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2 Installation
Installing Rockbox is generally a quick and easy procedure. However before beginning there
are a few important things to know.
2.1 Before Starting
-
Supported hardware versions.
- The Video is the 5th/5.5th generation Ipod only.
Rockbox does not run on the newer, 6th/Classic generation Ipod. For information
on identifying which Ipod you own, see this page on Apple’s website:
http://www.info.apple.com/kbnum/n61688.
-
USB connection.
- To transfer Rockbox to your player you need to connect it to your
computer. For manual installation/uninstallation, or should autodetection fail
during automatic installation, you need to know where to access the player. On
Windows this means you need to know the drive letter associated with the player.
On Linux you need to know the mount point of your player. On Mac OS X you
need to know the volume name of your player.
If you have Itunes installed and it is configured to open automatically when your
player is attached (the default behaviour), then wait for it to open and then quit
it. You also need to ensure the “Enable use as disk” option is enabled for your
player in Itunes. Your player should then enter disk mode automatically when
connected to a computer via USB. If your computer does not recognise your player,
you may need to enter disk mode manually. Disconnect your player from the
computer. Hard reset the player by pressing and holding the Menu and Select
buttons simultaneously. As soon as the player resets, press and hold the Select
and Play buttons simultaneously. Your player should enter disk mode and you can
try reconnecting to the computer.
-
Administrator/Root rights.
- Installing the bootloader portion of Rockbox requires you
to have administrative (Windows) or root (Linux) rights. Consequently when doing
either the automatic or manual bootloader install, please ensure that you are logged
in with an administrator account or have root rights.
-
File system format.
- Rockbox only works on Ipods formatted with the FAT32 filesystem
(i.e. Ipods initialised by Itunes for Windows). It does not work with the
HFS+ filesystem (i.e. Ipods initialised by Itunes for the Mac). More information
and instructions for converting an Ipod to FAT32 can be found on the
IpodConversionToFAT32 wiki page on the Rockbox website. Note that after
conversion, you can still use a FAT32 Ipod with a Mac.
2.2 Installing Rockbox
There are two ways to install Rockbox: automated and manual. The automated way is the
preferred method of installing Rockbox for the majority of people. Rockbox Utility is a
graphical application that does almost everything for you. However, should you encounter a
problem, then the manual way is still available to you.
There are three separate components, two of which need to be installed in order to run
Rockbox:
-
The Ipod bootloader.
- The Ipod bootloader is the program that tells your player how
to load and start the original firmware. It is also responsible for any emergency,
recovery, or disk modes on your player. This bootloader is stored in special flash
memory in your Ipod and comes factory-installed. It is not necessary to modify
this in order to install Rockbox.
-
The Rockbox bootloader.
- The Rockbox bootloader is loaded from disk by the Ipod
bootloader. It is responsible for loading the Rockbox firmware and for providing
the dual boot function. It directly replaces the Ipod firmware in the player’s boot
sequence.
-
The Rockbox firmware.
- Similar to the Ipod firmware, most of the Rockbox code is
contained in a “build” that resides on your player’s drive. This makes it easy to
update Rockbox. The build consists of a directory called .rockbox which contains
all of the Rockbox files, and is located in the root of your player’s drive.
Apart from the required parts there are some addons you might be interested in
installing.
-
Fonts.
- Rockbox can load custom fonts. The fonts are distributed as a separate package
and thus need to be installed separately. They are not required to run Rockbox
itself but a lot of themes require the fonts package to be installed.
-
Themes.
- The appearance of Rockbox can be customised by themes. Depending on your
taste you might want to install additional themes to change the look of Rockbox.
2.2.1 Automated Installation
To automatically install Rockbox, download the official installer and housekeeping tool
Rockbox Utility. It allows you to:
- Automatically install all needed components for using Rockbox (“Minimal
Installation”).
- Automatically install all suggested components (“Complete Installation”).
- Selectively install optional components.
- Install additional fonts and themes.
- Install voice files and generate talk clips.
- Uninstall all components you installed using Rockbox Utility.
Prebuilt binaries for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X are available at the RockboxUtility wiki
page.
