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Ubuntu on Newport
This page provides details on running Ubuntu on a Gateworks Newport Board.
Other references:
- The Gateworks Newport software page for other Linux options on Newport products.
- Gateworks Ubuntu Page for generic notes
Gateworks pre-built Ubuntu Disk Image
Gateworks provides a pre-built Ubuntu firmware images for the Newport Family:
- bionic-newport.img.gz - (Recommended) Compressed Disk Image containing Firmware, Linux kernel, and Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic root filesystem.
- To update the firmware on the eMMC see newport/firmware
- To update the firmware on a microSD card see linux/blockdev
- linux-newport.tar.xz - Compressed TAR archive of pre-built Linux kernel
- bionic-arm64.tar.xz - Compressed TAR archive of Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic arm64 root filesystem (does not include kernel)(package manifest)
Login Information (default)
- Username: root
- Password: root
Features:
- Ubuntu aarch64 core (created via debootstrap)
- Gateworks Newport Linux kernel (Linux 4.14 based)
- eth0 dhcp with a 10 second timeout
- User: root password: root
- Packages installed on top of core including:
- Updated modemmanager/libqmi-utils/libmbim-utils (see ubuntu/modem)
- Misc wireless: wpasupplicant iw
- Misc utils: vim can-utils i2c-tools usbutils pciutils screen watchdog binutils
- Misc network: wget ethtool iperf iperf3 openssh-server iptables
- Linux firmware
- mmc-utils from https://packages.debian.org/sid/utils/mmc-utils
- Gateworks hostapd-conf script
- Filesystem tools: e2fstools parted
- first-boot script to grow root filesystem partition and filesystem (useful when putting disk images on removable storage devices)
- use ifupdown tools instead of netplan (we find them easier to understand and configure)
To install the kernel and root filesystem on a removable block storage device see below.
BSP
To build a complete Ubuntu image, including all the boot firmware, start with the Newport BSP page as the easiest option.
Root filesystem
This is to build the rootfs ONLY. To easily build an entire system image, including the boot firmware and Ubuntu, consider the Newport BSP page.
A popular way to create an Ubuntu root filesystem is to use the deboostrap
utility on a Debian or Ubuntu host. This tool provides a 2-stage install where the second stage is within a chroot environment using qemu.
Gateworks uses a script to do this which you may find at http://github.com/Gateworks/ubuntu-rootfs
Requirements:
- Linux Ubuntu or Debian System with network connection and sudo permissions
Important notes:
- We set and use target and distro env variables in step 2 and use those env variables in the remaining steps to make this tutorial more version-agnostic. Please be aware of this and do not deviate from the steps unless or until you completely understand what you are doing.
- These steps are not always exactly what we do in our script but give you an idea of how you would go about doing it yourself if you wanted to customize something
Steps:
- Install pre-requisites:
sudo apt-get install qemu-user-static debootstrap binfmt-support
- Perform first stage install of minimal filesystem for
arm64
architecture:distro=bionic arch=arm64 target=${distro}-${arch} qemu_arch=aarch64 sudo debootstrap --arch=$arch --foreign $distro $target # copy qemu binary for the binfmt packages to find it and copy in resolv.conf from host sudo cp /usr/bin/qemu-${qemu_arch}-static $target/usr/bin
- See http://ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports/dists/ for a list of current Ubuntu releases: 18.04=bionic (latest LTS), 16.04=xenial
- this minimal rootfs is still missing some core packages and configuration before it can be booted. These steps are taken care of in a 2nd stage install within a chroot shell
- the chroot shell below will provide network support (inherited from the host)
- We now have a minimal Ubuntu rootfs - chroot to it and perform the 2nd stage install:
sudo chroot $target # now we are in the chroot - setup env matching the distro above distro=bionic export LANG=C # setup second stage /debootstrap/debootstrap --second-stage
- this is the most minimal rootfs we would recommend
- (optional) add additional apt package repos:
cat <<EOT > /etc/apt/sources.list deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports $distro main restricted universe multiverse deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports $distro-updates main restricted universe multiverse deb http://ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports $distro-security main restricted universe multiverse EOT
- you may want to customize the above list, depending on your needs. See below for more detail on Ubuntu package feeds
- (optional) update package database and setup locales (do not skip this step if you are needing to install any packages for the steps below or otherwise)
apt-get update apt-get -f install # fixup missing package dependencies apt-get install locales dialog dpkg-reconfigure locales
