![]() Plug in a network cable from your computer to the Raspberry Pi’s built in network port.Insert the SD/Micro SD card into the Raspberry Pi.For Windows desktop: On a Windows desktop, use Win32DiskImager to copy the img file to your SD card’s drive letter At this point your are ready to boot OpenWrt on Raspberry Pi. Replace the sdX with your device name you already get from previous step, such as sdb or sdf. As the root user, use dd to copy the image file to the device you identified previously, for example: For Raspberry Pi A/B/B+: 1ĭd if=/home/username/Downloads/openwrt-brcm2708-bcm2708-sdcard-vfat-ext4.img of=/dev/sdX bs=2M conv=fsyncĭd if=/home/username/Downloads/openwrt-brcm2708-bcm2709-sdcard-vfat-ext4.img of=/dev/sdX bs=2M conv=fsync The most recent message should give you the SD card’s device name, such as sdb or sdf or similar 2. Step 2: Flash OpenWrt to an SD/Micro SD card. ![]() Open and choose the most recent update from the download list. Step 1: Download the relevant openwrt-brcm2708-bcm2708-sdcard-vfat-ext4.img (For Raspberry Pi A/B/B+) or openwrt-brcm2708-bcm2709-sdcard-vfat-ext4.img image (For Raspberry Pi 2).
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