This repository contains an UEFI firmware implementation based on EDK2 for various RK3588 boards.
- Radxa ROCK 5B
- Radxa ROCK 5A
- Orange Pi 5
- Orange Pi 5 Plus
- ameriDroid Indiedroid Nova
- Firefly ROC-RK3588S-PC
- StationPC Station M3
- Mekotronics R58X
- Mekotronics R58 Mini
- Khadas Edge2
- Mixtile Blade 3
- FriendlyELEC NanoPC T6
- FriendlyELEC NanoPi R6C
- FriendlyELEC NanoPi R6S
- Hinlink H88K
Applicable to all platforms unless otherwise noted.
Device | Status | Notes |
---|---|---|
USB 3 / 2.0 / 1.1 | 🟢 Working | Host-mode only, USB 3 devices connected to a Type-C port only work in one orientation. |
PCIe 3.0 (RK3588) | 🟢 Working | No bifurcation support |
PCIe 2.1 | 🟢 Working | |
SATA | 🟢 Working | |
SD/eMMC | 🟢 Working | |
HDMI output | 🟡 Partial | Single display with mode limited at 1080p 60 Hz |
DisplayPort output (USB-C) | 🟡 Partial | Mode fixed at 1080p 60 Hz, only works in one orientation of the Type-C port. |
eDP output | 🟡 Partial | Disabled, requires manual configuration depending on the platform and panel. |
DSI output | đź”´ Not working | |
GMAC Ethernet | đź”´ Not working | Only brought-up for OS usage |
Realtek PCIe Ethernet | 🟢 Working | Some platforms don't have MAC addresses set, networking may not work in that case. |
UART | 🟢 Working | UART2 console available at 1500000 baud rate |
GPIO | 🟡 Partial | Only read, write and alt function supported |
I2C | 🟢 Working | |
SPI | 🟢 Working | |
PWM | 🟢 Working | |
SPI NOR Flash | 🟢 Working | |
HYM8563 real-time clock | 🟢 Working | |
Cooling fan | 🟢 Working | Supported on most platforms. Fan connector where present, otherwise available at the GPIO header for 3-pin PWM fans (do not connect 2-pin fans there!): * Orange Pi 5: GPIO4_B2 * Indiedroid Nova: GPIO4_B4 |
Status LED | 🟢 Working | |
Voltage regulators (RK806, RK860) | 🟢 Working | |
FUSB302 USB Type-C Controller | đź”´ Not working | Required for PD negotiation and connector orientation switching |
OS | Version | Tested/supported hardware | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Windows | 10 (1904x), 11 | Status | |
NetBSD | 10 | Display, UART, USB, PCIe (incl. NVME), SATA, eMMC, GMAC Ethernet | |
VMware ESXi Arm Fling | >= 1.12 | Display, USB | * PCIe devices will hang at boot, need to disable in settings or leave the ports empty. * GMAC Ethernet gets detected but does not work. |
Linux | tested Ubuntu 22.04, kernel 5.15.0-75-generic | Display, UART, USB, PCIe (incl. NVME & Ethernet), SATA | For full hardware functionality, use a kernel with RK3588 support and switch to Device Tree mode. |
- Devices behind PCIe switches do not work (e.g. the two NICs on Mixtile Blade 3).
- GMAC is limited to Gigabit speed (i.e. no 10/100).
OS | Version | Tested/supported hardware | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Rockchip SDK Linux | 5.10 legacy, tested with Armbian rk3588-live-iso | Platform-dependent, most peripherals work. | If using a different kernel, see Device Tree configuration. |
-
One of the supported devices.
-
Either SPI NOR flash (included with some devices), SD card or eMMC to store the firmware on.
-
Quality power supply that can provide at least 15 W. Depending on the peripherals you use, more may be needed.
Note: on Mixtile Blade 3, a fixed voltage higher than 5V must be supplied. The board cannot power any external peripherals if the input voltage is just 5V. USB-PD negotiation is not supported by firmware.
-
HDMI or DisplayPort (USB-C) screen capable of at least 1080p 60Hz.
-
Optionally, if display is not available or for debugging purposes, an UART adapter capable of 1500000 baud rate (e.g. USB CH340, CP2104).
The latest version can be obtained from https://github.com/edk2-porting/edk2-rk3588/releases.
If your platform is not yet supported, using an image meant for another device is not recommended. Although they are generally similar, voltage setup can happen to be different and you may risk damaging the board. External peripherals are unlikely to work either.
