Install on raspberry: Difference between revisions

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Short note on installation of (parts of) mobotware on Raspberry Pi (or Beagle-bone)
Back to [[Robobot]]
 
Back to [[Flexbot]]




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* Access to network (wired or wifi)
* Access to network (wired or wifi)
* Power - either an USB charger or cable to a PC (micro USB (version 3) or USB-C (version 4)
* Power - either an USB charger or cable to a PC (micro USB (version 3) or USB-C (version 4)
It should be possible to start using USB or wifi connection from a PC without extra screen or keyboard, find solutions on internet - I have not tried.


====Make SD card a FAT32 partision, if reusing an old card====
====Make SD card a FAT32 partision, if reusing an old card====
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====Add boot-files to SD card====
====Add boot-files to SD card====
=====RPI imager =====
Version 10 (buster) is easily installed using the 'Raspberry pi imager',
on Linux install with
snap install rpi-imager
rpi-imager
and follow the screen
=====manual =====
or


Get the install zip-file from https://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads/noobs/  
Get the install zip-file from https://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads/noobs/  
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* Insert SD card on Raspberry,
* Insert SD card on Raspberry,
* Mount a heatsink - especially needed on version 4,
* Mount a heatsink - especially needed on version 4,
* Connect monitor, keyboard and power
* Connect monitor, keyboard and (USB) power


That is all, Raspberry should boot on that, and take some time to prepare the SD-Card.
That is all, Raspberry should boot on that, and take some time to prepare the SD-Card.
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* Boot the raspberry and install the Raspberry Pi OS full (Debian).
* Boot the raspberry and install the Raspberry Pi OS full (Debian).
* On the bottom of the screen select keyboard layout and language,
* On the bottom of the screen select keyboard layout and language,
Settings
* Leave the pi password as is (for future reuse)
* Select language (prefer English - also for future reuse)
* select wifi access - if not using a cable.
==Usefull Linux commands==
Here are some common commands in Linux
ls    (directory file list)
cd    (change to home directory)
cd some_directory    (change to a subdirectory)
exit  (logout, e.g. of a ssh session)
grep -n string_to_look_for_in_a_file  *.cpp    (find a string in a file, e.g. a variable or a function)
sudo some_command    (execute a command as "root" - root is a superuser with administrator rights to everything)
pkill some_application_name  (stop (or kill) a running process with name "some_application_name")
pgrep some_application_name  (see if a process is running - good to use before a kill)
mv  from_file to_file    (rename a file)
cp  from_file to_file    (copy a file)
rm  some_file            (remove (delete) a file)
nano some_file          (simple text editor)
zip, unzip              (pack or unpack files -  try zip --help  to see how.
top    (see process load and memory usage)
make    (compile all as described in the "Makefile" in the same directory)
make -j4 (compile using up to 4 CPU cores - faster if more files need to be compiled)
All commands have an online help if you add --help or -h after the command.
If this is not enough, then try
man ls
to get the manual page for the ls command.


== Configure ==
== Configure ==
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Using ''raspi-config''
Using ''raspi-config''
Expand Filesystem (if not OK already)
Set keyboard layout
  Enable Camera
  Enable Camera
  Set hostname
  Set hostname (one word, no space)
  Enable SSH
  Enable SSH
Enable i2c - load module as default
  Disable Serial login
  Disable Serial login
  boot as a console with login
  boot as a console with login
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  sudo apt-get dist-upgrade
  sudo apt-get dist-upgrade
  sudo reboot
  sudo reboot
=== Login ===
login as ''pi'', password ''raspberry'' - password may have changed
Add a user called local, this leaves the pi user as is.
This can save reformatting and reinstall when the Pi is to be reused.
add a user called ''local''
sudo adduser local
sudo usermod -a --groups adm,cdrom,sudo,audio,video,plugdev,games,users,netdev,input,spi,gpio,i2c,dialout local
switch user to ''local'', and ensure groups are OK, and network is running
su - local
groups
ifconfig
Note the inet address.
Now it is possible to login (as ''local'') from network.
=== Get access using hostname ===
You may change the hostname by changing the name in /etc/hostname. If you do so, then you should probably restart before the new hostname works.
Now from another PC on the local network
ping hostname.local
where "hostname" is replaced with the hostname in /etc/hostname.
=== Get filesystem on normal Linux PC ===
From another (Linux) PC, mount the raspberry filesystem
mkdir rpi  (where the filesystem will be mounted)
sshfs local@10.59.8.141: rpi    (replace IP number with inet address from above, or use ''sshfs local@hostnale.local: rpi'')
Then in directory ''rpi'' the user files on the raspberry can be manipulated.
for other access, use (with IP address as found above, or IP replaced with ''hostname.local'')
ssh -X local@10.59.8.141
=== Packages needed ===
sudo apt install cmake
sudo apt install libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libswscale-dev libv4l-dev libxvidcore-dev libx264-dev libgtk2.0-dev
sudo apt install libatlas-base-dev gfortran alsa-tools jackd1
sudo apt install libgstreamer1.0-dev libgstreamer-plugins-base1.0-dev subversion libreadline-dev htpdate aptitude
# video for linux had some error, maybe this will help
cd /usr/include/linux
sudo ln -s -f ../libv4l1-videodev.h videodev.h
# opencv
# sudo apt install libopencv-dev (sorry, installs opencv 2.4 (jan 2020), with no ArUco code support)
==== NB! Stop here if you install ROBOBOT ====
==== Opencv ====
As of June 2019 opencv 3.2 is installed using line above - NO, it is back to 2.4 on noops 3.2.1 (jan 2020/jca)
Newer version of Opencv could be installed manually if you really need functions not available in 3.2.
For newer installation use
# make a directory for the opencv source
cd
mkdir -p git
cd git
# get source
wget -O opencv-3.4.zip https://github.com/Itseez/opencv/archive/3.4.zip
unzip opencv-3.4.zip
wget -O opencv_contrib-3.4.zip https://github.com/Itseez/opencv_contrib/archive/3.4.zip
unzip opencv_contrib-3.4.zip
# you will need this - if you use python - takes some minutes
pip install numpy
# prepare compilation
cd ~/git/opencv-3.4/
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RELEASE \
    -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local \
    -D INSTALL_PYTHON_EXAMPLES=ON \
    -D OPENCV_EXTRA_MODULES_PATH=~/git/opencv_contrib-3.4/modules \
    -D BUILD_EXAMPLES=ON ..
# inspect printout to see if needed features are enabled
# use -j2 option not to overload or overheat the processor (j2 means use 2 cores only)
# this probably takes an hour or so
make -j2
# install into /usr/local
sudo make install
# load environment settings
sudo ldconfig
== Mobotware ==
[[Mobotware on raspberry]]

