For SD booting, we need to have 2 partitions on the SD card. One partition(referred to as boot going forward) will be used to put the images like fsbl, linux image etc. The other partition (referred to as root going forward) will be used to hold the root file system. Table of Contents
Create partitions
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This pages provides information related to formatting and SD card for a two partition configuration.
Table of Contents
While some Linux systems only require a single FAT-formatted boot partition (e.g. those that use a ramdisk), some systems require a second ext4 formatted partition to hold the root filesystem. In this tutorial, the FAT partition will be referred to as the "boot" partition, which is used to hold the boot image (BOOT.BIN) and Linux image (image.ub or Image + .dtb). The ext4 partition for the root filesystem will be referred to as "root".
These steps assume you're using a blank, unformatted SD card with no existing partitions on it. We'll use the fdisk utility in Linux to create the new partitions. Fdisk is text based tool used to create partitions on a disk.
One You can also use gparted which is gui base partitioning tool.
- This tutorial assumes you are using a new SD card with no partition on it. Unmount First, unmount your disk and start fdisk with your device name. In my case my SD card is at /dev/sdc:
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language | bash |
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theme | Midnight |
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$ sudo fdisk /dev/sdc |
. If you type
- Type p, you will to see your current partition table.
- If you have existing partitions, you can delete them by typing 'd'
- Make a new partition by typing 'n'.
- Make it primary by selecting 'p',
- use default partition number and first sector .
- Set aside 1G for this partition by typing +1G .(this value can differ based on your needs - the rest of the card will be used for the second partition)
- Make this partition bootable. Set the bootable flag on this partition by typing 'a'.
- Now if you print out the partition table with 'p', you should see your new partition with a * under Boot.
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fdisk - Bootable flag setting |
- Make the root partition by typing 'n'.
- Select primary partition, leave
- Leave the first and last sector default.
- If you check your partition table now, you should see the 2 partitions you just created.
- After verification type 'w' to write to disk and exit.
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fdisk - print partition table |
- mkfs.vfat -F 32 -n boot /dev/sdc1 - this will format the first partitions using FAT.
- mkfs.ext4 -L root /dev/sdc2 - this will format 2nd partitions using ext4.
Mount the partitions and copy the needed files.After creating the partitions, the next step is to format them with the appropriate files system.
The boot partition should always be formatted as FAT. To format the first partition as FAT, use the following command:
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language | bash |
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theme | Midnight |
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$ mkfs.vfat -F 32 -n boot /dev/sdc1 |
The root partition can be formatted as ext2/ext4 depending on your Linux configuration. To format the second partition as ext4, use the following command:
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language | bash |
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theme | Midnight |
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$ mkfs.ext4 -L root /dev/sdc2 |
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If your root file system build artifact is an uncompressed ext4 image (i.e. rootfs.ext4) you can skip this step |
Coping the Images to the New Partitions
Mount the partitions so you can copy your boot images and root file system to the card.
Boot Partition
For the boot images, simply copy the files to the FAT partition. This typically will include BOOT.BIN, image.ub, and boot.scr (2020.1 and later). However, your system may require additional files on the FAT file system.
Root Partition
For the root file system, the process will depend on the format of your root file system image.
roofts.ext4 - This is an uncompressed ext4 file system image. To copy the contents to the root partition, you can use the following command:
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dd if=rootfs.ext4 of=/dev/sdc2 |
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