UEFI can be flashed to either a SPI NOR flash, SD card or eMMC module:
-
For removable SD or eMMC (easiest), you can simply use balenaEtcher, RPi Imager or dd.
-
For SPI NOR or soldered eMMC, instructions can be found at: https://wiki.radxa.com/Rock5/install/spi.
In short, you can flash the image from Linux booted on the device or by using RKDevTool on another computer. The latter requires entering Maskrom mode on the device. The way to do this slightly varies across platforms, refer to your vendor documentation.
Warning: these operations will erase data on the storage device. Make a backup first!
If you wish to have both UEFI and an OS on the same SD or eMMC device: flash UEFI first, then create any additional partitions without touching the first, reserved one. Steps for updating the firmware in this case can be found here.
Note: Using SPI NOR (if present) is recommeded, as it leaves the other storage options free for other purposes. Additionally, SD/eMMC will limit the firmware's ability to access its own storage (variable store) when an OS is running. This feature is mostly used by OS installers to create the boot menu options, it is not mandatory.
If the flashing process has been done correctly, you should see the status LED blinking (if present), and shortly after, the platform's boot logo with a progress bar at the bottom on the connected display.
At this stage, you can press Esc to enter the firmware setup, F1 to launch the UEFI Shell, or, provided you also have an UEFI bootloader/app on a storage device, you can let the system automatically run that, which is the default behavior if no action is taken.
Check the Supported peripherals and Supported OSes sections to see what's currently possible with this firmware.
Also check the configuration options described below, some of which may need to be changed depending on the OS used.
If you experience any issues, please see the Troubleshooting section.
The UEFI provides a few configuration options, like CPU frequency, PCIe/SATA selection for an M.2 port, fan control, etc. These can be viewed and changed using both the UI configuration menu (under Device Manager
-> Rockchip Platform Configuration
), as well as the UEFI Shell.
Configuration through the user interface is fairly straightforward and help information is provided on the right side of the menu.
Configuration through the UEFI shell is more advanced and mostly useful for scripts. See Setting configuration options via the shell.
-
CPU clocks are set to 816 MHz (boot default) on platforms without a cooling fan included. If you have adequate cooling, go to the configuration menu ->
CPU Performance
and set all Cluster Presets toMaximum
. -
If you only wish to boot non-Windows OSes in ACPI mode, go to the configuration menu ->
ACPI / Device Tree
and setUSB 2.0 Support
toEnabled
, in order to get maximum speed from USB 2.0 ports.Booting Windows with this option enabled will cause it to crash.
For rich Linux support, it is recommended to enable Device Tree mode. You can do so by going to the configuration menu -> ACPI / Device Tree
and setting Config Table Mode
to Device Tree
.
By default, the firmware installs a DTB compatible with (most) Rockchip SDK Linux 5.10 legacy kernel variants.
It is also possible to provide a custom DTB and overlays. To enable this, go to the configuration menu -> ACPI / Device Tree
and set Support DTB override & overlays
to Enabled
.
The firmware will now look for overrides in the partition of a selected boot option / OS loader. In most cases this will be the first FAT32 EFI System Partition.
-
The base DTB must be located at
\dtb\base\<PLATFORM-DT-NAME>.dtb
. -
The overlays can be placed in:
\dtb\overlays
- will be applied first, regardless of the platform.\dtb\overlays\<PLATFORM-DT-NAME>
- will be applied only to the specified platform.
and must have the
.dtbo
extension.
The paths above are relative to the root of the file system. That is, the dtb
directory must not be placed in a sub-directory.
<PLATFORM-DT-NAME>
can be:
Name | Platform |
---|---|
rk3588s-9tripod-linux |
Indiedroid Nova |
roc-rk3588s-pc |
ROC-RK3588S-PC / Station M3 |
rk3588-nanopc-t6 |
NanoPC T6 |
rk3588s-nanopi-r6c |
NanoPi R6C |
rk3588s-nanopi-r6s |
NanoPi R6S |
rk3588-hinlink-h88k |
H88K |
rk3588s-khadas-edge2 |
Edge2 |
rk3588-blueberry-minipc-linux |
R58 Mini |
rk3588-blueberry-edge-v12-linux |
R58X (v1.2) |
rk3588-blade3-v101-linux |
Blade 3 |
rk3588s-orangepi-5 |
Orange Pi 5 |
rk3588-orangepi-5-plus |
Orange Pi 5 Plus |
rk3588s-rock-5a |
ROCK 5A |
rk3588-rock-5b |
ROCK 5B |
In the absence of a custom base DTB override, the overlays are applied on top of the firmware-provided DTB.