Latest revision as of 09:54, 24 December 2021

Back to Robobot

Back to Flexbot


Prerequisite

  • Raspberry pi - version 3 or 4
  • SD-card preferably at least 16Gb
  • Monitor with HDMI (version 3) or micro HDMI (version 4) cable
  • keyboard - and optional a mouse
  • Access to network (wired or wifi)
  • Power - either an USB charger or cable to a PC (micro USB (version 3) or USB-C (version 4)

It should be possible to start using USB or wifi connection from a PC without extra screen or keyboard, find solutions on internet - I have not tried.

Make SD card a FAT32 partision, if reusing an old card

A new SD-card is fine as is, else

see http://qdosmsq.dunbar-it.co.uk/blog/2013/06/noobs-for-raspberry-pi/ for instruction to prepare any old or new SD-card

Add boot-files to SD card

RPI imager

Version 10 (buster) is easily installed using the 'Raspberry pi imager', on Linux install with

snap install rpi-imager
rpi-imager

and follow the screen

manual

or

Get the install zip-file from https://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads/noobs/

Then unpack NOOBS zip-file to the new disk (use the newest version), like for the network version

unzip NOOBS_lite_v3_5_1.zip -d /media/xxx/yyyy  or
unzip ~/Downloads/raspberry/NOOBS_lite_v3_5_1.zip  (if you are on the empty flash)

or for the full version

unzip NOOBS_v3_5_1.zip -d /media/xxx/yyyy  or
unzip ~/Downloads/raspberry/NOOBS_v3_5_1.zip  (if you are on the empty flash)

Reboot

  • Insert SD card on Raspberry,
  • Mount a heatsink - especially needed on version 4,
  • Connect monitor, keyboard and (USB) power

That is all, Raspberry should boot on that, and take some time to prepare the SD-Card. Or see instructions on e.g.: https://www.raspberrypi.org/help/noobs-setup/

  • Boot the raspberry and install the Raspberry Pi OS full (Debian).
  • On the bottom of the screen select keyboard layout and language,

Settings

  • Leave the pi password as is (for future reuse)
  • Select language (prefer English - also for future reuse)
  • select wifi access - if not using a cable.

Usefull Linux commands

Here are some common commands in Linux

ls     (directory file list)
cd     (change to home directory)
cd some_directory    (change to a subdirectory)
exit   (logout, e.g. of a ssh session)
grep -n string_to_look_for_in_a_file  *.cpp     (find a string in a file, e.g. a variable or a function)
sudo some_command    (execute a command as "root" - root is a superuser with administrator rights to everything)
pkill some_application_name  (stop (or kill) a running process with name "some_application_name")
pgrep some_application_name  (see if a process is running - good to use before a kill)
mv  from_file to_file    (rename a file)
cp  from_file to_file    (copy a file)
rm  some_file            (remove (delete) a file)
nano some_file           (simple text editor)
zip, unzip               (pack or unpack files -  try zip --help   to see how.
top     (see process load and memory usage)
make    (compile all as described in the "Makefile" in the same directory)
make -j4 (compile using up to 4 CPU cores - faster if more files need to be compiled)

All commands have an online help if you add --help or -h after the command. If this is not enough, then try

man ls

to get the manual page for the ls command.

Configure

Raspberry

use raspi-config, start a terminal:

sudo raspi-config

Using raspi-config

Enable Camera
Set hostname (one word, no space)
Enable SSH
Disable Serial login
boot as a console with login
Update firmware
Set locale to "en_DK.UTF-8 UTF-8" (danish keyboard, but English language)

Update operating system

Ensure you have internet access, then

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade
sudo reboot