Olimex Lime
Suitable for testing (WIP)
CLI

Armbian 23.8 Bookworm
Kernel 6.1, Size: 418Mb, Release date: Aug 31, 2023
SHA hash | PGP signature

stable user space packages
minimal

Armbian 23.8 Bookworm
Kernel 6.1, Size: 253Mb, Release date: Sep 1, 2023
SHA hash | PGP signature

stable user space packages

Other supported variants

User spaceInterfaceEUUSAAsiaTorrentKernelIntegritySizeRelease date
 
Armbian BookwormCLI 6.1SHA  ASC418MbAug 31, 2023
Armbian Bookworm Minimal CLI6.1SHA  ASC253MbSep 1, 2023
Armbian JammyCLI 6.1SHA  ASC453MbAug 31, 2023
Armbian Jammyi3 desktop 6.1SHA  ASC1366MbSep 1, 2023
Armbian Jammy Minimal CLI6.1SHA  ASC185MbSep 1, 2023
Armbian JammyXFCE desktop 6.1SHA  ASC1390MbSep 1, 2023
 
* Looking for different or custom variant? Use Armbian build framework!
While we try best possible to test provided images flaws can happen. If you experience issues please report those. Until we're able to fix latest builds stick to older images from our archive.

Specifications

100tx 1wire 2 core 32bit CAN UASP battery docker i2c i2s nand sata spi wireguard Allwinner A20

* Specifications differ from hardware revision, model and software support level

FAQs

We provide a selection of images that fits hardware best. If you need different image - use build framework and make whatever you need. Build framework relies on Debian and Ubuntu packages - you can build any combination - stable, old stable or rolling release.
Make sure you have a good & reliable boot media (SD card / USB key) and a proper power supply. Archives can be flashed with Etcher (all OS) directly. Insert the SD card into the slot, connect a cable to your network if possible or a display and power your board. (First) boot (with DHCP) takes a bit longer.

Rolling releases from CI pipeline

 User spaceKernelTorrentIntegritySizeRelease date
 
Armbian Trixie minimal CLIrolling6.1.53SHA  ASC254MbSep 20, 2023
Armbian Lunar minimal CLIrolling6.1.53SHA  ASC191MbSep 20, 2023
Armbian Jammy XFCE desktop stable6.1.53SHA  ASC818MbSep 20, 2023


Rolling releases are suitable for Linux enthusiasts who want cutting edge packages and have the skills to fix damage that a bad update might cause. If you want stability in a production environment or low headaches as a novice user, skip rolling releases. They are only at, build and ship, Debian testing / Arch / Manjaro / Suse Tumbleweed / Kali / Gentoo support quality level!