RPi4 | uefidoom | |
---|---|---|
54 | 14 | |
1,231 | 263 | |
1.1% | - | |
4.7 | 0.0 | |
about 2 months ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Shell | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
RPi4
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CentOS Stream and Raspberry Pi
Correct. It does not as shipped. However, the use of this project will bring the firmware into system ready spec, so it can boot with a standard aarch64 UEFI image: https://github.com/pftf/RPi4
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What is the most trusted hardware most OpenBSD people would suggest?
are you using the uefi firmware from https://github.com/pftf/RPi4 or are you trying to boot through the gpio serial header?I don't think the pi can boot on its own through uboot unless your using a serial/usb connection
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Kernel Updates Installed but not Loading
Looks like you can use Grub on UEFI ARM systems, but Raspberry Pi isn't natively running UEFI. https://github.com/pftf/RPi4
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Flatcar Container Linux
The rpi4 has uefi firmware available, this allows you to boot any generic uefi aarch64 image, you no longer need rpi specific images.
https://github.com/pftf/RPi4
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Does NetBSD 9.3 work on the RaspberryPi 4?
Straight out of the box, the image wouldn't boot, said that start.elf was invalid, so I went to https://github.com/pftf/RPi4/releases as suggested in the Readme.md file in the EFI partition. I installed that (version 1.34) over the existing EFI partition and tried again. That booted up the kernel, but it apparently died when it enabled the interrupt controller. The last messages are about armgic0.
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Ethernet on my Pi4 is giving me headaches
Maybe similar discussion on github:
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How can I dual boot Fedora on Pi4?
You can use these firmware images for UEFI as well as install with the arm ISO. I didn't have graphics acceleration that way, but it might be an easy fix.
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Orange Pi 5: 8-core CPU 2.4GHz, up to 32GB DDR4, $60 preorders ship Dec. 1
I'm guessing these are not SystemReady certified with UEFI firmware and require "bespoke" preinstalled arm images?
https://www.arm.com/architecture/system-architectures/system...
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/102677/0100/UEFI-req...
I have three SystemReady arm devices and it's pretty awesome to be able to just boot an aarch64 live ISO and install. The experience is the same for running vms via ESXi arm edition.
Nvidia Jetson AGX Xavier - https://developer.nvidia.com/embedded/downloads#?search=uefi
Honeycomb LX2 - https://github.com/SolidRun/lx2160a_uefi
RPI4 - https://github.com/pftf/RPi4
It can be tedious building/provisioning the firmware but once complete they are ready for any aarch64 uefi iso.
What is annoying however is when distros don't ship an aarch64 uefi iso - but instead choose to build a zillion device specific "preinstalled" arm images. (looking at you manjaro)
The list of supported devices for ESXi arm edition is a great place to start for identifying options and is constantly updated.
https://flings.vmware.com/esxi-arm-edition
Raspberry-Pi-4
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[Aarch64] Help creating a generic image that boots on the Raspberry Pi 4
The only reason why I am was trying to build the image was because I wanted to move stuff as mainline as possible and was worried that any installation made with the help of RPi4 UEFI firmware would stop booting after a while.
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I have come to bury the BIOS, not to open it: The need for holistic systems
Most ARM hardware is cellphones, raspberry pi and the Mac M1, which certainly aren't that type.
But a lot of ARM hardware is that type. The keywords are SBSA / SBBR / SystemReady. If your hardware is SBBR compatible then Fedora and Ubuntu's ARM64 iso, and Windows ARM64, downloaded from their website, will at least boot fine (drivers are a different question as always).
There's a good list of supported hardware in the lower half of https://community.arm.com/arm-community-blogs/b/architecture... . Many systems from Avantek, Gigabyte, NXP, Marvell, Solidrun etc are standardizing on this way of booting.
DeviceTree is low-level enough that you can implement UEFI on top of it. There's a UEFI port for the Raspberry Pi 4 at https://rpi4-uefi.dev/ that produces an SBBR layer, allowing it to boot any off-the-shelf ARM64 SBBR distro.
uefidoom
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I'm still waiting for a monitor upgrade
Not quite that level, but here's doom running in UEFI
- UEFI Doom
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I'm thinking about creating a bootable game. Are there common graphics and sound APIs/registers that I can use, that will work across devices, or can I write a generic driver that will work on most devices?
The closest you will get is the UEFI standard. In fact, there is a bootable doom port that uses it: https://github.com/Cacodemon345/uefidoom
- Microsoft is experimenting with a Windows gaming handheld mode for Steam Deck. Prototype includes a launcher that can open games from Steam, PC Game Pass, EA Play, Epic Games Store etc; UI improvemens to xbox app.
- Intel Microcode Decryptor
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TIL: You can patch firmware via the boot partition on Linux
Github
- Someone ported Doom to run directly from the UEFI shell
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Yes, it can run Doom
Simply use UEFI
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types of pc gamers
well https://github.com/Cacodemon345/uefidoom
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Why DOS Was (and Is) a Thing
I'll do you one better, DOOM without an OS at all (sort of) https://github.com/Cacodemon345/uefidoom
What are some alternatives?
NanoPi-R4S-OpenWRT - OpenWrt Frimwares for FriendlyARM NanoPi R4S
winboot - Command-line program to boot directly into Windows from a Linux terminal (in grub2 dual-boot setups).
openbsd-rpi4
gentoo - Official Gentoo ebuild repository
uhubctl - uhubctl - USB hub per-port power control
MicrocodeDecryptor
edk2-sdm845 - (Maybe) Generic edk2 port for sdm845
arm-doom - Doom-like engine on Raspberry Pi, in pure bare metal assembly
raspberry-pi-dramble - DEPRECATED - Raspberry Pi Kubernetes cluster that runs HA/HP Drupal 8
AudioPkg - Audio stack for UEFI. Currently supports HD audio controllers/codecs. WIP
pi-apps - Raspberry Pi App Store for Open Source Projects
ArchNotes - Installing Arch Linux and KDE on Virtualbox, the quick generic way