![]() ![]() You should see an ip address in the wlan0 section. You will need to hook up a monitor and keyboard to the BPI. RUN TERMINAL COMMAND: sudo nano /roofs/etc/network/interfacesĬhange the ssid and psk to match your home network, change wireless power to on, CTRL X and save file.Įject the SD card once again and put in BPI. You will need to know the exact path to edit that file. Navagate to this folder in file explorer of the rootfs partition /etc/network/interfaces. flash_sdcard_m2z_v2.sh /dev/sdbĮject the SD card and insert it in again. RUN TERMINAL COMMAND: cat rootfs_kernel_4.17.y.tar.gz. Use Disks or other util to find what disk the SD card is. Mine was cd ~/bananapi-zero-ubuntu-base-minimal Here are the steps as of this posting date: Use Linux computer for this first part.ĭownload or clone the bananapi-zero-ubuntu-base-minimal file from github.Įxtract the file to a folder and open terminal to that folder. You should be able to copy and paste all the commands from here. I also used an 8gb SD card for this project. It is pretty decent in performance and is comparable to my RPI 3b I had previously. I will be making a case for it with fan and heat sink since it does get warmer than the RPI zeros. I had a BPI M2 Zero laying around from a project that never took off, so I figured a quad core in a small size would work great for my print server. There is a decent guide but there were some missing parts that I thought would confuse beginners. I wanted to share the working steps to get a BPI M2 Zero setup with OctoPrint. ![]()
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