This is the USB device boot code which supports the Raspberry Pi 1A, 3A+, Compute Module, Compute Module 3, 3+ 4S, and 4, Raspberry Pi Zero and Zero 2 W. N.B. In regards to this document CM4 and CM4S have identical software support.
The default behaviour when run with no arguments is to boot the Raspberry Pi with special firmware so that it emulates USB Mass Storage Device (MSD). The host OS will treat this as a normal USB mass storage device allowing the file system to be accessed. If the storage has not been formatted yet (default for Compute Module) then the Raspberry Pi Imager App can be used to install a new operating system.
Since RPIBOOT
is a generic firmware loading interface, it is possible to load
other versions of the firmware by passing the -d
flag to specify the directory
where the firmware should be loaded from.
E.g. The firmware in the msd can be replaced with newer/older versions.
From Raspberry Pi5 onwards the MSD firmware has been replaced with a Linux initramfs providing a mass-storage-gadget.
For more information run rpiboot -h
.
Clone this repository on your Pi or other Linux machine. Make sure that the system date is set correctly, otherwise Git may produce an error.
- This git repository uses symlinks. For Windows builds clone the repository under Cygwin.
- Instead of duplicating the EEPROM binaries and tools the rpi-eeprom repository is included as a (git submodule)[https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Submodules]
sudo apt install git libusb-1.0-0-dev pkg-config build-essential
git clone --recurse-submodules --shallow-submodules --depth=1 https://github.com/raspberrypi/usbboot
cd usbboot
make
sudo ./rpiboot
sudo
isn't required if you have write permissions for the /dev/bus/usb
device.
From a macOS machine, you can also run usbboot, just follow the same steps:
- Clone the
usbboot
repository - Install
libusb
(brew install libusb
) - Install
pkg-config
(brew install pkg-config
) - (Optional) Export the
PKG_CONFIG_PATH
so that it includes the directory enclosinglibusb-1.0.pc
- Build using make
- Run the binary
git clone --recurse-submodules --shallow-submodules --depth=1 https://github.com/raspberrypi/usbboot
cd usbboot
brew install libusb
brew install pkg-config
make
sudo ./rpiboot
If the build is unable to find the header file libusb.h
then most likely the PKG_CONFIG_PATH
is not set properly.
This should be set via export PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$(brew --prefix libusb)/lib/pkgconfig"
.
If the build fails on an ARM-based Mac with a linker error such as ld: warning: ignoring file /usr/local/Cellar/libusb/1.0.26/lib/libusb-1.0.dylib, building for macOS-arm64 but attempting to link with file built for macOS-x86_64
then you may need to build and install libusb-1.0
yourself:
wget https://github.com/libusb/libusb/releases/download/v1.0.26/libusb-1.0.26.tar.bz2
tar -xf libusb-1.0.26.tar.bz2
cd libusb-1.0.26
./configure
make
make check
sudo make INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local install
Running make
again should now succeed.
After updating the usbboot repo (git pull --rebase origin master
) update the
submodules by running
git submodule update --init
Fit the EMMC-DISABLE
jumper on the Compute Module IO board before powering on the board
or connecting the USB cable.
On Compute Module 4 EMMC-DISABLE / nRPIBOOT (GPIO 40) must be fitted to switch the ROM to usbboot mode. Otherwise, the SPI EEPROM bootloader image will be loaded instead.
- Disconnect the USB-C cable. Power must be removed rather than just running "sudo shutdown now"
- Hold the power button down
- Connect the USB-C cable (from the
RPIBOOT
host to the Pi 5)
In addition to the MSD functionality, there are a number of other utilities that can be loaded via RPIBOOT on Compute Module 4.
Directory | Description |
---|---|
recovery | Updates the bootloader EEPROM on a Compute Module 4 |
recovery5 | Updates the bootloader EEPROM on a Raspberry Pi 5 |
rpi-imager-embedded | Runs the embedded version of Raspberry Pi Imager on the target device |
mass-storage-gadget | 32-bit mass storage gadget for BCM2711 |
mass-storage-gadget64 | Mass storage gadget with 64-bit Kernel for BCM2711 and BCM2712 |
secure-boot-recovery | Pi4 secure-boot bootloader flash and OTP provisioning |
secure-boot-recovery5 | Pi5 secure-boot bootloader flash and OTP provisioning |
secure-boot-example | Simple Linux initrd with a UART console. |
The RPIBOOT
protocol provides a virtual file system to the Raspberry Pi bootloader and GPU firmware. It's therefore possible to
boot Linux. To do this, you will need to copy all of the files from a Raspberry Pi boot partition plus create your own
initramfs.