The firmware applies some fix-ups to its own DTB depending on the user settings (e.g. PCIe/SATA/USB selection, making SATA overlays redundant). These fix-ups are not applied to a custom base DTB - overlays must be used instead.
If the application of an overlay fails (e.g. due to it being invalid in regard to the base DTB), all overlays are discarded, including those that got applied up to that point.
If the custom base DTB is invalid, the firmware-provided one will be passed to the OS instead.
This entire process is logged to the serial console. There's currently no other way to see potential errors.
If the storage is only used for UEFI and nothing else, simply download the latest image and flash it as described in the Getting started section.
If it is also used by an OS and has additional partitions, only part of the image needs to be applied. This can be done with the dd
tool:
dd if=FIRMWARE.img of=DESTINATION bs=512 skip=64 seek=64 conv=notrunc
FIRMWARE.img
is the firmware image for your platform. E.g. edge2_UEFI_Release_v0.8.img
.
DESTINATION
is the destination storage that you wish to update the firmware on. E.g. /dev/sdb
.
Here we skip the GPT and copy the firmware starting at offset 0x8000 (64
blocks * 512
bytes block size) until its end. See Flash layout for more details.
First of all, make sure your device can only possibly load the UEFI firmware and nothing else. U-Boot must not present on either SPI NOR, SD or eMMC, otherwise it could take precedence.
Below you can find some basic debugging information. If none of this helps, please see the Advanced troubleshooting section.
If your device has an activity LED, the firmware will blink it in different patterns to indicate the current system status.
-
Immediately after power on, the LED should start pulsing quickly. This indicates that the firmware is initializing.
-
After initialization (usually takes less than 5 seconds), the LED will switch to a short pulsing every 2 seconds or so. This indicates that the firmware is ready and waiting for user action or the countdown to boot automatically. The display output should also be enabled at this point.
-
When the firmware boots an OS and is about to exit, the LED will stop blinking.
If the LED:
-
does not light up after power on, this means the firmware has not managed to load up at all.
-
gets stuck in either on or off state after blinking a few times and never recovers, something went wrong and the firmware has crashed or frozen.
Note that it is only expected to stop as described at point 3) above.
Make sure you've flashed the firmware correctly and that it is the version designed for your device. In most cases this is the culprit.
Assuming the firmware loads fine:
- The display must support a resolution of at least 1080p at 60 Hz.
- If you're using HDMI and the system has two ports, only one will work. Try both.
- If you're using USB-C to DisplayPort, only one orientation of the USB-C connector will work. Check both.
If you are not able to get any display output, the only way to interact with UEFI is via the serial console.
- Try a different port.
- If you're using USB-C, 3.0 devices will only work in one orientation of the connector. Check both.
- Make sure the power supply and cable are good
-
Only Realtek PCIe and USB controllers are supported. Native Gigabit provided by RK3588 isn't.
-
Some boards with Realtek NICs do not have a MAC address set at factory and will show-up as being all zeros in UEFI, possibly preventing the adapter from obtaining an IP address.
You can easily fix this by writing the MAC address manually:
-
Boot into Linux and open up a terminal. The commands below apply to Armbian with legacy kernel.
-
Install the headers for your kernel version:
sudo apt install -y linux-headers-legacy-rk35xx
-
Clone Realtek PGTool and build the driver:
git clone https://github.com/redchenjs/rtnicpg cd rtnicpg make
-
Unload all Realtek modules and load the driver built above:
sudo rmmod pgdrv sudo ./pgload.sh
Note: make sure there aren't any remaining Realtek modules loaded after this, except for the new
pgdrv
.
If you haver8125
built-in, you might have to reboot withinitcall_blacklist=rtl8125_init_module
as a kernel parameter (in Grub). -
Burn a MAC address into the eFuses:
For only one NIC:
sudo ./rtnicpg-aarch64-linux-gnu /efuse /nodeid 00E04C001234
For two or more:
sudo ./rtnicpg-aarch64-linux-gnu /efuse /# 1 /nodeid 00E04C001234 sudo ./rtnicpg-aarch64-linux-gnu /efuse /# 2 /nodeid 00E04C001235
00E04C001234
is an example address. You can generate random and unique ones using: https://www.macvendorlookup.com/mac-address-generator
Note: the number of eFuses is limited, thus MAC addresses can only be changed a few times.
