Difference between revisions of "Raspberry Pi"
From Christoph's Personal Wiki
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==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* [https://www.raspberrypi.org/ Official website] | * [https://www.raspberrypi.org/ Official website] | ||
+ | * [https://rpilocator.com/ rpilocator] | ||
===GPIO=== | ===GPIO=== |
Revision as of 18:46, 17 August 2022
This article will be all about my Raspberry Pi projects.
Contents
Common commands
- Find Raspberry Pi IP address on your local WiFi network:
$ sudo nmap -sP 10.0.0.0/24 | awk '/^Nmap/{ip=$NF}/B8:27:EB/{print ip}' #~OR~ IFACE=eth0 # trigger IPv6 neighbour discovery with link-local scope multicast: ping6 -c2 -I $IFACE ff02::1 > /dev/null # print the results, filtered by MAC address vendor prefix of Raspberry Pi Foundation: ip -6 neigh | grep b8:27:eb #~OR~ $ arp-scan --interface=eth0 --localnet | grep b8:27:eb
- Store the following in your
~/.ssh/config
file:
Host rpi HostName 10.x.x.x User pi ProxyCommand none TCPKeepAlive yes ServerAliveInterval 5 PubkeyAuthentication no PreferredAuthentications keyboard-interactive,password
Then,
$ ssh rpi
Or, better yet, use SSH keys.
- Find out where your Raspberry Pi was made and other details about the hardware:
$ cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep -E '^Hardware|^Revision|^Serial' Hardware : BCM2835 Revision : a22082 Serial : 0000000038e10351 # ~OR~ $ cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep -E '^Hardware|^Revision|^Serial' Hardware : BCM2711 Revision : d03114 Serial : 10000000ecaf3b49
Then, go here or here and, using the above hardware/revision codes, find out where you RPi was made.
So, in my case, I have the following:
- Raspberry Pi 3 Model B (1 GB) manufactured by Embest in 2016 (Q1).
- Raspberry Pi 4 Model B (8 GB) manufactured by Sony in 2020 (Q2).
32-bit or 64-bit
$ arch || uname -a armv7l # <- 32-bit => ARMv7 Processor rev 4 (v7l) armv8 # <- 64-bit => ARMv8 Processor
$ tr '\0' '\n' </proc/device-tree/model;arch Raspberry Pi 3 Model B Rev 1.2 armv7l $ tr '\0' '\n' </proc/device-tree/model;arch Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Rev 1.4 armv7l
$ getconf LONG_BIT 32 # <- 32-bit 64 # <- 64-bit
$ dpkg --print-architecture armhf
Throttling
$ vcgencmd get_throttled
111100000000000001010 |||| ||||_ under-voltage |||| |||_ currently throttled |||| ||_ arm frequency capped |||| |_ soft temperature reached ||||_ under-voltage has occurred since last reboot |||_ throttling has occurred since last reboot ||_ arm frequency capped has occurred since last reboot |_ soft temperature reached since last reboot
Over-clocking
$ sudo cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpufreq/policy0/* 0 1 2 3 600000 1200000 600000 355000 0 1 2 3 600000 1200000 conservative ondemand userspace powersave performance schedutil 600000 BCM2835 CPUFreq ondemand 1200000 600000 <unsupported>
Video
- Capture a 10 seconds video with your camera module:
$ raspivid -o video.h264 -t 10000
Useful commands
- Check which network the wireless adaptor is using:
$ iwconfig
- Print a list of the currently available wireless networks:
$ iwlist wlan0 scan
- Show details about the device's memory:
$ cat /proc/meminfo
- Show the size and number of partitions on the SD card or hard drive:
$ cat /proc/partitions
- Show which version of the Raspberry Pi you are using:
$ cat /proc/version
- Show all of the installed packages that are related to XXX:
$ dpkg --get-selections | grep XXX
- Show all of the installed packages:
$ dpkg --get-selections
- Show the IP address of the Raspberry Pi:
$ hostname -I
- List USB hardware connected to the Raspberry Pi:
$ lsusb
- Show the temperature of the CPU:
$ vcgencmd measure_temp
- Show the memory split between the CPU and GPU:
$ vcgencmd get_mem arm && vcgencmd get_mem gpu
- Display GPIO pinout (GUI-only):
$ pinout
GPIO
- Light up an LED:
$ sudo -i # Use GPIO pin 27 by creating a virtual file: $ echo "27" > /sys/class/gpio/export # Set pin 27 to ''out'' mode (allows us to turn on/off): $ echo "out" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio27/direction # Turn pin on/off: $ echo "1" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio27/value $ echo "0" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio27/value $ exit
I2C
$ sudo apt-get install -y python-smbus i2c-tools
- If you know an I2C device is connected to your RPi, but you do not know its 7-bit I2C address, use the following command to find it:
$ sudo i2cdetect -y 0
This will search /dev/i2c-0
for all address, and if an MCP4725 DAC breakout is properly connected and it is set to its default address it should show up at 0x62
.