On Raspberry Pi 4 / CM4 the recommended approach is to use a boot.img
which is a FAT disk image containing
the minimal set of files required from the boot partition.
This section describes how to diagnose common rpiboot
failures for Compute Modules. Whilst rpiboot
is tested on every Compute Module during manufacture the system relies on multiple hardware and software elements. The aim of this guide is to make it easier to identify which component is failing.
The Product Information Portal contains the official documentation for hardware revision changes for Raspberry Pi computers. Please check this first to check that the software is up to date.
- Inspect the Compute Module pins and connector for signs of damage and verify that the socket is free from debris.
- Check that the Compute Module is fully inserted.
- Check that
nRPIBOOT
/ EMMC disable is pulled low BEFORE powering on the device.- On BCM2711, if the USB cable is disconected and the nRPIBOOT jumper is fitted then the green LED should be OFF. If the LED is on then the ROM is detecting that the GPIO for nRPIBOOT is high.
- Remove any hubs between the Compute Module and the host.
- Disconnect all other peripherals from the IO board.
- Verify that the red power LED switches on when the IO board is powered.
- Use another computer to verify that the USB cable for
rpiboot
can reliably transfer data. For example, connect it to a Raspberry Pi keyboard with other devices connected to the keyboard USB hub.
- The CM4 EEPROM supports MMC, USB-MSD, USB 2.0, Network and NVMe boot by default. Try booting to Linux from an alternate boot mode (e.g. network) to verify the
nRPIBOOT
GPIO can be pulled low and that the USB 2.0 interface is working. - If
rpiboot
is running but the mass storage device does not appear then try running therpiboot -d mass-storage-gadget
because this uses Linux instead of a custom VPU firmware to implement the mass-storage gadget. This also provides a login console on UART and HDMI.
- Press, and hold the power button before supplying power to the device.
- Release the power button immediately after supplying power to the device.
- Remove any non-essential USB peripherals or HATs.
- Use a USB-3 port capable of supplying at least 900mA and use a high quality USB-C cable OR supply additional power via the 40-pin header.
The recommended host setup is Raspberry Pi with Raspberry Pi OS. Alternatively, most Linux X86 builds are also suitable. Windows adds some extra complexity for the USB drivers so we recommend debugging on Linux first.
- Update to the latest software release using
apt update rpiboot
or download and rebuild this repository from Github. - Run
rpiboot -v | tee log
to capture verbose log output. N.B. This can be very verbose on some systems.
The rpiboot
system runs in multiple stages. The ROM, bootcode.bin, the VPU firmware (start.elf) and for the mass-storage-gadget
or rpi-imager
a Linux initramfs. Each stage disconnects the USB device and presents a different USB descriptor. Each stage will appears as a new USB device connect in the dmesg
log.
See also: EEPROM boot flow
Be careful not to overwrite bootcode.bin
or bootcode4.bin
with the executable from a different subdirectory. The rpiboot
process simply looks for a file called bootcode.bin
(or bootcode4.bin
on BCM2711). However, the file in recovery
/secure-boot-recovery
directories is actually the recovery.bin
EEPROM flashing tool.
- Monitor the Linux
dmesg
output and verify that a BCM boot device is detected immediately after powering on the device. If not, please check thehardware
section. - Check the green activity LED. On Compute Module 4 this is activated by the software bootloader and should remain on. If not, then it's likely that the initial USB transfer to the ROM failed.
- On Compute Module 4 connect a HDMI monitor for additional debug output. Flashing the EEPROM using
recovery.bin
will show a green screen and themass-storage-gadget
enables a console on the HDMI display. - If
rpiboot
starts to downloadbootcode4.bin
but the transfer fails then can indicate a cable issue OR a corrupted file. Check the hash ofbootcode.bin
file against this repository and checkdmesg
for USB error. - If
bootcode.bin
or thestart.elf
detects an error then error-code will be indicated by flashing the green activity LED. - Add
uart_2ndstage=1
to theconfig.txt
file inmsd/
orrecovery/
directories to enable UART debug output. - Add
recovery_metadata=1
to theconfig.txt
file inrecovery/
orrecovery5/
directory to enable metadata JSON output.
This repository contains the low-level tools and firmware images for enabling secure-boot/verified boot on Compute Module 4 plus preliminary support for Compute Module 5.
Creating a secure-boot system with encrypted file-system support from scratch can be a complicated process.
The recommended starting point is the Raspberry Pi Secure Boot Provisioner which provides an automated mechanism for installing Raspberry Pi OS - pi-gen images with secure-boot and root file-system encryption.
