The Raspberry Pi is an inexpensive single-board computer system which runs Raspberry Pi OS, a flavor of Debian Linux. This page provides advice and guidance for running ImageJ, ImageJ2, and Fiji on Raspberry Pi systems.
Installation
The following steps describe how to install Fiji on a Raspberry Pi:
- Open the terminal
- Install SDKMAN!
-
Verify it works:
sdk version
-
Install Java 8:
sdk install java 8.0.402-tem
-
Verify it works:
java -version
- Download and install the platform-independent “no JRE” distribution of Fiji
- Download the ImageJ.sh shell script
- Move the
ImageJ.sh
file to theFiji.app
folder -
Set the executable bit:
chmod +x ImageJ.sh
-
Launch Fiji:
./ImageJ.sh
Note that the shell script supports only a subset of the functionality of the native ImageJ Launcher, but it should be able to run ImageJ successfully.
The following steps describe how to create a desktop icon to launch Fiji on a Raspberry Pi:
- Download the Fiji icon image: Fiji icon link
- Press ⌃ Ctrl + ⌥ Alt + T to open the terminal window
- Type
nano Fiji.desktop
and press return. This will load Nano which will allow you to create a desktop icon. - Type the following code, replacing
/path/to
with the paths to theImageJ.sh
file and the Fiji icon:
[Desktop Entry]
Name=Fiji
Version=1.0
Comment=Launches Fiji
Exec=/path/to/ImageJ.sh
Icon=/path/to/48px-Fiji-icon.png
Terminal=false
Type=Application
Categories=Education
- Press ⌃ Ctrl + X and then press Y to exit and save the new desktop icon.
- Enter your desired file name, such as
Fiji.desktop
and press return. Once complete, an icon should be visible on the desktop. - Press ⌃ Ctrl + X to return to the terminal window
- In the terminal window, type the following to navigate to the Desktop
cd ~/Desktop
- Then type the following to make the new icon executable
chmod +x Fiji.desktop
3D Visualization
It is supposedly possible to run Java 3D on the Pi; see this StackOverflow thread. However, there have been no official reported successes on ImageJ community channels yet. If you get it working, please edit this section to describe the steps you used!
Even better, if you get ClearVolume and/or sciview working on the Pi, please update this page, and announce it on the Image.sc Forum!
Troubleshooting
See the Troubleshooting page.
Frequently Asked Questions
See the Frequently Asked Questions page.
See also
- Topics tagged raspberry-pi on the Image.sc Forum.
- The Linux page, for general information about ImageJ on Linux systems.