-
The firmware will log detailed information to the serial console when using a debug version. See the release notes for details on how to obtain this version.
-
The debug image needs to be flashed in place of the existing one.
-
Connect the UART2 RX, TX and GND pins on your device (check vendor documentation) to the UART adapter on your other computer.
-
Open up a serial terminal (
PuTTY
on Windows,stty
on Linux) set to 1500000 baud rate and 8n1 (default). -
Power on the device.
You should be able to see a lot of debug messages being printed. If that's not the case, double check the connections (swap RX/TX), make sure the adapter is functional and configured correctly.
The logs should give an insight of what's going on. If you need help analyzing them, feel free to open an issue ticket.
You can open issues related to UEFI at https://github.com/edk2-porting/edk2-rk3588/issues.
Please include as many details as possible: expected behavior, what actually happens, steps to reproduce, serial logs, etc.
Also check the existing issues in case yours might be already reported.
The firmware can only be built on Linux currently. For Windows use WSL.
-
Install required packages:
For Ubuntu/Debian:
sudo apt install git gcc g++ build-essential gcc-aarch64-linux-gnu iasl python3-pyelftools uuid-dev
For Arch Linux:
sudo pacman -Syu sudo pacman -S git base-devel gcc dtc aarch64-linux-gnu-binutils aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc aarch64-linux-gnu-glibc python python-pyelftools iasl --needed
-
Clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/edk2-porting/edk2-rk3588.git --recursive cd edk2-rk3588
-
Build UEFI (ROCK 5B for example, check list of platform configs):
./build.sh --device rock-5b --release Release # (or Debug)
If you get build errors, it is very likely that you're still missing some dependencies. The list of packages above is not complete and depending on the distro you may need to install additional ones. In most cases, looking up the error messages on the internet will point you at the right packages.
Address | Size | Desc | File |
---|---|---|---|
0x00000000 | 0x00004400 | GPT Table | rk3588_spi_nor_gpt.img |
0x00008000 | IDBlock | idblock.bin | |
0x00100000 | 0x00500000 | BL33_AP_UEFI FV | ${DEVICE}_EFI.itb |
0x007C0000 | 0x00010000 | NV_VARIABLE_STORE | |
0x007D0000 | 0x00010000 | NV_FTW_WORKING | |
0x007E0000 | 0x00010000 | NV_FTW_SPARE |
The variable store is not included in the flash image, in order to prevent overwriting it and to maintain the user settings across updates.
The firmware expects these exact offsets, do not change them.
Address | Size | Desc | File |
---|---|---|---|
0x00040000 | ATF | bl31_0x00040000.bin | |
0x000f0000 | ATF | bl31_0x000f0000.bin | |
0x00200000 | 0x00500000 | UEFI FV | BL33_AP_UEFI.Fv |
0x007C0000 | 0x00010000 | NV_VARIABLE_STORE | |
0x007D0000 | 0x00010000 | NV_FTW_WORKING | |
0x007E0000 | 0x00010000 | NV_FTW_SPARE | |
0x08400000 | OP-TEE | bl32.bin | |
0xff100000 | ATF (PMU_MEM) | bl31_0xff100000.bin |
To configure using the UEFI Shell, use setvar
command to read/write the UEFI variables with GUID = 10f41c33-a468-42cd-85ee-7043213f73a3
.
The syntax to read a setting is:
setvar <NAME> -guid 10f41c33-a468-42cd-85ee-7043213f73a3
The syntax to write a setting is:
setvar <NAME> -guid 10f41c33-a468-42cd-85ee-7043213f73a3 -bs -rt -nv =<VALUE>
VALUE
must be in hexadecimal.
