openwrt/target/linux/ipq40xx/base-files/etc/hotplug.d/firmware/11-ath10k-caldata

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#!/bin/sh
[ -e /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE ] && exit 0
ipq40xx: add support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13 This patch adds support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13. hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 128 MiB DDR3L-1066 @ 537 MHz (1074?) NT5CC64M16GP-DI NOR: 2 MiB Macronix MX25L1606E (for boot, QSEE) NAND: 128 MiB Winbond W25NO1GVZE1G (cal + kernel + root, UBI) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 Gigabit Switch (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) USB: 1 x 3.0 (via Synopsys DesignWare DWC3 controller in the SoC) WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: one Reset and one WPS button LEDS: Status, WAN, WIFI1/2, USB and LAN (one blue LED for each) Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has an unpopulated 1x4 0.1" header. The pinout (VDD, RX, GND, TX) is printed on the PCB right next to the connector. U-Boot Note: The ethernet driver isn't always reliable and can sometime time out... Don't worry, just retry. Access via the serial console is required. As well as a working TFTP-server setup and the initramfs image. (If not provided, it has to be built from the OpenWrt source. Make sure to enable LZMA as the compression for the INITRAMFS!) To install the image permanently, you have to do the following steps in the listed order. 1. Open up the router. There are four phillips screws hiding behind the four plastic feets on the underside. 2. Connect the serial cable (See notes above) 3. Connect your router via one of the four LAN-ports (yellow) to a PC which can set the IP-Address and ssh and scp from. If possible set your PC's IPv4 Address to 192.168.1.70 (As this is the IP-Address the Router's bootloader expects for the tftp server) 4. power up the router and enter the u-boot choose option 1 to upload the initramfs image. And follow through the ipv4 setup. Wait for your router's status LED to stop blinking rapidly and glow just blue. (The LAN LED should also be glowing blue). 3. Connect to the OpenWrt running in RAM The default IPv4-Address of your router will be 192.168.1.1. 1. Copy over the openwrt-sysupgrade.bin image to your router's temporary directory # scp openwrt-sysupgrade.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp 2. ssh from your PC into your router as root. # ssh root@192.168.1.1 The default OpenWrt-Image won't ask for a password. Simply hit the Enter-Key. Once connected...: run the following commands on your temporary installation 3. delete the "jffs2" ubi partition to make room for your new root partition # ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=jffs2 4. install OpenWrt on the NAND Flash. # sysupgrade -v /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin - This will will automatically reboot the router - Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-07 08:13:10 +00:00
. /lib/functions/caldata.sh
ipq40xx: add support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13 This patch adds support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13. hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 128 MiB DDR3L-1066 @ 537 MHz (1074?) NT5CC64M16GP-DI NOR: 2 MiB Macronix MX25L1606E (for boot, QSEE) NAND: 128 MiB Winbond W25NO1GVZE1G (cal + kernel + root, UBI) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 Gigabit Switch (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) USB: 1 x 3.0 (via Synopsys DesignWare DWC3 controller in the SoC) WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: one Reset and one WPS button LEDS: Status, WAN, WIFI1/2, USB and LAN (one blue LED for each) Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has an unpopulated 1x4 0.1" header. The pinout (VDD, RX, GND, TX) is printed on the PCB right next to the connector. U-Boot Note: The ethernet driver isn't always reliable and can sometime time out... Don't worry, just retry. Access via the serial console is required. As well as a working TFTP-server setup and the initramfs image. (If not provided, it has to be built from the OpenWrt source. Make sure to enable LZMA as the compression for the INITRAMFS!) To install the image permanently, you have to do the following steps in the listed order. 1. Open up the router. There are four phillips screws hiding behind the four plastic feets on the underside. 2. Connect the serial cable (See notes above) 3. Connect your router via one of the four LAN-ports (yellow) to a PC which can set the IP-Address and ssh and scp from. If possible set your PC's IPv4 Address to 192.168.1.70 (As this is the IP-Address the Router's bootloader expects for the tftp server) 4. power up the router and enter the u-boot choose option 1 to upload the initramfs image. And follow through the ipv4 setup. Wait for your router's status LED to stop blinking rapidly and glow just blue. (The LAN LED should also be glowing blue). 3. Connect to the OpenWrt running in RAM The default IPv4-Address of your router will be 192.168.1.1. 1. Copy over the openwrt-sysupgrade.bin image to your router's temporary directory # scp openwrt-sysupgrade.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp 2. ssh from your PC into your router as root. # ssh root@192.168.1.1 The default OpenWrt-Image won't ask for a password. Simply hit the Enter-Key. Once connected...: run the following commands on your temporary installation 3. delete the "jffs2" ubi partition to make room for your new root partition # ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=jffs2 4. install OpenWrt on the NAND Flash. # sysupgrade -v /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin - This will will automatically reboot the router - Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-07 08:13:10 +00:00
