what adapters are plugged in and working
* NetworkManager is used instead of Debian's interfaces config to be more flexible with what adapters are plugged in and working
* An sshd is started on port 22 with freshly generated keys
* An sshd is started on port 22 with freshly generated keys
=== NetBSD ===
NetBSD relies upon the UEFI support in Tianocore.  Before NetBSD 10 is released, the latest version of NetBSD-current should be used:
* [http://nycdn.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD-daily/HEAD/ NetBSD daily builds top level] from inside here, navigate to a date, and inside the images/ subdirectory are installable images. Use the one called "NetBSD-<version>-evbarm-aarch64-install.img.gz".  This image can be written to a supported device, such as the eMMC interface, any USB storage device, NVMe, and PCIe AHCI SATA are all supported with builds after 2022-01-15.
* Currently this can not be shared with the EDK2 port, ie, microSD for EDK2 and some other media for NetBSD.


=== Tianocore EDK II port by jmcneill ===
=== Tianocore EDK II port by jmcneill ===
Line 108: Line 122:
This (as of 2021-12-30) is a work in progress to enable UEFI enabled systems, and is able to bring up SD, eMMC, USB, PCIe with SATA and NVMe, HDMI, thermal sensors, TRNG, as well as general Cortex A-55 features.  Known to work with NetBSD -current, and the ESXi Arm fling version 1.8.
This (as of 2021-12-30) is a work in progress to enable UEFI enabled systems, and is able to bring up SD, eMMC, USB, PCIe with SATA and NVMe, HDMI, thermal sensors, TRNG, as well as general Cortex A-55 features.  Known to work with NetBSD -current, and the ESXi Arm fling version 1.8.


Download:
* [https://github.com/jaredmcneill/quartz64_uefi jmcneill's Quartz64 UEFI Github]
* [https://github.com/jaredmcneill/quartz64_uefi jmcneill's Quartz64 UEFI Github]


The sdcard image should be written to an microSD card and installed. Currently, using this card also for the OS may be problematic.
Notes:
* The microSD card image should be written to an microSD card and installed. Currently, using the same card for the operating system as well may be problematic.


== BSP Linux SDK ==
== BSP Linux SDK ==


The '''BSP Linux SDK ver 4.19 for Quartz64 Model A SBC'''.
The '''BSP Linux SDK ver 4.19'' for the Quartz64 Model A.


Download:
Download:
* [http://files.pine64.org/SDK/Quartz64/QUARTZ64-model-A_BSP%20Linux.tar.gz Direct download from pine64.org] (32.67GB, MD5 of the TAR-GZip file ''24554419aec29700add97167a3a4c9ed'')
* [http://files.pine64.org/SDK/Quartz64/QUARTZ64-model-A_BSP%20Linux.tar.gz Direct download] from ''pine64.org'' (32.67GB, MD5 of the TAR-GZip file ''24554419aec29700add97167a3a4c9ed'')


== Android SDK ==
== Android SDK ==


=== Android 11 SDK for Quartz64 Model A SBC ===
=== Android 11 SDK ===
* [http://files.pine64.org/SDK/Quartz64/QUARTZ64_SDK_android11.tar.gz Direct Download from pine64.org]
 
** MD5 (TAR-GZip file): 77c2ff57ea3372fb04da7fb49e17d12b
The '''Android 11 SDK''' for the Quartz64 Model A SBC.
** File Size: 79.00GB
 
** Just the boot blobs (<1MB): [[File:Rk35-blobs.tar.gz]]
Download:
* [http://files.pine64.org/SDK/Quartz64/QUARTZ64_SDK_android11.tar.gz Direct download] from ''pine64.org'' (79.00GB, MD5 of the TAR-GZip file ''77c2ff57ea3372fb04da7fb49e17d12b'')
* Just the boot blobs (<1MB): [[File:Rk35-blobs.tar.gz]]


=== Android 11 Production Test Build for Quartz64 model A SBC ===
=== Android 11 Production Test Builds  ===


==== Android 11 Stock ====
==== Android 11 Stock ====
The '''Android 11 Stock''' images for eMMC boot. This is test build that was used during product testing.
The '''Android 11 Stock''' images for eMMC boot for the Quartz64 Model A. This is test build that was used during product testing.


