--- title: gokrazy quickstart aliases: - /quickstart.html menu: main: title: "Quickstart" weight: 20 ---
Currently, the Raspberry Pi 3 and Pi 4 are the only supported models. Many people assume the Raspberry Pi Zero W could be used as well. Unfortunately, it uses the older BCM2835 SoC, which is not arm64, so gokrazy won’t run on it. See also stapelberg’s reddit comment about supported hardware.
If you don’t already have Go installed, install the latest Go version.
INSTANCE=gokrazy/hello; mkdir -p ~/${INSTANCE?} && cd ~/${INSTANCE?} && echo module ${INSTANCE?} > go.mod go get -u github.com/gokrazy/tools/cmd/gokr-packer
Plug an SD card into your card reader and locate its device node by checking dmesg | tail
. In this example, we’ll assume the SD card is accessible as /dev/sdb
.
To overwrite the entire SD card /dev/sdb
with a gokrazy installation running a hello world program, use:
cd ~/gokrazy/hello gokr-packer -overwrite=/dev/sdb github.com/gokrazy/hello github.com/gokrazy/serial-busybox
The gokr-packer
command above will result in log output like this:
2017/03/01 20:59:55 packer.go:85: installing [github.com/gokrazy/hello] 2017/03/01 20:59:56 packer.go:131: partitioning /dev/sdb 2017/03/01 20:59:56 parttable.go:40: device holds 15931539456 bytes 2017/03/01 20:59:56 packer.go:139: waiting for /dev/sdb1 to appear If your applications need to store persistent data, create a file system using e.g.: mkfs.ext4 /dev/sdb4 To boot gokrazy, plug the SD card into a Raspberry Pi 3 or 4 (no other models supported) To interact with the device, gokrazy provides a web interface reachable at: http://gokrazy:<automatically-generated-random-password>@gokrazy/ There will be not be any other output (no HDMI, no serial console, etc.)
After booting from this SD card, your Raspberry Pi 3 or 4 will:
~/.config/gokrazy/http-password.txt
)