- Set hostname:
echo ${distro}-$(uname -m) > /etc/hostname
- set a root passwd so you can login
passwd
- or consider adding a user via
adduser
:adduser myuser usermod -a -G tty myuser # add to tty group for tty access usermod -a -G dialout myuser # add to dialout group for UART access usermod -a -G sudo myuser # add to sudo group for root access
- or consider adding a user via
- (optional) configure networking:
- wired ethernet with DHCP on eth0
apt-get install net-tools ifupdown cat <<EOF >> /etc/network/interfaces allow-hotplug eth0 auto eth0 iface eth0 inet dhcp EOF
- or static IP:
apt-get install net-tools ifupdown cat <<EOF >> /etc/network/interfaces allow-hotplug eth0 auto eth0 iface eth0 inet static address 192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 gateway 192.168.1.254 EOF
- or wireless (requires ~3MB of additional packages):
apt-get install wpasupplicant iw cat << EOF >> /etc/network/interfaces # Wireless interface auto wlan0 iface wlan0 inet dhcp wireless_mode managed wireless_essid any wpa-driver nl80211 wpa-conf /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf EOF wpa_passphrase <myssid> <mypass> >> /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf
- wired ethernet with DHCP on eth0
- (optional) install some useful packages
apt-get install openssh-server # ssh server for remote access apt-get install can-utils i2c-tools usbutils pciutils # cmdline tools for various hardware support
- Note that by default root ssh access is disabled for security. See This link for info on enabling it
- Exit the chroot shell and remove files we no longer need
exit sudo rm $target/usr/bin/qemu-$qemu_arch-static
At this point you have a directory containing a root filesystem (without kernel) and likely want to install it onto removable storage or the on-board FLASH of a target board. Some intermediate formats that are useful to keep around would be a tarball, perhaps an ext4 filesystem image, or a compressed disk image suitable for flashing in the U-Boot bootloader.
To create a tarball which is the most flexible storage format and can be used for a variety of future installation uses:
sudo tar --keep-directory-symlink -cvJf bionic-newport.tar.xz -C rootfs/ .
- '--numeric-owner' is required to store user/group as a number instead of a name, your specific use case may require this switch.
- the '-C rootfs/' is required to eliminate the rootfs directory prefix
- the sudo is needed to be able to read the root owned files
- '--keep-directory-symlink' will preserve symbolic links
Compressed Disk Image (for flashing onto a board)
To create a 'Compressed Disk Image' using this tarball see newport/boot#disk-images and to install this onto a board's embedded FLASH see here.
ext4 filesystem
If desired you can create an ext4 filesystem from the directory or tarball. This requires you choose a size for the filesystem. This size can be increased at runtime using resize2fs
as long as the partition table has room for it to grow. The advantage of using an as small as possible size is that the time necessary to flash it onto storage is reduced to a minimum (when flashing you have to write the entire ext4 fs but when formatting or resizing it only has to write periodic markers to FLASH).
For a given size (see SIZEMB variable below) you can create a rootfs with:
SIZEMB=1536 # 1.5GB - expandable later with resize2fs OUT=bionic-newport.ext4 # create a file of specific size truncate -s ${SIZEMB}M ${OUT} # format it as an ext4 filesystem mkfs.ext4 -q -F -L rootfs ${OUT} # mount it to a temporary mount point tmp_mnt=$(mktemp -d -p/tmp) mount ${OUT} ${tmp_mnt} # copy files to it cp -rup rootfs/* ${tmp_mnt} # and/or extract files from a tarball tar -C ${tmp_mnt} -xf linux-newport.tar.xz # unmount temporary mount point umount ${tmp_mnt} sync # compress it gzip -k -f ${OUT}
For automatically resizing the rootfs on boot you can create a one-shot init script before you unmount the filesystem above:
cat << EOF > /etc/init.d/resize2fs_once #!/bin/sh ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: resize2fs_once # Required-Start: # Required-Stop: # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5 S # Default-Stop: # Short-Description: Resize the root filesystem to fill partition # Description: ### END INIT INFO . /lib/lsb/init-functions ROOT=\$(cat /proc/cmdline | sed -e 's/^.*root=//' -e 's/ .*\$//') case "\$1" in start) log_daemon_msg "Starting resize2fs_once" && resize2fs \$ROOT && update-rc.d resize2fs_once remove && rm /etc/init.d/resize2fs_once && log_end_msg \$? ;; *) echo "Usage: \$0 start" >&2 exit 3 ;; esac EOF chmod +x /etc/init.d/resize2fs_once systemctl enable resize2fs_once
Building a Bootable Disk Image
You will want to build your own Ubuntu disk image if you want control over any of the following:
- Contents of root filesystem (packages and configuration) (see [#debootstrap debootsrap below)
- Configuration of the Linux kernel (see newport/bsp/kernel)
See newpowrt/boot/disk-images for detailed instructions.