Download:
Download:
Line 143: Line 161:


==== Android 11 Production Test Build ====
==== Android 11 Production Test Build ====
The '''Android 11 Production Test Build''' for the Quartz64 model A SBC for eMMC boot using ROCKChip tools method. This is a test build that was used during product testing.
The '''Android 11 Production Test Build''' for the Quartz64 model A for eMMC boot using ROCKChip tools method. This is a test build that was used during product testing.


Download:
Download:
Line 155: Line 173:


==== Android 11 eink SDK ====
==== Android 11 eink SDK ====
This the '''Android 11 eink SDK''' build for 10.3" e-ink panels on the Quartz64 model A SBC.  
This the '''Android 11 eink SDK''' build for 10.3" e-ink panels on the Quartz64 Model A.  


Download:
Download:
* [http://files.pine64.org/SDK/Quartz64/QUARTZ64-model-A_eink.android11_SDK.tar.gz Direct download] from ''pine64.org'' (72.88GB, MD5 of the TAR-GZip file ''293a550584298de4fb95ceae18103672'', build 20210604)
* [http://files.pine64.org/SDK/Quartz64/QUARTZ64-model-A_eink.android11_SDK.tar.gz Direct download] from ''pine64.org'' (72.88GB, MD5 of the TAR-GZip file ''293a550584298de4fb95ceae18103672'', build 20210604)
* Just the boot blobs (<1MB): [[File:Rk35-blobs.tar.gz]]
* Just the boot blobs (<1MB): [[File:Rk35-blobs.tar.gz]]
[[Category:Quartz64]]

Revision as of 09:20, 19 May 2023

This page contains a list of all available operating systems for the Quartz64 in alphabetical order, as well as links to other resources.

Software releases

Warning: You are strongly encouraged to procure a 3.3V UART serial adapter capable of running at 1.5 mbauds, such as the Woodpecker if you want to use a Quartz64, as some images' U-Boot may have no video output on this chip.
Note: The images are provided by the community, not by PINE64. Most community projects currently aim at getting mainline Linux running on the board, not some vendor provided kernel that will never be receiving updates. A mainline-first approach allows for the boards to continue receiving important updates, such as security updates, for years to come, as well as have higher quality code in the kernel as it underwent independent review, but does mean that not all aspects of the hardware work right out of the gate.

Armbian

Armbian.png

Armbian is a base operating system platform for single board computers

  • Lightweight Debian or Ubuntu based Linux distribution specialized for ARM development boards
  • Each system is compiled, assembled and optimized by Armbian Build Tools
  • It has powerful build and software development tools to make custom builds

Download:

Note: This image appears to have issues detecting more than 2GB of RAM.It is strongly recommended to use a different distribution.

Notes:

DietPi

Dietpi.png

DietPi is a lightweight, yet easy to setup and feature-rich Linux distribution, based on Debian. To find out more about DietPi, please visit the official documentation. Discuss the Quartz64 build(s) on the PINE64 forum thread.

Download:

Default credentials
Root user root/dietpi

Manjaro ARM

Error creating thumbnail: File missing

Manjaro ARM is a user friendly rolling release distribution, based on Arch Linux ARM.

Download:

Default credentials
SSH oem/oem

Notes:

Most of the hardware support is already available in the mainline kernel. If some devices doesn't work it is possible to swap to the linux-quartz64 kernel pacman -S linux-quartz64.

Following desktop options available:

  • Gnome
  • KDE Plasma
  • Mate
  • Sway
  • XFCE

as well as minimal image without desktop.

NetBSD

NetBSD is a free, fast, secure, and highly portable Unix-like Open Source operating system. It relies upon the UEFI support in Tianocore. Before NetBSD 10 is released, the latest version of NetBSD-current should be used.

