Hello I can not seem to get started with my PI. I have run dd on my Peppermint Linux OS to the SD card, which completed sucessfully. How ever the installl image will not boot on the PI.
I have no idea what to do next. Please help.
Regards.
Hello I can not seem to get started with my PI. I have run dd on my Peppermint Linux OS to the SD card, which completed sucessfully. How ever the installl image will not boot on the PI.
I have no idea what to do next. Please help.
Regards.
As far as I can tell, Peppermint Linux runs on x86 (pc-type) processors and not on the ARM processor of the rPi. In simpler terms, you're trying to burn diesel fuel in a gasoline engine ...
If you're just starting out, adafruit has an excellent distro and instructions here .. http://learn.adafruit.com/adafruit-raspberry-pi-educational-linux-distro/occidentalis-v0-dot-1
They also have a series of tutorials on getting started with the Pi here: http://learn.adafruit.com/category/learn-raspberry-pi
Look here, under "Create your own":
http://elinux.org/RPi_Easy_SD_Card_Setup
Use the Raspbian "Wheezy" image. If you have a Windows computer, Win32DiskImager is the easiest method to write to the sd card, but there are instructions here on using "dd" as well.
Thanx to both of you. I think pjc123's reply is closest to what I need. I did not mean casuse anyone to think that I am attempting to boot Raspbian on my X86. In fact I did say that is what I did not do and therefore I have no real way to test the image as it was failing on my PI. Either one or both of those links will help me write the image as long as they are not Windows dependent. I am not at my work PC now so I will have to thank you and get at this task tomarrow.
Regards.
As a side note, since so many people make the same mistake, when you do the checksum (SHA-1) check on the downloaded image file, you perform it on the .zip file not the unzipped file.
Also, here is the main page of that wiki, which has a ton of information regarding the raspberry pi:
http://elinux.org/RaspberryPiBoard
and here is a good series of magazines for beginners. Press the arrow directly under the displayed magazines to get to all the older issues:
There is another possibility.
If your boot image is a little older and you have a Hynix RAM installed (look near the centre of the board), your image needs to be updated. See here for more information:
http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/3534
Hth
Derek
Actually I did not think to check the hash. Very bad. Also oddly enough I seem to resort to win32 md5 utilities for what ever reason. I think it is do to the fact that there are so many related and confusing md5 options, most of which that do not do what I need. That said I think there is reason to trust this md5 hash checker.
I have gone through various checksum programs on Windows over the years, but the latest one I found is the best and quickest to use, called HashTab. When you right click on a file in Windows Explorer and select Properties, you can see that HashTab adds a new tab called “File Hashes”, and it can generate pretty much every checksum out there. I can't remember offhand what Linux program that I use.
Yeah the win32 did fail but I simply used the help pages that were linked here and the command line md5 option worked for me.
How ever I am still not getting my PI to boot. I am begining to wonder if my PI has hardware issues. But I am going to plod on and try the net install option. I forget what it is called. But it seems like the best I can do at this point.
Note that there is a very small 0.02% return rate of all raspberry pis, and out of that, half of those are testing OK and never had a problem in the first place; so don't rush to return it right away (The number one issue appearing to be inadequate power supplies and/or power usb cables). When you say that it will not boot, what are you basing this on? Are the LED's indicating that it is not booting, (Which is what you should go by), or the fact that there is no display on the monitor? First, go through the following troubleshooting steps, as they resolve most problems:
> Note that there is a very small 0.02% return rate of all raspberry pis, and out of that, half of those are testing OK and never had a problem in the first place;
I am a bit doubtful of your figures. If around 1.2M RPi's are sold per year, or about 100K per month,
and .02% are returned, that would be 20 units returned per month. If half of those tested OK,
that would be 10 OK units returned per month. However, the Hynix memory incompatibility
alone reportedly accounts for as many as 5 OK units in a single day, which is not surprising
because the Debian Wheezy soft-float version on the official download page apparently still
has the obsolete firmware, as does the latest Fedora download, as well as many pre-loaded
SD cards still being sold. And there are lots of reasons besides the Hynix issue for people to
mistakenly believe their RPi is faulty.
Since Farnell manufactures all their RPi's in the well-regarded Sony plant, I would expect their
return rate to be even less than the overall rate, giving E-14 something to really brag about.
But nothing but silence.