PL:RPi Łatwa konfiguracja karty SD
Getting Started:
Buying Guide - for advice on buying the Raspberry Pi.
SD Card Setup - for information on how to prepare the SD Card used to boot your Raspberry Pi.
Basic Setup - for help with buying / selecting other hardware and setting it up.
Beginners Guide - you are up and running, now what can you do?
Latest RPi 4 Topics - Recent topics on Raspberry Pi 4 and the Pi OS
Advanced Setup - for more extensive information on setting up.
Trouble Shooting - some things to check if things don't work as expected.
Konfiguracja karty SD
Do uruchomienia Raspberry Pi jest potrzebna karta SD z zainstalowanym bootloaderem dostarczonym przez fundację oraz odpowiedni system operacyjny.
Oficjane obrazy można pobrać z http://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads. Ten przewodnik zakłada, że został pobrany obraz Debian "squeeze".
Podczas zapisu obrazu na kartę pamięci cała jej zawartość zostanie skasowana.
Bezpieczny sposób dla leniwych
Kup specjalnie przygotowaną kartę bezpośrednio w sklepie Raspberry Pi shop (jeszcze nie dostępne)
Najprostszy sposób
Należy pobrać i uruchomić program PiCard tool, który to poprowadzi użytkownika przez cały proce.
PiCard is currently being developed , and aims to make creation of bootable SD cards for the Pi easy. See the google code repo and the forum discussion.
Prosty sposób
Kopiowanie obrazu na kartę pod Windowsem
- Extract the image file debian6-17-02-2012.img from the debian6-17-02-2012 directory in the debian6-17-02-2012.zip
- Insert the SD card into your SD card reader and check what drive letter it was assigned.
- Download the Win32DiskImager utility. The download links are on the right hand side of the page, you want the binary zip.
- Extract the zip file and run the Win32DiskImager utility.
- Select the debian6-17-02-2012.img image file you extracted earlier
- Select the drive letter of the SD card in the device box. Be careful to select the correct drive.
- Click Write and wait for the write to complete.
- Exit the imager and eject the SD card.
- Insert the card in the Raspberry Pi, power it on, and it should boot up. Have fun!
Copying an image to the SD Card in Mac OSx
- Download the image from a mirror or torrent
- Verify if the the hash key is the same (optional), in the terminal run:
- shasum ~/Downloads/debian6-17-02-2012.zip
- Extract the image, just double click the zip, it will extract automatically
- From the terminal run df -h
- Connect the sdcard reader with the sdcard inside
- Run df -h again and look for the new device that wasn't listed last time. Record the filesystem name of the device, e.g. /dev/disk1s1
- Open disk utility and unmount the partition of the sdcard (do not eject it, or you have to reconnect it)
- In the terminal write the image to the card with this command, making sure you replace "/dev/disk1" with the right device name from before, but missing out the final "s1".
- dd bs=1m if=~/Downloads/debian6-17-02-2012/debian6-17-02-2012.img of=/dev/disk1
- After the dd comand finishes go to disk utility and eject the sdcard
- Insert it in the raspberry pi, and have fun
Copying an image to the SD Card in Linux
- Download the image from a mirror or torrent
- Verify if the the hash key is the same (optional), in the terminal run:
- shasum ~/debian6-17-02-2012.zip
- Extract the image, with
- unzip ~/debian6-17-02-2012.zip
- Connect the sdcard reader with the sdcard inside
- Check the name of the device that the SD card was mounted as by running: dmesg | tail, it will be something like "/dev/sdc"
- In the terminal write the image to the card with this command, making sure you replace "/dev/sdc" with the right device name.
- dd bs=1M if=~/debian6-17-02-2012/debian6-17-02-2012.img of=/dev/sdc
- Insert it in the raspberry pi, and have fun
|