When first starting Rockbox Utility run “Autodetect”, found in the configuration dialog (File
→ Configure). Autodetection can detect most player types. If autodetection fails
or is unable to detect the mountpoint, make sure to enter the correct values. The
mountpoint indicates the location of the player in your filesystem. On Windows, this
is the drive letter the player gets assigned, on other systems this is a path in the
filesystem.
Choosing a Rockbox version
There are three different versions of Rockbox available from the Rockbox website: Release
version, current build and archived daily build. You need to decide which one you want to
install and get the appropriate version for your player. If you select either “Minimal
Installation” or “Complete Installation” from the “Quick Start” tab, then Rockbox Utility will
automatically install the release version of Rockbox. Using the “Installation” tab will allow
you to select which version you wish to install.
-
Release.
- The release version is the latest stable release, free of known critical bugs.
For a manual install, the current stable release of Rockbox is available at
http://www.rockbox.org/download/.
-
Development Build.
- The development build is built at each change to the Rockbox
source code repository and represents the current state of Rockbox development.
This means that the build could contain bugs but most of the time is
safe to use. For a manual install, you can download the current build from
http://build.rockbox.org/.
-
Archived Build.
- In addition to the release version and the current build, there is also
an archive of daily builds available for download. These are built once a day from
the latest source code in the repository. For a manual install, you can download
archived builds from http://www.rockbox.org/daily.shtml.
Note: Because current and archived builds are development versions that change frequently,
they may behave differently than described in this manual, or they may introduce new (and
potentially annoying) bugs. Unless you wish to try the latest and greatest features at the price
of possibly greater instability, or you wish to help with development, you should stick with the
release.
Please now go to section 2.2.3 to complete the installation procedure.
2.2.2 Manual Installation
The manual installation method is still available to you, should you need or desire it
by following the instructions below. If you have used Rockbox Utility to install
Rockbox, then you do not need to follow the next section and can skip straight to
section 2.2.3
Installing the firmware
-
1.
- Download your chosen version of Rockbox from the links in the previous section.
-
2.
- Connect your player to the computer via USB as described in the manual that
came with your player.
-
3.
- Take the .zip file that you downloaded and use the “Extract all” command of
your unzip program to extract the files onto your player.
Note: The entire contents of the .zip file should be extracted directly to the root of
your player’s drive. Do not try to create a separate directory on your player for the
Rockbox files! The .zip file already contains the internal structure that Rockbox
needs.
If the contents of the .zip file are extracted correctly, you will have a directory called
.rockbox, which contains all the files needed by Rockbox, in the main directory of your
player’s drive.
Installing the bootloader
Bootloader installation from Windows
-
1.
- Download ipodpatcher.exe from
http://download.rockbox.org/bootloader/ipod/ipodpatcher/win32/ipodpatcher.exe
and run it whilst logged in with an administrator account.
-
2.
- If all has gone well, you should see some information displayed about your player
and a message asking you if you wish to install the Rockbox bootloader. Press i
followed by ENTER, and ipodpatcher will now install the bootloader. After a short
time you should see the message “[INFO] Bootloader installed successfully.” Press
ENTER again to exit ipodpatcher.
-
3.
-
Note: If ipodpatcher fails to install the bootloader for you, please be certain that
you do indeed have a supported iPod model and are logged in as an administrator.
If you do, run ipodpatcher once more and try again. If you don’t, then do not
attempt to install again.
Bootloader installation from Mac OS X
-
1.
- Attach your player to your Mac and wait for its icon to appear in Finder.
-
2.
- Download and open ipodpatcher.dmg from http://download.rockbox.org/bootloader/ipod/ipodpatcher/macosx/ipodpatcher.dmg
and then double-click on the ipodpatcher icon inside. You can also drag the ipodpatcher
icon to a location on your hard drive and launch it from the Terminal.
-
3.
- If all has gone well, you should see some information displayed about your player
and a message asking you if you wish to install the Rockbox bootloader. Press i
followed by ENTER, and ipodpatcher will now install the bootloader. After a short
time you should see the message “[INFO] Bootloader installed successfully.” Press
ENTER again to exit ipodpatcher and then quit the Terminal application.
-
4.
-
Note: If ipodpatcher fails to install the bootloader for you, please be certain that
you do indeed have a supported iPod model. If you do, run ipodpatcher once more
and try again. If you don’t, then do not attempt to install again.
-
5.
