
Insert the SD card into your Raspberry Pi and switch it on. Prior to turning on your Raspberry Pi, ensure the keyboard is plugged in and the monitor is connected using the mini-HDMI port.

Connect directly with a keyboard and monitor Refer to the appropriate section for your setup - choose between connecting directly with a keyboard and monitor or connecting to a headless server. This section repeats some of that information. Step 4 in the Ubuntu installation tutorial instructs you to “Boot Ubuntu Server”. If you already have Ubuntu 20.04 LTS ARM64 running on your Raspberry Pi board, you can skip the tutorial. Note: The steps given in the tutorial will erase all existing content on your microSD card.
#IVPN UI FOR RASPBERRY PI HOW TO#
How to install Ubuntu Server on your Raspberry Pi. Follow this tutorial, but skip step 5 (you don’t need to install a desktop): The first step is to install Ubuntu Server 20.04 on your Raspberry Pi and connect it to the network. A monitor with an HDMI input (optional).A Raspberry Pi 4, 400, or CM4 (A Raspberry Pi 3 will be fairly slow, and Raspberry Pi 2 and older can’t run 64-bit software and so aren’t compatible).A computer with a microSD card drive, or an SD card drive and a microSD card adapter.A microSD card (8 GB or more recommended - 4 GB is possible).Note that the Raspbian OS is not supported. OpenVPN Access Server is available for Ubuntu 20.04 LTS ARM 64 bit platform. How to install and launch OpenVPN Access Server.How to create a bootable microSD card with Ubuntu Server 20.04.Note that Access Server performance is highly dependent on the CPU and network capabilities of your platform. You can also use these steps as a reference for installing OpenVPN Access Server on other single-board computers on the ARM64 platform such as Orange Pi or Rock Pi. In this document we’ll show you how to install OpenVPN Access Server on a Raspberry Pi single-board computer.
