Skip to content

bcardarella/nerves_livebook

 
 

Repository files navigation

Nerves Livebook Firmware

CircleCI

The Nerves Livebook firmware lets you try out the Nerves projects on real hardware without needing to build anything. Within minutes, you'll have a Raspberry Pi or Beaglebone running Nerves. You'll be able to run code in Livebook and work through Nerves tutorials from the comfort of your browser.

Looking for a quick demo first? Click below for Underjord's Nerves Quickstart video.

Install video

Prerequisites

First, you'll need to get some hardware. Nerves Livebook supports the following devices:

  • bbb - BeagleBone Black, BeagleBone Green, PocketBeagle, etc.
  • grisp2 - GRiSP2 (Experimental)
  • rpi0 - Raspberry Pi Zero or Zero W
  • rpi - The original Raspberry Pi Model B
  • rpi2 Raspberry Pi 2 Model B
  • rpi3 - Raspberry Pi 3 Model B and Model B+
  • rpi3a - Raspberry Pi 3 Model A+ and Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W
  • rpi4 - Raspberry Pi 4 Model B
  • rpi5 - Raspberry Pi 5 Model B
  • osd32mp1 - Octavo OSD32MP1-BRK
  • npi_imx6ull - Seeed Studio imx6ull (select the MicroSD boot mode switches)
  • mangopi_mq_pro - MangoPi MQ Pro (Allwinner D1 64-bit RISC-V)

Some of these are easier than others to use. If you have a choice, the Raspberry Pi Zero, Raspberry Pi 4 and BeagleBones are good ones to try first. These boards have a lot of functionality and connecting them to a network is a little easier than the others.

Downloading the Firmware

If you're using a GRiSP 2, skip to the installation instructions below for it.

First, find the appropriate firmware or zip'd image file for your hardware in the releases. This is a one time step. There's a Livebook notebook for upgrading the firmware for when we make releases!

You have two firmware packaging options. The first is to use the fwup commandline application and the other is to use a program like Etcher. Download the file with the .fw extension for fwup and the zip file for Etcher. If you're ok with the commandline, using fwup will come in handy if you start using Nerves more.

Once the download completes, you're ready to install the firmware on your device.

Burning the Firmware for devices that boot from MicroSD

These instructions will work for the Raspberry Pi, Beaglebones and other devices that either boot off MicroSD cards or can be configured to do so. If you're using a GRiSP 2, see the GRiSP 2 installation section.

Navigate to the directory where you downloaded the firmware. Either fwup or etcher can be used to burn the firmware.

To be clear, this formats your SD card, and you will lose all data on the SD card. Make sure you're OK with that.

fwup

You'll need to install fwup if you don't have it. On Mac, run brew install fwup. For Linux and Windows, see the fwup installation instructions.

$ fwup nerves_livebook_rpi0.fw
Use 15.84 GB memory card found at /dev/rdisk2? [y/N] y

Depending on your OS, you'll likely be asked to authenticate this action. Go ahead and do so.

|====================================| 100% (31.81 / 31.81) MB
Success!
Elapsed time: 3.595 s

If you're using a WiFi-enabled device and want the WiFi credentials to be written to the MicroSD card, initialize the MicroSD card like this instead:

sudo NERVES_WIFI_SSID='access_point' NERVES_WIFI_PASSPHRASE='passphrase' fwup nerves_livebook_rpi0.fw

You can still change the WiFi credentials at runtime using VintageNetWiFi.quick_configure/2, but this helps if you don't have an easy way of accessing the device to configure WiFi.

Now you have Nerves Livebook ready to run on your device. Skip ahead to the next section.

etcher

Start etcher, point it to the zip file, and follow the prompts:

etcher screenshot

IMPORTANT: There's no way to configure the initial WiFi credentials with etcher. If you have a device that you can only access via WiFi (so no way of setting credentials), then check out the fwup instructions above.

GRiSP 2 installation

GRiSP 2 support is VERY new. While it should be safe, it's probably a good idea to skim the instructions for re-installing the GRiSP demo app. If that doesn't look that hard, then let's continue:

Assuming you don't already have a Nerves firmware on your GRiSP 2, you'll need to do a first time install. Even if you do have Nerves on your GRiSP 2, you can still follow these instructions.

First, download nerves_livebook_grisp2.img.gzfrom the latest releases.

  1. Copy nerves_livebook_grisp2.img.gz to a FAT-formatted MicroSD card:

     $ cp nerves_livebook_grisp2.img.gz /Volumes/...
    
  2. Unmount the MicroSD card and insert it into the GRiSP 2.

  3. Connect the GRiSP 2 to your computer via USB via picocom or another serial terminal program. The GRiSP 2 shows up as two serial ports. Connect to second one. On MacOS, it's /dev/tty.usbserial-0<GRiSP Serial Number>1.

  4. Press the reset button on the GRiSP 2. Press a key on the serial console to get a Barebox prompt.

  5. At the Barebox prompt, run:

     :/ uncompress /mnt/mmc/nerves_livebook_grisp2.img.gz /dev/mmc1
     :/ reset
    
  6. The GRiSP 2 will reboot into the Nerves Livebook firmware. The first boot takes a little longer due to it initializing the application data partition.

Once it boots, you can use the IEx prompt over the USB cable or connect over Ethernet. There's a sticker on the back of the GRiSP with the serial number. The device will be at nerves-<serial number>.local on the network.

To configure WiFi, run:

VintageNetWiFi.quick_configure("ssid", "password")

VintageNet.info will show the current state of the network connections.

The normal Nerves firmware update methods will work. Since the GRiSP 2 port is so new, it may be required to perform a fresh install using the above instructions in the future.

To see the current progress of the GRiSP 2 port to Nerves, see nerves_system_grisp2.

Running the Firmware

Eject the SD card and insert it into the device that you're using. Power up the device and connect a network cable. If you're using a Raspberry Pi Zero, Beaglebone or Raspberry Pi 4, a USB cable can provide both power and network.

The first boot can take longer than subsequent boots due to initializing the data filesystem for storing your notebooks. It is noticeable especially on large MicroSD cards.

Most, but not all supported devices, have an LED on them. Nerves Livebook will make it blink when the network is disconnected and change it to solid on when it's possible to connect over any network interface.

Once the device is ready, point your browser at http://nerves.local. The password is "nerves".

Livebook screenshot

Special Windows setup

Microsoft Windows requires a device driver to be installed to support networking over a USB cable:

  1. Download the USB Ethernet/RNDIS Gadget driver from the Microsoft Update Catalog
  2. Connect your Raspberry Pi or Beaglebone that's running Nerves Livebook to your computer
  3. Start Device Manager
  4. You should see a COM device show up
    1. Right click on it and update the driver
    2. Select "Let me pick", then "Have disk", and point it at the digitally signed inf/cat files downloaded in step 1
  5. Once the COM device changes into a "USB Ethernet/RNDIS Gadget" device you'll be able to visit nerves.local in a browser

Going further

At some point you may want to customize Nerves Livebook. See the Nerves Installation and Getting Started guides for details.

To build the Nerves Livebook firmware, make sure that you have run through the Nerves installation steps. Then open a terminal window and run the following:

$ git clone https://github.com/nerves-livebook/nerves_livebook.git
$ cd nerves_livebook

# Set the MIX_TARGET to the desired platform (rpi0, bbb, rpi3, etc.)
$ export MIX_TARGET=rpi0
$ mix deps.get
$ mix firmware

# Option 1: Insert a MicroSD card
$ mix burn

# Option 2: Upload to an existing Nerves Livebook device
$ mix firmware.gen.script
$ ./upload.sh [email protected]

Firmware provisioning options

Nerves Livebook supports some device-specific customization after the firmware has been created. This means that you don't need to rebuild the firmware to set any of the options in this section. Instead, they are set when you use fwup to initialize a MicroSD card. Here's an example invocation of fwup to show what to do:

sudo NERVES_WIFI_SSID='access_point' NERVES_WIFI_PASSPHRASE='passphrase' fwup nerves_livebook_rpi0.fw

See the config/provisioning.conf for details. Here is a summary of the options:

Environment variable Nerves.Runtime.KV key Description
NERVES_SERIAL_NUMBER nerves_serial_number Set the device serial number to the specified text (default is to use device-specific unique ID)
NERVES_WIFI_FORCE wifi_force Set to true to always set WiFi credentials on boot even if other ones were previously set
NERVES_WIFI_PASSPHRASE wifi_passphrase A WiFi passphrase to use if WiFi hasn't been configured
NERVES_WIFI_SSID wifi_ssid A WiFi SSID to use if WiFi hasn't been configured

License

Copyright (C) 2021-22 Frank Hunleth

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at [http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0](http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.

About

Develop on embedded devices with Livebook and Nerves

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Elixir 96.4%
  • Shell 2.4%
  • HTML 1.2%