Buildroot 2025.02.13 LTS, Linux 6.1.82, U-Boot 2023.10 - Serial console working (115200 8N1) - 4x Cortex-A7 @ quad-core, 1GB RAM - Framebuffer active (4x Tux on LCD without LCD patch) - SSH daemon running - 512MB rootfs, 52MB used Ethernet timeout expected — WiFi driver not yet included.
Mestre
An open-source control head for software-defined radios — built on the Xiegu X6200.
What is Mestre?
Mestre turns a Xiegu X6200 into a dedicated, tactile remote control head for any networked SDR transceiver, starting with the Hermes-Lite 2.
The motivation is simple. Concepts like FlexRadio's Maestro prove that a dedicated piece of hardware — real VFO knob, real buttons, no laptop — gives the operating experience that touchscreens and mouse-driven SDR consoles don't. But Maestro is closed, expensive, and locked to the FlexRadio ecosystem.
Mestre uses a radio you may already own (the X6200) and turns its physical controls into a Maestro-class experience for radios you may already own (HL2, ANAN, anything HPSDR-compatible). Open hardware, open software, open protocol.
┌─────────────────────────┐ ┌──────────────────────┐
│ X6200 │ │ Hermes-Lite 2 │
│ ┌───────────────────┐ │ │ │
│ │ Knobs, buttons │ │ │ (or any HPSDR rig) │
│ │ Touchscreen, LCD │ │ │ │
│ └─────────┬─────────┘ │ └──────────┬───────────┘
│ │ │ │
│ ┌─────────▼─────────┐ │ Network (HPSDR) │
│ │ Mestre service │ │ │
│ │ (evdev → MIDI) │ │ │
│ └─────────┬─────────┘ │ │
│ │ │ │
│ ┌─────────▼─────────┐ │ │
│ │ piHPSDR │◄─┼───────────────────────────┘
│ └───────────────────┘ │
└─────────────────────────┘
Mestre vs Virtuoso
The project is Mestre — the build system, services, and software stack.
The product name Virtuoso is reserved for when (if!) Mestre actually delivers a Maestro-class experience. It must be earned.
Project Status
🚧 Early development. Building the foundation.
| # | Milestone | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Boot a recent Buildroot LTS on the X6200 (serial console) | ✅ 2026-05-03 |
| 2 | Forward-port LCD panel driver — full display output | 🟡 In progress |
| 3 | piHPSDR running on X6200 with working audio | ⚪ Planned |
| 4 | mestre service: evdev → ALSA virtual MIDI bridge |
⚪ Planned |
| 5 | End-to-end: X6200 controlling Hermes-Lite 2 as a control head | ⚪ Planned |
| 6 | First-boot wizard, settings persistence, polished UX | ⚪ Planned |
| ∞ | Earn the right to call it Virtuoso | ⚪ TBD |
Architecture
Mestre is built as a Buildroot-based Linux distribution for the X6200. The system runs three cooperating components:
- piHPSDR — handles the SDR protocol, audio, waterfall, and overall radio UI on the X6200's LCD. Connects over the network to the actual transceiver hardware (HL2 or other HPSDR rig).
- mestre service — a small daemon that reads the X6200's physical knobs and buttons via
/dev/input/eventXand translates them into MIDI control change messages on a virtual ALSA MIDI port. - piHPSDR's MIDI mapper — already built into piHPSDR. Subscribes to the virtual MIDI port and acts on the controls.
The architecture is deliberately patch-free: piHPSDR is used as-is, and the MIDI protocol is the well-known, stable contract between the two halves.
Hardware
- Control head: Xiegu X6200 (Allwinner R16 / sun8i-a33, 480×800 LCD, knobs, buttons, internal speaker)
- Transceiver: Hermes-Lite 2 (open-hardware HF SDR), or any HPSDR-protocol radio supported by piHPSDR
Building
⚠️ Pre-1.0: build instructions are aspirational while milestone 1 is in progress.
Prerequisites
A recent Linux host with the Buildroot prerequisites installed. Building inside the provided container is also supported.
Quickstart
git clone --recurse-submodules <repo-url> mestre
cd mestre
./scripts/build.sh
The resulting sdcard.img will appear under build/images/. Flash it to a microSD card with dd or your tool of choice and boot the X6200 from it.
Buildroot version
Mestre is pinned to Buildroot 2025.02 LTS for stability — the LTS line is supported with security and bugfix updates for three years. Bumping is a deliberate, documented choice, not a continuous treadmill.
Repository layout
mestre/
├── buildroot/ # submodule → Buildroot 2025.02.x
├── br2_external/ # all our Buildroot customisations
│ ├── configs/ # defconfig
│ ├── board/x6200/ # linux config, U-Boot config, DTS, overlay
│ └── package/ # custom packages (mestre service, etc.)
├── docs/ # design notes, hardware notes
├── scripts/ # build wrappers
├── README.md # this file
└── DESIGN.md # architectural decisions
Credits & Prior Art
Mestre stands on the shoulders of others. In particular:
- gdyuldin/AetherX6200Buildroot — the Aether project, from which Mestre inherits the X6200 device tree, U-Boot configuration, and LCD panel driver. Aether's project goal (improving the X6200 as a transceiver) differs from Mestre's (using the X6200 as a control head), but Aether's hardware enablement work made Mestre feasible from day one. Vendored files retain their original copyright headers.
- apritzel (#linux-sunxi @ OFTC) — device-tree guidance for the X6200, acknowledged in the DTS source.
- Rui Oliveira and Oleg Belousov — original authors of the Jinglitai JLT4013A panel driver, forward-ported here for use with current mainline kernels.
- The piHPSDR project — the SDR console Mestre wraps. Mestre would not exist without piHPSDR's existing MIDI control infrastructure, which lets us avoid patching the console itself.
- The OpenHPSDR community and Steve Haynal (N0EJV / Hermes-Lite 2) — for keeping open-protocol SDR alive.
License
GPL-2.0-or-later, matching the kernel-derived components Mestre vendors. Userland components written specifically for Mestre may be re-licensed (e.g. to MIT) on a per-component basis where doing so doesn't conflict with this overall license; such cases will be marked clearly in the relevant subdirectory.