Raspberry Pi 3 - Setting Up Bluetooth

From Alpine Linux
Revision as of 09:13, 17 April 2023 by Bbbhltz (talk | contribs) (added link to Bluetooth page)

The Raspberry Pi Bluetooth chip varies by model.

  • Raspberry Pi 3 has BCM2837 connected to the hardware UART
  • Raspberry Pi 3B+ has BCM4345C0 connected to the hardware UART
  • Raspberry Pi Zero W has BCM43430A1 connected to the hardware UART

You can get Bluetooth to work only if you are not using the UART (ttyAMA0) for anything else, for example serial console. Recent versions of Alpine Linux for Raspberry Pi come with the required Broadcom firmware files. If you need the UART for something else, you can use an USB Bluetooth adapter instead.

You'll need the bluez package

apk add bluez

The Bluetooth controller is not automatically discovered on the UART. Test attaching it and check that the controller is found

btattach -B /dev/ttyAMA0 -P bcm -S 115200 -N &

/etc/init.d/bluetooth start

bluetoothctl list Controller B8:27:EB:01:02:03 BlueZ 5.50 [default]

If the interface is discovered after the attach, you can make attaching persistent by uncommenting the line next to "rpi bluetooth" in /etc/mdev.conf

Start the bluetooth deamon at boot. This should load the right modules when you next reboot.

rc-update add bluetooth

lbu commit && reboot


The output from the btattach above should be

Attaching Primary controller to /dev/ttyAMA0 Switched line discipline from 0 to 15 Device index 0 attached

Then it's a matter of doing what you normally do with your Bluetooth stack.

See also