Difference between revisions of "AXIOM Beta/Firmware Flashing"

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(Created page with "16GB micro sd card required. Download: https://github.com/apertus-open-source-cinema/axiom-firmware/releases You need to first unpack the sd.dd.xz with the xz tool (or some...")
 
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16GB micro sd card required.
The entire camera firmware is stored on a Micro SD card that's plugged into the Microzed.
To flash a new version of the firmware onto a Micro SD card you require one with at least 16GB.


Download: https://github.com/apertus-open-source-cinema/axiom-firmware/releases  
Download Firmware 2.0 firmware from: https://github.com/apertus-open-source-cinema/axiom-firmware/releases  


You need to first unpack the sd.dd.xz with the xz tool (or some other tool which can handle XZ data).
You need to first unpack the sd.dd.xz with the xz tool (or some other tool which can handle XZ data).

Revision as of 16:45, 6 January 2022

The entire camera firmware is stored on a Micro SD card that's plugged into the Microzed. To flash a new version of the firmware onto a Micro SD card you require one with at least 16GB.

Download Firmware 2.0 firmware from: https://github.com/apertus-open-source-cinema/axiom-firmware/releases

You need to first unpack the sd.dd.xz with the xz tool (or some other tool which can handle XZ data).

$ xz -k -d sd.dd.xz

Then you need to write the sd.dd image to the SD card, for example like this (this assumes that /dev/sdx is the device for the new SD card).

$ dd if=sd.dd of=/dev/sdx bs=128k status=progress

or using a GUI tool like https://www.balena.io/etcher/


Firmware Backup

The entire camera firmware is stored on a Micro SD card that's plugged into the Microzed. To back up the entire firmware we plug the Micro SD card into a Linux PC and do the following:

1. Find out which device the micro SD card is:

cat /proc/partitions
   mount 

... should give you a list of all connected devices. Let's assume in our case that the card is /dev/sdc

2. Make sure the card is unmounted (all 3 partitions):

umount /dev/sdc1
umount /dev/sdc2
umount /dev/sdc3

3. Clone the entire card to a file:

ddrescue /dev/sdc sdimage.img sdimage.log


For Mac and Windows see this guide: http://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/311/how-do-i-backup-my-raspberry-pi