Software Framework
Linux distribution
Armbian is a computing build framework that allows users to create system images with configurations for various single-board computers (SBCs).[2] Armbian's objective is to unify the experience across ARM single-board computers, while maintaining performance with hardware-specific optimizations.[3]
Armbian comes in two distinct versions: one Debian-based, the other is based on a lightweight Ubuntu version.[4]
Releases
Version table with releases.[5]
Version
|
Date
|
Debian
|
Ubuntu
|
22.11.1
|
2022-11-30
|
bullseye
|
jammy
|
22.11.3
|
2023-01-09
|
bullseye
|
jammy
|
23.02.2
|
2023-02-27
|
bullseye
|
jammy
|
23.2.9
|
2023-05-25
|
bullseye
|
jammy
|
23.5.1
|
2023-05-27
|
bookworm
|
jammy
|
23.5.59
|
2023-08-16
|
bookworm
|
jammy
|
23.5.63
|
2023-08-21
|
bookworm
|
jammy
|
23.8.1
|
2023-08-31
|
bookworm
|
jammy
|
24.2.0
|
2024-02-??
|
bookworm
|
jammy
|
24.2.2
|
2024-02-??
|
bookworm
|
maybe noble?
|
24.5.1
|
2024-05-27
|
bookworm
|
noble
|
Version
|
Date
|
Debian
|
Ubuntu
|
Supported hardware
Armbian supports a plethora of single-board computers. As of January 2024, it supports at least 164 different ones.[6]
References