The default U-Boot configuration tries to build tools that depend on
OpenSSL _and_ GnuTLS. We need to enable the corresponding buildroot
configuration options, or the build system will try to use the
system-wide headers and libraries.
At this point, we can generate an SD card image that is composed of an
EFI system partition, a SquashFS root partition (a), a blank root
partition (b), and a data partition. On the EFI system partition are
the Raspberry Pi firmware and device trees, U-Boot and GRUB. The
SquashFS filesystem contains the kernel and the whole filesystem tree.
A Raspberry Pi can successfully boot from an SD card containing this
image. It's not quite usable yet, because there's no writable storage
available, or indeed any way to log in.