Installing OS onto a Raspberry Pi

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Revision as of 17:04, 10 December 2022 by RadimStano (talk | contribs)
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WARNING: THIS IS A PAGE IN PROGRESS! DO NOT FOLLOW IT IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR THE BUILDING OF A CAMERA FROM SCRATCH

Ahoj! In this section, you will flash (or install if you wish) an OS Linux onto your SD card or USB flash key and boot your Raspberry Pi for the first time.

Flash image onto a microSD card/USB flash disk

The process is the same for an microSD card or a USB flash key, just the target will differ.

  1. Download the zipped Image for Raspberry Pi 4B here and save it on the PC somewhere.
  2. Download the BalenaEtcher, if you haven’t done it yet.
  3. Insert a microSD card or a USB flash disk into your PC, and note the letter it was assigned.
  4. Run BalenaEtcher, and flash the image file onto your microSD card/USB flash disk: Select Flash from file, find your zip file and select it. As Target select your USB flash disk. Normally the system disks are hidden but verify the name, letter and size of your USB flash disk to be sure you have the correct target. Click Flash, once again verify the target and confirm it. Wait for the process to finish. (In case you will receive an error you may need to run BalenaEtcher as administrator)
  5. Eject the USB flash disk in windows if necessary and then remove your microSD card/USB flash disk from your PC and insert it into your Raspberry Pi, which should be connected to a TV or Monitor, and have a keyboard and mouse connected. Power on a Raspberry Pi. Make sure that a microSD card is not inserted.
  6. Wait for the boot. If the boot takes too long to occur, please have a look at the next section. If it booted successfully, follow the on-screen instructions.

This is what the selection should look like:

BalenaEtcher selection.png

This is what the process should look like:

BalenaEtcher process.png

Pre-2021 Raspberry Pi 4 Bootloader update - an USB flash disk ONLY

If you encountered a problem booting Raspberry Pi 4 from a USB device (common for all USB devices, not only flash disks), the most probable reason is that your Raspberry Pi 4 is from an older batch and its bootloader has to be updated. The procedure is simple and you will need a blank small MicroSD card to continue, the data are around 1MB in size, so any small microSD card will do the job. The process is nicely described in the raspberry pi official documentation.

  • In case you are looking for more extensive USB booting guide click here
  • the pre-installed RMS software images incorporate an auto-updating feature, so that the RMS software is updated to the current release whenever your Raspberry Pi RMS is booted. This way, your station is always running the most recent set of updates.

[OPTIONAL] Install the software from scratch

This is for users who wish to perform more advanced tasks, if you have gone for the previous section, do not continue with the sections below Note: if you're setting up a Raspberry Pi you should use the prebuilt image as this comes with all necessary software installed and is ready to use.. If you really really really do want to install on the RPi from scratch, you can follow the instructions below:

Install for Raspberry Pi 4

Detailed instructions here

Install for Linux

Detailed instructions here

Linux GUI and multi-Camera support

Detailed instructions here

Installation for Windows

Data capture does not work under windows. However you can use the other tools on your PC, where its much quicker to run SkyFit2 to calibrate your camera to the sky, or you want to use BatchFFToImage to convert data to jpeg format to share on Social Media.

Click here for detailed instructions. The instructions were tested on Windows 10 64-bit, but should work on any Windows version where git and Anaconda are available.

Aside: If you are a Windows whizz, please feel free to investigate why data capture doesn't work!

Installation for MacOS

As with Windows, installation for MacOS is useful if you want to analyse the data offline. If you do want to install it, please follow the instructions here.

You are now done with this section and now you are going to focus your camera and put all bits and pieces together for the first test. Exciting, isn't it? Back to the signpost page.