PrawnOS fork with mainline Kernel and internal WiFi support.
SolidHal 25d53118d5 Merge pull request #154 from austin987/fail-sooner | 4 years ago | |
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resources | 4 years ago | |
scripts | 4 years ago | |
.gitignore | 4 years ago | |
AUTHORS | 4 years ago | |
COPYING | 6 years ago | |
DOCUMENTATION.md | 5 years ago | |
README.md | 4 years ago | |
makefile | 4 years ago |
Build Debian filesystem with:
Build a deblobbed mainline kernel with:
Don't want to use one of the two USB ports for the WiFi dongle? check out this
Combined with Libreboot, an AR9271 or AR7010 WiFi dongle, and a libre OS (like Debian with the main repos, the one built by PrawnOS) the Asus c201 is a fully libre machine with no blobs, or microcode, or Intel Management Engine.
If you do not have a way to recover your device by using an external flasher as described in the second part of this page https://libreboot.org/docs/install/c201.html it would be safest to wait until this issue is resolved. I have opened a bug with libreboot, which can be found here https://notabug.org/libreboot/libreboot/issues/666 If you have any information that may help with debugging, please post it there.
The install process of PrawnOS does not flash your bios, so it is safe to use along with the default coreboot/depthcharge and does not risk bricking your device
In the world of free and open-source software, the term is used to refer to proprietary device drivers, which are distributed without their source code, exclusively through binary code; in such use, the term binary blob is common. wikipedia
If you don't want to or can't build the image, you can find downloads under https://github.com/SolidHal/PrawnOS/releases
Building PrawnOS has been tested on Debian 10 Buster (in a VM) stretch doesn't work as the version of gcc-arm-none-eabi is too old This is the only build enviroment that is supported. These packages are required:
apt install --no-install-recommends --no-install-suggests parted cgpt git \
gawk device-tree-compiler vboot-kernel-utils gcc-arm-none-eabi u-boot-tools \
gcc make libc-dev wget g++ cmake binfmt-support qemu-user-static debootstrap \
lzip libssl-dev libncurses-dev flex bison sudo patch bc texinfo
Clone this Git repo.
Build the PrawnOS-*-.img
by running sudo make image
This has only been tested on a Debian Buster VM, and borrows some components from the host system to setup apt/debootstrap during the build process so I would recommend using a Debian Buster VM to avoid any issues.
Write the 2GB image to a flash drive. Make sure to replace $USB_DEVICE with the desired target flash drive or SD card device. If you're not familiar with dd, check out Debian's how to page https://www.debian.org/CD/faq/#write-usb
sudo dd if=PrawnOS-*.img of=/dev/$USB_DEVICE bs=50M; sync
There are two ways to use PrawnOS.
The first and recommended option is to install it on a device other than the one you wrote the PrawnOS image to. click here
The second option is to boot from the external USB or SD device you wrote the image to, and expand the image to take up the entire device. click here
Now on the C201, insert the drive you wrote the PrawnOS image to. Press control+u
at boot to boot from the external drive.
If you are running stock coreboot and haven't flashed Libreboot, you will first have to enable developer mode and enable USB / external device booting. A quick search should get you some good guides, but if you're having issues feel free to open an issue here on github.
At the prompt, login as root. The password is blank.
Now insert the other USB device or SD card you would like to install PrawnOS on. If you want to boot from the internal emmc, you have nothing to insert! Note: If you are installing to an external device, the filesystem portion may take a loooong time (20 minutes). This is because we are reading from one external device (the boot device) and writing to another external device. This more than saturates the USB and/or SD bus.
WARNING! THIS WILL ERASE YOUR INTERNAL EMMC STORAGE (your Chrome OS install or other Linux install and all of the associated user data) OR WHATEVER EXTERNAL DEVICE YOU CHOOSE AS YOUR INSTALL TARGET. Make sure to back up any data you would like to keep before running this.
Run:
cd /
./InstallPrawnOS.sh
Choose Install
and follow the prompts. This will ask what device you want to install to and setup root encryption with a custom initramfs and dmcrypt/LUKS if you want.
If you are curious how the initramfs, and root partition encryption work on PrawnOS check out the Initramfs and Encryption section in DOCUMENTATION.md
If you run in to any problems please open an issue.
If you install to the internal emmc this will show a bunch of scary red warnings that are a result of the emmc (internal storage) having a few unwritable (bad) blocks at the beginning of the device and the kernel message level being set low for debugging. They don't effect anything long-term. All C201s have these bad blocks at the beginning of the emmc
After the partitioning and the filesystem copy is complete, it will prompt you to install either the xfce4 or the lxqt desktop environment, sound, trackpad, and Xorg configurations It will also prompt you to make a new user that automatically gets sudo privileges.
After reboot, remove the external media you had booted from originally. If you installed to the internal emmc press control+d
, if you installed to an external device press control+u
If you press nothing, it will boot to the internal storage by default.
Congratulations! Your computer is now a Prawn! https://sprorgnsm.bandcamp.com/track/the-prawn-song
Now on the C201, insert the drive you wrote the PrawnOS image to. Press control+u
at boot to boot from the external drive.
If you are running stock coreboot and haven't flashed Libreboot, you will first have to enable developer mode and enable USB / external device booting. A quick search should get you some good guides, but if you're having issues feel free to open an issue here on github.
