Issue: it seems the guidance for Asahi is out of date in the documentation. I am no expert, though, so maybe I'm misunderstanding something, sorry if that's the case.
If I understand correctly, the Asahi installer was released with the March UEFI-b09-refresh release.
But the docs suggest otherwise:
- in the README there is a "Coming Soon" badge on the "Asahi (Apple Silicon)" listing under "Supported devices:".
- Under the heading "Get the installer" it reads "There are no images available for Asahi" and advises users how to pursue an advanced method to make it work.
It seems the update is simple enough: point folks to the .img and provide any pointers. I would be happy to contribute by updating the docs and opening a PR if that would help.
I am about to test the Asahi Linux .img and could contribute additional docs about my experience if it might be useful, after or instead of resolving this present issue.
Thanks for sharing this excellent project. Recently I followed different tutorials to build a .img for Arch Linux manually for RPi, and it was brutal haha. It's not my specialty at all.
I'm an Arch on Arm enthusiast because of its potential as a more efficient, sustainable computing architecture. We might not yet know just how much of an energy saver a large-scale switch to ARM could be :)
Issue: it seems the guidance for Asahi is out of date in the documentation. I am no expert, though, so maybe I'm misunderstanding something, sorry if that's the case.
If I understand correctly, the Asahi installer was released with the March UEFI-b09-refresh release.
But the docs suggest otherwise:
It seems the update is simple enough: point folks to the .img and provide any pointers. I would be happy to contribute by updating the docs and opening a PR if that would help.
I am about to test the Asahi Linux .img and could contribute additional docs about my experience if it might be useful, after or instead of resolving this present issue.
Thanks for sharing this excellent project. Recently I followed different tutorials to build a .img for Arch Linux manually for RPi, and it was brutal haha. It's not my specialty at all.
I'm an Arch on Arm enthusiast because of its potential as a more efficient, sustainable computing architecture. We might not yet know just how much of an energy saver a large-scale switch to ARM could be :)