- Your player will now automatically reconnect itself to your Mac. Wait for it to
connect, and then eject and unplug it in the normal way.
Note: You should unplug your ipod immediately after ejecting it to prevent
Rockbox immediately rebooting your player into disk mode when it detects that
your player is attached to a computer.
Bootloader installation from Linux
-
1.
- Download ipodpatcher from http://download.rockbox.org/bootloader/ipod/ipodpatcher/linux32x86/ipodpatcher
(32-bit x86 binary) or http://download.rockbox.org/bootloader/ipod/ipodpatcher/linux64amd64/ipodpatcher
(64-bit amd64 binary). You can save this anywhere you wish, but the next steps
will assume you have saved it in your home directory.
-
2.
- Attach your player to your computer.
-
3.
- Open up a terminal window and type the following commands:
cd $HOME chmod +x ipodpatcher ./ipodpatcher
Note: You need to be the root user in order for ipodpatcher to have sufficient
permission to perform raw disk access to your player.
-
4.
- If all has gone well, you should see some information displayed about your player and a
message asking you if you wish to install the Rockbox bootloader. Press i followed by
ENTER, and ipodpatcher will now install the bootloader. After a short time you should
see the message “[INFO] Bootloader installed successfully.” Press ENTER again to exit
ipodpatcher.
2.2.3 Finishing the install
Safely eject / unmount the USB drive, unplug the cable and restart.
2.2.4 Enabling Speech Support (optional)
If you wish to use speech support you will also need a voice file. Voice files allow Rockbox to
speak the user interface to you. Rockbox Utility can install an English voice file, or you can
download it from http://www.rockbox.org/daily.shtml and unzip it to the root of
your player. Rockbox Utility can also aid you in the creation of voice files with
different voices or in other languages if you have a suitable speech engine installed on
your computer. Voice menus are enabled by default and will come into effect after
a reboot. See section 8.10 for details on voice settings. Rockbox Utility can also
aid in the production of talk files, which allow Rockbox to speak file and folder
names.
2.3 Running Rockbox
Hard reset the Ipod by holding Menu and Select simultaneously for a couple of seconds until
the player resets. Now Rockbox should load.
Note: If you have loaded music onto your player using Itunes, you will not be able to see
your music properly in the File Browser. This is because Itunes changes your files’ names and
hides them in directories in the Ipod_Control directory. Files placed on your player using
Itunes can be viewed by initialising and using Rockbox’s database. See section 4.2 for more
information.
2.4 Updating Rockbox
Rockbox can be easily updated with Rockbox Utility. You can also update Rockbox manually
– download a Rockbox build as detailed above, and unzip the build to the root directory of
your player as in the manual installation stage. If your unzip program asks you whether to
overwrite files, choose the “Yes to all” option. The new build will be installed over your
current build.
The bootloader only changes rarely, and should not normally need to be updated.
Note: If you use Rockbox Utility be aware that it cannot detect manually installed
components.
2.5 Uninstalling Rockbox
Note: The Rockbox bootloader allows you to choose between Rockbox and the original
firmware. (See section 3.1.3 for more information.)
2.5.1 Automatic Uninstallation
You can uninstall Rockbox automatically by using Rockbox Utility. If you installed Rockbox
manually you can still use Rockbox Utility for uninstallation but will not be able to do this
selectively.
2.5.2 Manual Uninstallation
To uninstall Rockbox and go back to using just the original Ipod software, connect the player
to your computer and follow the instructions to install the bootloader but, when prompted by
ipodpatcher, enter u for uninstall instead of i for install.
If you wish to clean up your disk, you may also wish to delete the .rockbox directory and its
contents. Turn the Ipod off. Turn the player back on and the original Ipod software will
load.
2.6 Troubleshooting
-
Bootloader install problems
- If you have trouble installing the bootloader, please ensure
that you are either logged in as an administrator (Windows), or you have root
rights (Linux)
-
“File Not Found”
- If you receive a “File Not Found” from the bootloader, then the
bootloader cannot find the Rockbox firmware. This is usually a result of not
extracting the contents of the .zip file to the proper location, and should not
happen when Rockbox has been installed with Rockbox Utility.
To fix this, either install Rockbox with the Rockbox Utility which will take care
of this for you, or recheck the Manual Install section to see where the files need to
be located.