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HOWTO: Upgrade Raspberry Pi OS from Bullseye to Bookworm
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### WARNING: READ CAREFULLY BEFORE ATTEMPTING ### | |
# | |
# Officially, this is not recommended. YMMV | |
# https://www.raspberrypi.com/news/bookworm-the-new-version-of-raspberry-pi-os/ | |
# | |
# This mostly works if you are on 64bit. You are on your own if you are on 32bit or mixed 64/32bit | |
# | |
# Credit to anfractuosity and fgimenezm for figuring out additional details for kernels | |
# | |
# Make sure everything is up-to-date | |
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get dist-upgrade | |
# Point to bookworm repos instead | |
sudo sed -i -e 's/bullseye/bookworm/g' /etc/apt/sources.list | |
sudo sed -i -e 's/bullseye/bookworm/g' /etc/apt/sources.list.d/raspi.list | |
# Contents of /etc/apt/sources.list | |
deb http://deb.debian.org/debian bookworm main contrib non-free non-free-firmware | |
deb http://security.debian.org/debian-security bookworm-security main contrib non-free non-free-firmware | |
deb http://deb.debian.org/debian bookworm-updates main contrib non-free non-free-firmware | |
# Uncomment deb-src lines below then 'apt-get update' to enable 'apt-get source' | |
#deb-src http://deb.debian.org/debian bookworm main contrib non-free | |
#deb-src http://security.debian.org/debian-security bookworm-security main contrib non-free | |
#deb-src http://deb.debian.org/debian bookworm-updates main contrib non-free | |
# Contents of /etc/apt/sources.list.d/raspi.list | |
deb http://archive.raspberrypi.org/debian/ bookworm main | |
# Uncomment line below then 'apt-get update' to enable 'apt-get source' | |
#deb-src http://archive.raspberrypi.org/debian/ bookworm main | |
# Do actual update | |
sudo apt update && sudo apt -y full-upgrade && sudo apt -y clean && sudo apt -y autoremove | |
# Reboot | |
sudo reboot | |
# Remove old config files after doing sanity checks | |
sudo apt purge ?config-files | |
### Switch to the new kernels ### | |
# | |
## WARNING: Since this has bitten several folks. The following can completely brick your system requiring a reinstall | |
## DO NOT do this if you are unsure | |
# | |
# Prep | |
sudo dpkg --purge --force-depends raspberrypi-kernel raspberrypi-bootloader | |
sudo umount /boot | |
sudo fsck -y /boot | |
sudo mkdir /boot/firmware | |
sudo sed -i.bak -e "s#boot#boot/firmware#" /etc/fstab | |
sudo systemctl daemon-reload | |
sudo mount /boot/firmware | |
sudo apt install raspi-firmware | |
# Actually install the kernels. Make sure you pick the right version for your Pi | |
# sudo apt install linux-image-rpi-v8 linux-headers-rpi-v8 # 64bit | |
# sudo apt install linux-image-rpi-v7l linux-headers-rpi-v7l # 32bit | |
# sudo apt install linux-image-rpi-v6 linux-headers-rpi-v6 | |
# Append auto_initramfs=1 to the bottom of file where it says [all] | |
sudo sed -i.bak '$ a\auto_initramfs=1' /boot/firmware/config.txt | |
# Reboot | |
sudo reboot | |
# Verify using "uname -a" (correct as of 10/2023) | |
# Old kernel | |
# Linux raspberrypi 6.1.21-v8+ #1642 SMP PREEMPT Mon Apr 3 17:24:16 BST 2023 aarch64 GNU/Linux | |
# New kernel | |
# Linux raspberrypi 6.1.0-rpi4-rpi-v8 #1 SMP PREEMPT Debian 1:6.1.54-1+rpt2 (2023-10-05) aarch64 GNU/Linux | |
# If you are not converted to using NetworkManager, you might lose networking upon reboot. | |
# Check the ARP table to see what the new DHCP assigned IP address is. You may have to manually set the IP address again | |
# Thanks to solsticedhiver for identifying this | |
# | |
# Install NetworkManager if not already installed | |
sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends network-manager | |
# | |
# Switch to NetworkManager from dhcpcd | |
sudo systemctl enable --now NetworkManager | |
sudo systemctl disable --now dhcpcd | |
# | |
# Set up static IP. Adjust as necessary | |
sudo nmcli -p connection show | |
sudo nmcli -p connection show "Wired connection 1" | |
sudo nmcli con mod "Wired connection 1" ipv4.method manual ipv4.addresses 192.168.1.5/24 ipv4.gateway 192.168.1.1 | |
# Reboot | |
sudo reboot | |
# | |
# Bonus steps | |
# | |
# Install btop | |
sudo apt-get install btop | |
# | |
# Update /etc/ssh/sshd_config for up to date, secure by default config. Use ssh-audit to verify | |
KexAlgorithms [email protected],curve25519-sha256,[email protected] | |
HostKeyAlgorithms [email protected],ssh-ed25519 | |
# Ciphers [email protected] # Disabled due to CVE-2023-48795 for now | |
Ciphers [email protected],[email protected] | |
MACs [email protected],[email protected] |
sudo sed -i.bak '$ a\auto_initramfs=1' /boot/firmware/config.txt
broke it for me. Raspi didn't boot with auto_initramfs
set to 1 anymore. Reverted it to 0 and boot with new kernel was successful.
# Switch to NetworkManager from dhcpcd
sudo systemctl enable --now NetworkManager
sudo systemctl disable --now dhcpcd
Noteable here is that NetworkManager ignores all interfaces defined in /etc/network/interfaces*
. The interfaces must be removed from there to get visible in NetworkManager.
Edit: I'm on a Raspberry Pi 2 Model B
Raspberry PI 4 Model B, 64bit, installed in NVMe disk. Just upgraded to bookworm with kernel, without problems :)
I've (mostly) followed these steps and now have Bookworm running on my Raspberry Pi model B. Notes:
- Lines 18-25 (contents of sources.list) only apply to 64-bit installations, not 32-bit installations. Lines 14-16 take care of sources.list based on your current install's bitness so just trust those.
- I was using an SD card from a fresh bookworm install (backed out of that, too much work) with root on an external SSD that still had bullseye installed. This booted fine with the SD card mounted at /boot, but IPv6 didn't work (I run dual stack). After making a backup copy of /boot, I followed lines 41-59, though I purged raspberrypi-kernel and raspberrypi-bootloader after unmounting /boot instead of before. New kernel (6.6.47+rpt-rpi-v6) installed fine and IPv6 was enabled after reboot.
- The above issues with IPv6 caused the initial upgrade to fail because my nginx config files had IPv6 addresses. I had to comment those out of the nginx config files then manually install nginx-full which allowed the upgrade to complete successfully.
- I already had auto_initramfs=1 in my config.txt
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This went perfectly smoothly for me on a Pi4, thanks!