At the prompt, login as root. The password is blank. Run:
cd /
./InstallPrawnOS.sh
Choose Expand
at the prompt
If you run in to any problems please open an issue.
Now you can choose to install the packages, which are either the xfce4 or the lxqt desktop enviroment, sound, trackpad, and Xorg configurations. It will also prompt you to make a new user that automatically gets sudo privileges.
If you choose in install the packages, when installation is complete it will reboot.
Press control+u
at boot once again, and you'll get to a login screen.
Congratulations! Your computer is now a Prawn! https://sprorgnsm.bandcamp.com/track/the-prawn-song
Say no at the prompt to install packages and a desktop environment. Congratulations: you are done! Welcome to PrawnOS. You should probably change the root password and make a user, but I'm not your boss or anything so I'll leave that to you.
If have a basic environment without xfce or lxqt you can connect to WiFi using wpa_supplicant by running the following commands:
wpa_passphrase <Network_name> <network_password> > wpa.conf
wpa_supplicant -i wlan0 -c wpa.conf
Now switch to another tty by pressing ctrl+alt+f2 Login as root, and run
dhclient wlan0
When that finishes, you should have access to the internet.
The script UpgradeKernel.sh
located in /InstallResources
can be ran be used to copy the kernel, modules, initramfs, and ath9k firmware from a newer version of PrawnOS running on a USB drive or SD card onto an older version of PrawnOS installed on the laptops internal emmc storage.
To use it, write the new PrawnOS image to a USB drive or SD card, boot the laptop to it by pressing control+u
at boot, navigate to the /InstallResources
folder, and run the script.
Some useful things can be found in DOCUMENTATION.md
(All of these should be run as root or with sudo to avoid issues) The makefile automates many processes that make debugging the kernel or the filesystem easier. To begin with:
make kernel_config
cross compiles make menuconfig
Cross compiling is required for any of the Linux kernel make options that edit the kernel config, as the Linux kernel build system makes assumptions that change depending on what platform it is targeting.
make kernel
builds just the kernel
make filesystem
builds the -BASE filesystem image with no kernel
make initramfs
builds the PrawnOS-initramfs.cpio.gz, which can be found in /build
make image
builds the initramfs image, builds the kernel, builds the filesystem if a -BASE image doesn't exist, and combines the two into a new PrawnOS.img using kernel_inject
make kernel_inject
Injects a newly built kernel into a previously built PrawnOS.img located in the root of the checkout. Usually, this will be a copy of the -BASE image made by make filesystem. Only use this if you already have a built kernel and filesystem -BASE image.
You can use the environment variable PRAWNOS_SUITE
to use a Debian suite other than Buster
. For example, to use Debian stretch, you can build with sudo PRAWNOS_SUITE=stretch make image
. Note that only stretch
and buster
have been tested.
You can use the environment variable PRAWNOS_DEBOOTSTRAP_MIRROR
to use a non-default Debian mirror with debootstrap. For example, to use Debian's Tor onion service mirror with debootstrap, you can build with sudo PRAWNOS_DEBOOTSTRAP_MIRROR=http://vwakviie2ienjx6t.onion/debian make image
.
crossystem is installed from the debian repos and mosys (a dependency of crossystem, and all around useful tool) is built and installed as part of the PrawnOS filesystem build.
Specifically, enabling dev_boot_signed_only
will prevent PrawnOS from booting, as no key is stored in the bootloader for the PrawnOS Linux kernel
Its also a bad idea to disable dev_boot_usb
unless you are positive you will always be able to boot to the internal emmc.
Unless you are running libreboot, the only way to recover if you get in one of these states is to reinstall chromeos using recovery media
Kernels signature verification:
sudo crossystem dev_boot_signed_only=1
enable
sudo crossystem dev_boot_signed_only=0
disable
External media boot:
sudo crossystem dev_boot_usb=1
enable
sudo crossystem dev_boot_usb=0
disable
Legacy payload boot:
sudo crossystem dev_boot_legacy=1
enable
sudo crossystem dev_boot_legacy=0
disable
Default boot medium:
sudo crossystem dev_default_boot=disk
internal storage
sudo crossystem dev_default_boot=usb
external media
sudo crossystem dev_default_boot=legacy
legacy payload
Dump system state:
sudo crossystem
View mosys command tree:
sudo mosys -t
On older PrawnOS releases or other distributions, you can run the buildCrossystem.sh
script located in scripts/InstallScripts/
to build and install mosys
and install crossystem
sudo /InstallScripts/buildCrossystem.sh
Watch this link for GPU support: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/panfrost and this one for progress updates: https://rosenzweig.io/blog/gpu-feed.xml
Sick of having a USB dongle on the outside of your machine for wi-fi? Want to be able to use two USB devices at once without a hub? Check out the instructions here: https://github.com/SolidHal/AsusC201-usb-wifi-from-webcam Warning: decent soldering skills required
The pulse audio mixer will only run if you are logged in as a non-root account. This is an issue (feature?) of pulse audio
Thanks to dimkr for his great devsus scripts for the Chrome OS 3.14 kernel, from which PrawnOS took much inspiration https://github.com/dimkr/devsus
Because PrawnOS started as a fork of devsus-3.14, some of this repo's ancient history can be found at https://github.com/SolidHal/devsus/tree/hybrid_debian
PrawnOS is free and unencumbered software released under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2; see COPYING for the license text. For a list of its authors and contributors, see AUTHORS.