If you are using a 512MB Raspberry Pi version 2, you will need to use /dev/i2c-1
by running:
$ sudo i2cdetect -y 1 # as the i2c port number changed from #0 to #1
Compute Modules
Part number options | |||
---|---|---|---|
Model | Wireless | RAM LPDDR4 | eMMC Storage |
CM4 | 0 = No | 01 = 1 GB | 000 = 0 GB (Lite) |
1 = Yes | 02 = 2 GB | 008 = 8 GB | |
04 = 4 GB | 016 = 16 GB | ||
08 = 8 GB | 032 = 32 GB |
Example Part Number: CM4102032: Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4, 2GB RAM, 32GB eMMC, Wireless, BCM2711, ARM Cortex-A72, RPL#SC0670B
Miscellaneous
- Commands to remove Microsoft's repo and GPG key from your Pi:
$ sudo rm /etc/apt/sources.list.d/vscode.list $ sudo rm /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/microsoft.gpg $ sudo apt update
Use VSCodium instead.
- Get the current pull:
$ cat /sys/devices/platform/rpi-poe-power-supply@0/power_supply/rpi-poe/current_now 601000 # Note: # 60100uA = 0.6A # 0.6A @ 5V (nominal) = 3W (P = IV)
- Turn a specified GPIO pin (e.g., pin 23) on/off:
echo "23" > /sys/class/gpio/export echo "out" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio23/direction echo "1" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio23/value echo "0" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio23/value
- Setup HDMI HotSwap:
$ vi /boot/config.txt hdmi_force_hotplug=1
- Real-time update for added HDD:
$ echo 1 | sudo tee /sys/bus/pci/rescan
Memory
- 1GB: 4HBMGCJ
- 2GB: D9WHZ
- 4GB: D9WHV
- 8GB: D9ZCL
Turing Pi v2
SEE: https://turingpi.com/turing-pi-v2-is-here/
- Specs
- Mini ITX standard
- 4x Nodes
- Managed Switch, VLAN
- HDMI
- 2x Mini PCIe Gen2
- 2x SATA III 6 Gbps
- 2x 1 Gbps Ethernet
- 4x USB 3.0 (2x Front / 2x Back)
- GPIO 40-pin (RPi compatible)
- 24-pin ATX power
- Removed
- 4x Node Fan connector
- 3x GPIO 40-pin
- Audio-out 3.5mm
- Added
- Nvidia Jetson Support
- Board Management Controller with remote access
- System Fan connector
--- slot_1: - HDMI - GPIO - mPCIe slot_2: - mPCIe slot_3: - SATA slot_4: - USB
External links
GPIO
Tools
- libcamera
- video4linux (
apt install v4l-utils
)
Alternative OSes
PCIe devices
- Raspberry Pi PCIe Devices — by Jeff Geerling
Cases
- Argon One M.2 Raspberry Pi SSD Case Review — by Jeff Geerling