For string-type settings, the syntax to write is:
setvar <NAME> -guid 10f41c33-a468-42cd-85ee-7043213f73a3 -bs -rt -nv =L"<VALUE>" =0x0000
Variable | NAME | VALUE |
---|---|---|
CPUx Clock Preset |
CpuPerf_CPUxClusterClockPreset |
Boot default = 0x00000000 Min = 0x00000001 Max = 0x00000002 Custom = 0x00000003 |
CPUx Custom Clock Preset (MHz) |
CpuPerf_CPUxClusterClockCustom |
Hex numeric option, 4-bytes See below. |
CPUx Voltage Mode |
CpuPerf_CPUxClusterVoltageMode |
Auto = 0x00000000 (default)Custom = 0x00000001 |
CPUx Custom Voltage (uV) |
CpuPerf_CPUxClusterVoltageCustom |
Hex numeric value, 4-bytes See below. |
x
can be :
L
for LITTLE clusterB01
for big cluster #0B23
for big cluster #1
CpuPerf_CPUxClusterClockCustom
can have one of the following values:
- All clusters:
408000000
,600000000
,816000000
,1008000000
,1200000000
,1416000000
,1608000000
,1800000000
- Big cluster additional clocks:
2016000000
,2208000000
,2256000000
,2304000000
,2352000000
,2400000000
CpuPerf_CPUxClusterVoltageCustom
is the cluster voltage in microvolts. Min: 500000
, Max: 1500000
.
Default value depends on cluster type.
Variable | NAME | VALUE |
---|---|---|
PHY #0 Mode | ComboPhy0Mode |
Unconnected = 0x00000000 PCIe = 0x00000001 SATA = 0x00000002 |
PHY #1 Mode | ComboPhy1Mode |
Unconnected = 0x00000000 PCIe = 0x00000001 SATA = 0x00000002 |
PHY #2 Mode | ComboPhy2Mode |
Unconnected = 0x00000000 PCIe = 0x00000001 SATA = 0x00000002 USB3 = 0x00000003 |
Default values and supported options depend on the platform. Check documentation and schematics for more details on PHY wiring.
Variable | NAME | VALUE |
---|---|---|
PHY #0 USB 3 SuperSpeed State | UsbDpPhy0Usb3State |
Enabled = 0x00000001 Disabled = 0x00000000 |
PHY #1 USB 3 SuperSpeed State | UsbDpPhy1Usb3State |
Enabled = 0x00000001 Disabled = 0x00000000 |
Variable | NAME | VALUE |
---|---|---|
Support State | Pcie30State |
Enabled = 0x00000001 Disabled = 0x00000000 |
Variable | NAME | VALUE |
---|---|---|
Config Table Mode | ConfigTableMode |
ACPI = 0x00000001 DeviceTree = 0x00000002 Both = 0x00000003 |
Variable | NAME | VALUE |
---|---|---|
USB 2.0 Support | AcpiUsb2State |
Enabled = 0x00000001 Disabled = 0x00000000 |
Variable | NAME | VALUE |
---|---|---|
Support DTB override & overlays | FdtSupportOverrides |
Enabled = 0x01 Disabled = 0x00 |
Variable | NAME | VALUE |
---|---|---|
On-board Fan | CoolingFanState |
Enabled = 0x00000001 Disabled = 0x00000000 |
Fan Speed (%) | CoolingFanSpeed |
Hex numeric value, 4-bytes Percentage: 0-100 |
Examples:
- To read the 'CPUL Clock Preset' setting :
setvar CpuPerf_CPULClusterClockPreset -guid 10f41c33-a468-42cd-85ee-7043213f73a3
- To change the 'CPUL Clock Preset' setting to 'Maximum' :
setvar CpuPerf_CPULClusterClockPreset -guid 10f41c33-a468-42cd-85ee-7043213f73a3 -bs -rt -nv =0x00000002
Most of the UEFI code is licensed under the default EDK2 license, which is BSD-2-Clause-Patent.
Some non-critical components have been ported from Rockchip's U-Boot fork and are licensed as GPL-2.0-or-later:
- UsbDpPhy
- DwDpLib
The files in edk2-rockchip-non-osi
are licensed as GPL-2.0-only.
The license for some of the blobs in the misc/rkbin/
directory can be found at: https://github.com/rockchip-linux/rkbin/blob/master/LICENSE. Note that it also contains binaries built from open-source projects such as U-Boot (SPL), Arm Trusted Firmware and OP-TEE, having a different license.
- Radxa forum: https://forum.radxa.com/t/windows-uefi-on-rock-5-mega-thread/12924
- Hack w/ Rockchip Telegram: https://t.me/UEFIonRockchip
- Windows on R Discord: https://discord.gg/vjHwptUCa3
This firmware is based on Rockchip's initial efforts at https://gitlab.com/rk3588_linux/rk/uefi-monorepo.
For RK356x, check out the Quartz64-UEFI project at https://github.com/jaredmcneill/quartz64_uefi, from which we also reused some code.