Add emphasis on the cloning method.

pull/431/head
piradio 2019-05-23 22:52:02 +02:00
parent 2682ab33b8
commit 78dc467dcd
1 changed files with 2 additions and 1 deletions

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@ -17,7 +17,8 @@ The image is built with the official RaspberryPi.org tool (https://github.com/RP
Nothing has been changed or otherwise improved from the original scripts, so the image you get here is the same as if you would install it the official way. Nothing has been changed or otherwise improved from the original scripts, so the image you get here is the same as if you would install it the official way.
## how to create the image ## how to create the image
- First clone this repository with `git clone --recursive git@github.com:pirateradiohack/PiRadio.git`. - First clone this repository with `git clone --recursive git@github.com:pirateradiohack/PiRadio.git`.
(Please note the `--recursive` here is important to get all the code, there is a submodule present)
- Configure your radio stations: Pimoroni maintains a set of default internet radio streams. You can see them in the file `example.m3u`. This file will be installed if nothing else is supplied. If you create a file called `my-playlist.m3u` with your own list of internet radio streams, this file will be used instead. - Configure your radio stations: Pimoroni maintains a set of default internet radio streams. You can see them in the file `example.m3u`. This file will be installed if nothing else is supplied. If you create a file called `my-playlist.m3u` with your own list of internet radio streams, this file will be used instead.
- Configure your wifi settings: copy the file called `config.example` to `config` and edit this last one. You will see where to enter your wifi name, password and country. All 3 settings are necessary. - Configure your wifi settings: copy the file called `config.example` to `config` and edit this last one. You will see where to enter your wifi name, password and country. All 3 settings are necessary.
- Then build the image. (You can see the whole guide on the official RaspberryPi repo: https://github.com/RPi-Distro/pi-gen). I find it easier to use docker as there is nothing else to install, just run one command from this directory: `./build-docker.sh`. That's it. On my computer it takes between 15 and 30 minutes. And at the end you should see something like: `Done! Your image(s) should be in deploy/` - Then build the image. (You can see the whole guide on the official RaspberryPi repo: https://github.com/RPi-Distro/pi-gen). I find it easier to use docker as there is nothing else to install, just run one command from this directory: `./build-docker.sh`. That's it. On my computer it takes between 15 and 30 minutes. And at the end you should see something like: `Done! Your image(s) should be in deploy/`