Download:

  • NetBSD daily builds top level from inside here, navigate to a date, and inside the images/ subdirectory are installable images. Use the one called "NetBSD-<version>-evbarm-aarch64-install.img.gz".

Notes:

  • This image can be written to a supported device, such as the eMMC interface, any USB storage device, NVMe, and PCIe AHCI SATA are all supported with builds after 2022-01-15.
  • Currently this can not be shared with the EDK2 port, ie, microSD for EDK2 and some other media for NetBSD.

pgwipeout's Quartz64 CI

pgwipeout provides continuously rebuilt set of images for Quartz64 devices which includes a Debian installer and a buildroot rescue environment. It is aimed at advanced users who generally know their way around a Linux system, and as a baseline for whether something is working or not. Works on both SD cards and eMMC, uses pgwipeout's patched kernel. Kernels aren't auto-updated on the installed system, so the user manually has to do this by mounting the actual correct boot partition.

Download:

Notes:

For Quartz64 Model A, flash rk3566-quartz64-a.dtb.img.xz. On Linux, you can for example do this as follows, assuming your target device is /dev/sdX:

sudo -i; xzcat /path/to/rk3566-quartz64-a.dtb.img.xz > /dev/sdX

For Quartz64 Model B, use rk3566-quartz64-b.dtb.img.xz instead.

For line by line instructions to boot Quartz64 CI on a microSD card and use it to install Debian onto an eMMC follow these instructions Quartz64 Installing Debian

Plebian

Plebian stands for PINE64 Live Debian and aims to be a fairly vanilla live Debian image for Quartz64 and SOQuartz devices, based on Debian Bookworm.

To flash, run (replace /dev/sdX with your target block device):

$ xzcat imagename.img.xz | sudo dd of=/dev/sdX bs=4M oflag=dsync status=progress

Some quick notes:

  • You will be asked to change your password on first login (for what the default login is, read the instructions!)
  • Root file system is grown to take up the entire space of your boot device
  • NetworkManager is used instead of Debian's interfaces config to be more flexible with what adapters are plugged in and working
  • An sshd is started on port 22 with freshly generated keys

Tianocore EDK II port by jmcneill

This (as of 2021-12-30) is a work in progress to enable UEFI enabled systems, and is able to bring up SD, eMMC, USB, PCIe with SATA and NVMe, HDMI, thermal sensors, TRNG, as well as general Cortex A-55 features. Known to work with NetBSD -current, and the ESXi Arm fling version 1.8.

Download:

Notes:

  • The microSD card image should be written to an microSD card and installed. Currently, using the same card for the operating system as well may be problematic.

BSP Linux SDK

The 'BSP Linux SDK ver 4.19 for the Quartz64 Model A.

Download:

  • Direct download from pine64.org (32.67GB, MD5 of the TAR-GZip file 24554419aec29700add97167a3a4c9ed)

Android SDK

Android 11 SDK

The Android 11 SDK for the Quartz64 Model A SBC.

Download:

Android 11 Production Test Builds

Android 11 Stock

The Android 11 Stock images for eMMC boot for the Quartz64 Model A. This is test build that was used during product testing.

Download:

Notes:

  • Write the disk images to the eMMC modules using the USB adapter, for example using dd.
  • Please allow 3-5 minutes boot up time on first time for initialization.

Android 11 Production Test Build

The Android 11 Production Test Build for the Quartz64 model A for eMMC boot using ROCKChip tools method. This is a test build that was used during product testing.

Download:

  • Direct download from pine64.org (812MB, MD5 of the Gzip file 800f867fdd0d1b2bd7822c156b6067e3, build 20210604)

Notes:

  • Please unzip first and then using Rockchip Android tool ver 2.84 to flash in
  • For Windows OS environment please install the DriverAssistant v5.11 driver first
  • The OTG port located at top USB 2.0 port on top of USB 3.0 port, needs USB type A to type A cable.
  • Please allow 3-5 minutes boot up time on first time for initialization

Android 11 eink SDK

This the Android 11 eink SDK build for 10.3" e-ink panels on the Quartz64 Model A.

Download: