I know that its the 2nd partition that have kernel image and DTB for our board. Now we will check the partitions on this nvme SSD by using the nvme part command. Ones we have a PCI device detected, we can try for scan for a nvme device by using the nvme scan command. Step-5: look for a PCI device using the pci command. One workaround is to let u-boot fall back to the prompt due to not having a valid boot configuration. we are looking for the u-boot prompt.įor some unknown reason interrupting the u-boot at Hit any key to stop autoboot: results into PCI device not getting detected. Remove the microSD card an power up the board. Step-4: Make sure the boot mode is set to QSPI Flash. just the parts where he copied the debian to nvme SSD. We don’t need to following the complete blog post. Chambers StarFive VisionFive 2 Official Debian SSD Boot Guide For this step I just followed a very good blog post by James A. Step-3: Prepare NVME SSD with VF2 Debian Image. Now using the flashcp command we will burn these files into the QSPI Fash flashcp -v /dev/mtd0įlashcp -v visionfive2_fw_payload.img /dev/mtd1 Step-2: Update the QSPI Flash bootloader.Įither scp or use wget to download the required bootloader files into the running system. after booting this new sdcard.img, we need to update the bootloader in QSPI Flash. Step-1: Get the latest sdcard.img file from here. Note: These are some bleeding edge stuff and can potentially brick your VF2. Here is the steps for anyone trying to do the same. I managed to boot kernel directly from nvme ssd in VF2.
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