board=$(board_name)
case "$FIRMWARE" in
ipq40xx: add Cisco Meraki MR33 Support This patch adds support for Cisco Meraki MR33 hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4029 Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB DDR3L-1600 @ 627 MHz Micron MT41K128M16JT-125IT NAND: 128 MiB SLC NAND Spansion S34ML01G200TFV00 (106 MiB usable) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros AR8035 Gigabit PHY (1 x LAN/WAN) + PoE WLAN1: QCA9887 (168c:0050) PCIe 1x1:1 802.11abgn ac Dualband VHT80 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 VHT80 LEDS: 1 x Programmable RGB+White Status LED (driven by Ti LP5562 on i2c-1) 1 x Orange LED Fault Indicator (shared with LP5562) 2 x LAN Activity / Speed LEDs (On the RJ45 Port) BUTTON: one Reset button MISC: Bluetooth LE Ti cc2650 PG2.3 4x4mm - BL_CONFIG at 0x0001FFD8 AT24C64 8KiB EEPROM Kensington Lock Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has a populated 1x4 0.1" header with half-height/low profile pins. The pinout is: VCC (little white arrow), RX, TX, GND. Flashing needs a serial adaptor, as well as patched ubootwrite utility (needs Little-Endian support). And a modified u-boot (enabled Ethernet). Meraki's original u-boot source can be found in: <https://github.com/riptidewave93/meraki-uboot/tree/mr33-20170427> Add images to do an installation via bootloader: 0. open up the MR33 and connect the serial console. 1. start the 2nd stage bootloader transfer from client pc: # ubootwrite.py --write=mr33-uboot.bin (The ubootwrite tool will interrupt the boot-process and hence it needs to listen for cues. If the connection is bad (due to the low-profile pins), the tool can fail multiple times and in weird ways. If you are not sure, just use a terminal program and see what the device is doing there. 2. power on the MR33 (with ethernet + serial cables attached) Warning: Make sure you do this in a private LAN that has no connection to the internet. - let it upload the u-boot this can take 250-300 seconds - 3. use a tftp client (in binary mode!) on your PC to upload the sysupgrade.bin (the u-boot is listening on 192.168.1.1) # tftp 192.168.1.1 binary put openwrt-ipq40xx-meraki_mr33-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 4. wait for it to reboot 5. connect to your MR33 via ssh on 192.168.1.1 For more detailed instructions, please take a look at the: "Flashing Instructions for the MR33" PDF. This can be found on the wiki: <https://openwrt.org/toh/meraki/mr33> (A link to the mr33-uboot.bin + the modified ubootwrite is also there) Thanks to Jerome C. for sending an MR33 to Chris. Signed-off-by: Chris Blake <chrisrblake93@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me> Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-10 09:59:18 +00:00
"ath10k/cal-pci-0000:01:00.0.bin")
case "$board" in
ipq40xx: add support for GL.iNet GL-B2200 This patch adds supports for the GL-B2200 router. Specifications: - SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 ARM Quad-Core - RAM: 512 MiB - Flash: 16 MiB NOR - SPI0 - EMMC: 8GB EMMC - ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 - WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n 2x2 - WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 - WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9886 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 - INPUT: Reset, WPS - LED: Power, Internet - UART1: On board pin header near to LED (3.3V, TX, RX, GND), 3.3V without pin - 115200 8N1 - UART2: On board with BLE module - SPI1: On board socket for Zigbee module Update firmware instructions: Please update the firmware via U-Boot web UI (by default at 192.168.1.1, following instructions found at https://docs.gl-inet.com/en/3/troubleshooting/debrick/). Normal sysupgrade, either via CLI or LuCI, is not possible from stock firmware. Please do use the *gl-b2200-squashfs-emmc.img file, gunzipping the produced *gl-b2200-squashfs-emmc.img.gz one first. What's working: - WiFi 2G, 5G - WPA2/WPA3 Not tested: - Bluetooth LE/Zigbee Credits goes to the original authors of this patch. V1->V2: - updates *arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch correctly (sorry, my mistake) - add uboot-envtools support V2->V3: - Li Zhang updated official patch to fix wrong MAC address on wlan0 (PCI) interface V3->V4: - wire up sysupgrade Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <li.zhang@gl-inet.com> [fix tab and trailing space, document what's working and what's not] Signed-off-by: TruongSinh Tran-Nguyen <i@truongsinh.pro> [rebase on top of master, address remaining comments] Signed-off-by: Enrico Mioso <mrkiko.rs@gmail.com> [remove redundant check in platform.sh] Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
