title: Generic SPI Flashing Guide x-toc-enable: true ...
NOTE: Canoeboot standardises on flashprog now, as of 3 May 2024, which is a fork of flashrom.
There are a plethora of single board computers with which you can flash canoeboot to a SOIC chip. Some users might be daunted by the price of a raspberry pi. This guide is intended to help users looking to use a programmer which is not listed in the main guide. As an example, this guide will use the libre computer 'le potato.' You should note however, that this guide is intended to demonstrate how to set up any SBC with SPI programming capabilities for flashing Canoeboot.
If you are wondering about which SBC to buy, keep these things in mind:
All of this means that you should try to find a board that is known to support SPI on an OS for which there are available images. It is not enough to know that the board itself supports SPI.
In theory, any linux based operating system will do. In practice, many distros are highly limited when it comes to single-board-computers. SBCs often require specialized kernel patches which are rarely upstreamed. Additionally, armhf boards (like the le potato) are not supported in most modern distros.
In light of the above facts, it is a good general rule to use a distro aimed at supporting SBCs. Armbian is one such distro you might use. Note that not all armbian images support SPI. If your SBC supports Raspbian then using it will make your work much easier. As a bonus, you may refer to the main guide if the SBC you have supports raspbian, should you get confused with this guide.
Many SBC operating systems enable ssh by default. If the OS you chose does not enable ssh on first boot, try checking the distro documentation and looking for terms such as 'headless install.'
You will need the IP address of your programmer to continue.
Connecting via ethernet is generally easier than doing so with WiFi.
Check your distro's docs if you wish to connect with WiFi only.
To determine the IP address of your programmer, log in to your AP/Router web interface.
If you're not sure the IP address of your AP, it is likely 192.168.1.1.
You can determine the correct IP address with ip r
on a GNU+Linux system.
You should see your programmer somewhere on the homepage, depending on your router firmware.
This author recommends using https://openwrt.org/ for your router firmware.
SSH to your programmer using the default credentials as specified in your distro's docs. The IP address is the one determined in the earlier step. For example:
ssh root@192.168.0.167
If you have determined that a board supports SPI then the only step left is to determine the correct location of the SPI pins. The board will have the pinout in its documentation. The Le potato board has the same pinout as the raspberry pi so you can refer to the main SPIC documentation.
If your board is not raspberry pi compatible, refer to the wiring table. Match each of the categories in the 'signal' column with those in the 'pin' column. Using this method, you can theoretically use any single board computer with SPI support.
The modules needed and methods to enable SPI vary based on the SBC you choose. You should always make sure there is a well documented method for enabling SPI on your SBC before purchasing. In the case of the le potato, SPI is enabled by activating the correct overlays as such (raspbian):
sudo ldto enable spicc spicc-spidev
sudo ldto merge spicc spicc-spidev
Some GNU+Linux distros will provide flashprog in their default repositories.
sudo apt update
sudo apt install flashprog
Reading/writing from SPI works respectively as such:
sudo ./flashprog -p linux_spi:dev=/dev/spidev0.0,spispeed=32768 -r /path/to/read.bin
sudo ./flashprog -p linux_spi:dev=/dev/spidev0.0,spispeed=32768 -w /path/to/canoeboot.rom
Note that spispeed
varies based on the board in question.
A standard lower limit is 512.
For example, to read on a board with a lower SPI speed, you may try:
sudo ./flashprog -p linux_spi:dev=/dev/spidev0.0,spispeed=512 -r /path/to/read.bin