This repository packages components from NVIDIA's Jetpack SDK for use with NixOS, including:
- Platform firmware flashing scripts
- A 5.10 Linux kernel from NVIDIA, which includes some open-source drivers like nvgpu
- An EDK2-based UEFI firmware
- ARM Trusted Firmware / OP-TEE
- Additional packages for:
- GPU computing: CUDA, CuDNN, TensorRT
- Multimedia: hardware accelerated encoding/decoding with V4L2 and gstreamer plugins
- Graphics: Wayland, GBM, EGL, Vulkan
- Power/fan control: nvpmodel, nvfancontrol
This package is based on the Jetpack 5 release, and will only work with devices supported by Jetpack 5.1:
- Jetson Orin AGX
- Jetson Orin NX
- Jetson Xavier AGX
- Jetson Xavier NX
The Jetson Nano, TX2, and TX1 devices are not supported, since support for them was dropped upstream in Jetpack 5. In the future, when the Orin Nano is released, it should be possible to make it work as well.
This step may be optional if your device already has recent-enough firmware which includes UEFI. (Post-Jetpack 5. Only newly shipped Orin devices might have this) If you are unsure, I'd recommend flashing the firmware anyway.
Plug in your Jetson device, press the "power" button" and ensure the power light turns on. Then, to enter recovery mode, hold the "recovery" button down while pressing the "reset" button. Connect via USB and verify the device is in recovery mode.
$ lsusb | grep -i NVIDIA
Bus 003 Device 013: ID 0955:7023 NVIDIA Corp. APX
On an x86_64 machine (some of NVIDIA's precompiled components like tegrarcm_v2
are only built for x86_64),
build and run (as root) the flashing script which corresponds to your device (making sure to
replace xavier-agx
with the name of your device, use nix flake show
to see options):
$ nix build github:anduril/jetpack-nixos#flash-xavier-agx-devkit
$ sudo ./result/bin/flash-xavier-agx-devkit
At this point, your device should have a working UEFI firmware accessible either a monitor/keyboard, or via UART.
Now, build and write the customized installer ISO to a USB drive:
$ nix build github:anduril/jetpack-nixos#iso_minimal
$ sudo dd if=./result/iso/nixos-22.11pre-git-aarch64-linux.iso of=/dev/sdX bs=1M oflag=sync status=progress
(Replace /dev/sdX
with the correct path for your USB drive)
As an alternative, you could also try the generic ARM64 multiplatform ISO from NixOS. See https://nixos.wiki/wiki/NixOS_on_ARM/UEFI (Last I tried, this worked on Xavier AGX but not Orin AGX. We should do additional testing to see exactly what is working or not with the vendor kernel vs. mainline kernel)
Insert the USB drive into the Jetson device. On the AGX devkits, I've had the best luck plugging into the USB-C slot above the power barrel jack. You may need to try a few USB options until you find one that works with both the UEFI firmware and the Linux kernel.
Press power / reset as needed. When prompted, press ESC to enter the UEFI firmware menu. In the "Boot Manager", select the correct USB device and boot directly into it.
Follow the NixOS manual for installation instructions, using the instructions specific to UEFI devices.
Include the following in your configuration.nix
(or the equivalent in your flake.nix
) before installing:
{
imports = [
(builtins.fetchTarball "https://github.com/anduril/jetpack-nixos/archive/master.tar.gz" + "/modules/default.nix")
];
hardware.nvidia-jetpack.enable = true;
hardware.nvidia-jetpack.som = "xavier-agx"; # Other options include orin-agx, xavier-nx, and xavier-nx-emmc
hardware.nvidia-jetpack.carrierBoard = "devkit";
}
The Xavier AGX contains some critical firmware paritions on the eMMC. If you are installing NixOS to the eMMC, be sure to not remove these partitions! You can remove and replace the "UDA" partition if you want to install NixOS to the eMMC. Better yet, install to an SSD.
After installing, reboot and pray!
On all recent Jetson devices besides the Xavier AGX, the firmware stores the UEFI variables on a flash chip on the QSPI bus.
However, the Xavier AGX stores it on a uefi_variables
partition on the eMMC.
This means that it cannot support runtime UEFI variables, since the UEFI runtime drivers to access the eMMC would conflict with the Linux kernel's drivers for the eMMC.
Concretely, that means that you cannot modify the EFI variables from Linux, so UEFI bootloaders will not be able to create an EFI boot entry and reorder the boot options.
You may need to enter the firmware menu and reorder it manually so NixOS will boot first.
(See this issue)
Recent versions of Jetpack (>=5.1) support updating the device firmware from the device using the UEFI Capsule update mechanism.
This can be done as a more convenient alternative to physically attaching to the device and re-running the flash script.
These updates can be performed automatically after a nixos-rebuild boot
if the hardware.nvidia-jetpack.bootloader.autoUpdate
setting is set to true and systemd-boot is used.
Otherwise, the instructions to apply the update manually are below.
To determine if the currently running firmware matches the software, run, ota-check-firmware
:
$ ota-check-firmware
Current firmware version is: 35.2.1
Current software version is: 35.2.1
If these versions do not match, you can update your firmware using the UEFI Capsule update mechanism. The procedure to do so is below:
To build a capsule update file, build the
config.system.build.jetsonDevicePkgs.uefiCapsuleUpdate
attribute from your NixOS build. For the standard devkit configurations supported in this repository, one could also run (for example),
nix build .#uefi-capsule-update-xavier-nx-emmc-devkit
. This will produce a file that you can scp (no need for nix copy
) to the device to update.
Once the file is on the device, run:
$ sudo ota-apply-capsule-update example.Cap
$ sudo reboot
(Assuming example.Cap
is the file you copied to the device.) While the device is rebooting, do not disconnect power. You should be able to see a progress bar while the update is being applied. The capsule update works by updating the non-current slot A/B firmware partitions, and then rebooting into the new slot. So, if the new firmware does not boot up to UEFI, it should theoretically rollback to the original firmware.
After rebooting, you can run ota-check-firmware
to see if the firmware version had changed.
Additionally, you can get more detailed information on the status of the firmware update by running:
$ sudo nvbootctrl dump-slots-info
The Capsule update status is one of the following integers:
- 0 - No Capsule update
- 1 - Capsule update successfully
- 2 - Capsule install successfully but boot new firmware failed
- 3 - Capsule install failed
To ensure only authenticated capsule updates are applied to the device, you can build the UEFI firmware and each subsequent capsule update using your own signing keys. An overview of the key generation can be found at EDK2 Capsule Signing.
To include your own signing keys in the EDK2 build and capsule update, make
sure the option hardware.nvidia-jetpack.firmware.uefi.capsuleAuthentication.enable
is turned on and each signing key option is set.
Much of this is inspired by the great work done by OpenEmbedded for Tegra. We also use the cleaned-up vendor kernel from OE4T.