# Raspberry Pi 3 [pi3] kernel=rpi3-u-boot.bin dtoverlay=upstream # Raspberry Pi 4 [pi4] kernel=rpi4-u-boot.bin dtoverlay=upstream-pi4 # Default Fedora configs for all Raspberry Pi Revisions [all] # Put the RPi into 64 bit mode arm_64bit=1 # Enable UART # Only enable UART if you're going to use it as it has speed implications # Serial console is ttyS0 on RPi3 and ttyAMA0 on all other variants # u-boot will auto detect serial and pass corrent options to kernel if enabled # Speed details: https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=141195 # Terrible hack to work around U-Boot issues on most devices enable_uart=1 # Early boot delay in the hope monitors are initialised enough to provide EDID bootcode_delay=1 # We need this to be 32Mb to support VCHI services and drivers which use them # but this isn't used by mainline VC4 driver so reduce to lowest supported value # You need to set this to at least 80 for using the camera gpu_mem=32 # Use eXtended firmware by default start_x=1 # Stop the RPi turning on HDMI monitors on reboot hdmi_ignore_cec_init=1 # New option to allow the firmware to load upstream dtb # Will allow things like camera, touchscreen etc to work OOTB upstream_kernel=1 # HAT and DT overlays. Documentation at Raspberry Pi here: # https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/configuration/device-tree.md # Each dtoverlay line is an individual HAT/overlay, multiple lines allowed # dtoverlay=rpi-sense # Other options you can adjust for all Raspberry Pi Revisions # https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/configuration/config-txt/README.md # All options documented at http://elinux.org/RPiconfig # for more options see http://elinux.org/RPi_config.txt # To use this on Fedora you need to use firmware provided device tree, not kernel # For this functionality follow the following guide: # https://fedoraproject.org/w/index.php?title=Architectures/ARM/Raspberry_Pi/HATs