If you are porting an existing Buildroot/Yocto image then please see the secure boot code signing tutorial uses a minimal buildroot initramfs OS image to demonstrate the low-level code-signing aspects.
- Secure boot BCM2711 chain of trust diagram.
- Secure boot BCM2712 chain of trust diagram.
- Secure boot configuration properties.
- Device tree bootloader signed-boot property.
- Device tree public key - NVMEM property.
- Raspberry Pi OTP registers.
- Raspberry Pi device specific private key.
Secure boot require a 2048 bit RSA asymmetric keypair and the Python pycrytodome
module to sign the bootloader EEPROM config and boot image.
sudo apt install python3-pycryptodome
cd $HOME
openssl genrsa 2048 > private.pem
- Please see the secure boot EEPROM guide to enable via rpiboot
recovery.bin
. - Please see the secure boot MSD guide for instructions about to mount the EMMC via USB mass-storage once secure-boot has been enabled.
Secure Boot requires self-contained ramdisk (boot.img
) FAT image to be created containing the GPU
firmware, kernel and any other dependencies that would normally be loaded from the boot partition.
This plus a signature file (boot.sig
) must be placed in the boot partition of the Raspberry Pi
or network download location.
The boot.img
file should contain:-
- The kernel
- Device tree overlays
- GPU firmware (start.elf and fixup.dat)
- Linux initramfs containing the application OR scripts to mount/create an encrypted file-system.
Secure-boot is responsible for loading the Kernel + initramfs and loads all of the data
from a single boot.img
file stored on an unencrypted FAT/EFI partition.
There is no support in the ROM or firmware for full-disk encryption.
If a custom OS image needs to use an encrypted file-system then this would normally be implemented via scripts within the initramfs.
Raspberry Pi computers do not have a secure enclave, however, it's possible to store a 256 bit
device specific private key
in OTP. The key is accessible to any process with access to /dev/vcio
(vcmailbox
), therefore, the
secure-boot OS must ensure that access to this interface is restricted.
It is not possible to prevent code running in ARM supervisor mode (e.g. kernel code) from accessing OTP hardware directly
See also:-
The secure boot tutorial contains a boot.img
that supports cryptsetup and a simple example.
The secure-boot-example
directory contains a simple boot.img
example with working HDMI,
network, UART console and common tools in an initramfs.
This was generated from the raspberrypi-signed-boot
buildroot config. Whilst not a generic fully featured configuration it should be relatively
straightforward to cherry-pick the raspberrypi-secure-boot
package and helper scripts into
other buildroot configurations.
The firmware must be new enough to support secure boot. The latest firmware APT package supports secure boot. To download the firmware files directly.
git clone --depth 1 --branch stable https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware
To check the version information within a start4.elf
firmware file run
strings start4.elf | grep VC_BUILD_
To verify that the boot image has been created correctly use losetup to mount the .img file.
sudo su
mkdir -p boot-mount
LOOP=$(losetup -f)
losetup -f boot.img
mount ${LOOP} boot-mount/
echo boot.img contains
find boot-mount/
umount boot-mount
losetup -d ${LOOP}
rmdir boot-mount
For secure-boot, rpi-eeprom-digest
extends the current .sig
format of
sha256 + timestamp to include an hex format RSA bit PKCS#1 v1.5 signature. The key length
must be 2048 bits.
../tools/rpi-eeprom-digest -i boot.img -o boot.sig -k "${KEY_FILE}"
To verify the signature of an existing image set the PUBLIC_KEY_FILE
environment variable
to the path of the public key file in PEM format.
../tools/rpi-eeprom-digest -i boot.img -k "${PUBLIC_KEY_FILE}" -v boot.sig
rpi-eeprom-digest
is a shell script that wraps a call to openssl dgst -sign
.
If the private key is stored within a hardware security module instead of
a .PEM file the openssl
command will need to be replaced with the appropriate call to the HSM.
rpi-eeprom-digest
called by update-pieeprom.sh
to sign the EEPROM config file.
The RSA public key must be stored within the EEPROM so that it can be used by the bootloader.
By default, the RSA public key is automatically extracted from the private key PEM file. Alternatively,
the public key may be specified separately via the -p
argument to update-pieeprom.sh
and rpi-eeprom-config
.
To extract the public key in PEM format from a private key PEM file, run:
openssl rsa -in private.pem -pubout -out public.pem
Copy boot.img
and boot.sig
to the boot filesystem.
Secure boot images can be loaded from any of the normal boot modes (e.g. SD, USB, Network).