2021-12-01 15:18:17 +00:00
glinet,gl-b2200)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x9000 0x2f20
;;
ipq40xx: add Cisco Meraki MR33 Support This patch adds support for Cisco Meraki MR33 hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4029 Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB DDR3L-1600 @ 627 MHz Micron MT41K128M16JT-125IT NAND: 128 MiB SLC NAND Spansion S34ML01G200TFV00 (106 MiB usable) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros AR8035 Gigabit PHY (1 x LAN/WAN) + PoE WLAN1: QCA9887 (168c:0050) PCIe 1x1:1 802.11abgn ac Dualband VHT80 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 VHT80 LEDS: 1 x Programmable RGB+White Status LED (driven by Ti LP5562 on i2c-1) 1 x Orange LED Fault Indicator (shared with LP5562) 2 x LAN Activity / Speed LEDs (On the RJ45 Port) BUTTON: one Reset button MISC: Bluetooth LE Ti cc2650 PG2.3 4x4mm - BL_CONFIG at 0x0001FFD8 AT24C64 8KiB EEPROM Kensington Lock Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has a populated 1x4 0.1" header with half-height/low profile pins. The pinout is: VCC (little white arrow), RX, TX, GND. Flashing needs a serial adaptor, as well as patched ubootwrite utility (needs Little-Endian support). And a modified u-boot (enabled Ethernet). Meraki's original u-boot source can be found in: <https://github.com/riptidewave93/meraki-uboot/tree/mr33-20170427> Add images to do an installation via bootloader: 0. open up the MR33 and connect the serial console. 1. start the 2nd stage bootloader transfer from client pc: # ubootwrite.py --write=mr33-uboot.bin (The ubootwrite tool will interrupt the boot-process and hence it needs to listen for cues. If the connection is bad (due to the low-profile pins), the tool can fail multiple times and in weird ways. If you are not sure, just use a terminal program and see what the device is doing there. 2. power on the MR33 (with ethernet + serial cables attached) Warning: Make sure you do this in a private LAN that has no connection to the internet. - let it upload the u-boot this can take 250-300 seconds - 3. use a tftp client (in binary mode!) on your PC to upload the sysupgrade.bin (the u-boot is listening on 192.168.1.1) # tftp 192.168.1.1 binary put openwrt-ipq40xx-meraki_mr33-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 4. wait for it to reboot 5. connect to your MR33 via ssh on 192.168.1.1 For more detailed instructions, please take a look at the: "Flashing Instructions for the MR33" PDF. This can be found on the wiki: <https://openwrt.org/toh/meraki/mr33> (A link to the mr33-uboot.bin + the modified ubootwrite is also there) Thanks to Jerome C. for sending an MR33 to Chris. Signed-off-by: Chris Blake <chrisrblake93@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me> Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-10 09:59:18 +00:00
meraki,mr33)
caldata_extract_ubi "ART" 0x9000 0x844
caldata_valid "4408" || caldata_extract "ART" 0x9000 0x844
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(get_mac_binary "/sys/bus/i2c/devices/0-0050/eeprom" 0x66) 1)
ipq40xx: add Cisco Meraki MR33 Support This patch adds support for Cisco Meraki MR33 hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4029 Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB DDR3L-1600 @ 627 MHz Micron MT41K128M16JT-125IT NAND: 128 MiB SLC NAND Spansion S34ML01G200TFV00 (106 MiB usable) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros AR8035 Gigabit PHY (1 x LAN/WAN) + PoE WLAN1: QCA9887 (168c:0050) PCIe 1x1:1 802.11abgn ac Dualband VHT80 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 VHT80 LEDS: 1 x Programmable RGB+White Status LED (driven by Ti LP5562 on i2c-1) 1 x Orange LED Fault Indicator (shared with LP5562) 2 x LAN Activity / Speed LEDs (On the RJ45 Port) BUTTON: one Reset button MISC: Bluetooth LE Ti cc2650 PG2.3 4x4mm - BL_CONFIG at 0x0001FFD8 AT24C64 8KiB EEPROM Kensington Lock Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has a populated 1x4 0.1" header with half-height/low profile pins. The pinout is: VCC (little white arrow), RX, TX, GND. Flashing needs a serial adaptor, as well as patched ubootwrite utility (needs Little-Endian support). And a modified u-boot (enabled Ethernet). Meraki's original u-boot source can be found in: <https://github.com/riptidewave93/meraki-uboot/tree/mr33-20170427> Add images to do an installation via bootloader: 0. open up the MR33 and connect the serial console. 1. start the 2nd stage bootloader transfer from client pc: # ubootwrite.py --write=mr33-uboot.bin (The ubootwrite tool will interrupt the boot-process and hence it needs to listen for cues. If the connection is bad (due to the low-profile pins), the tool can fail multiple times and in weird ways. If you are not sure, just use a terminal program and see what the device is doing there. 2. power on the MR33 (with ethernet + serial cables attached) Warning: Make sure you do this in a private LAN that has no connection to the internet. - let it upload the u-boot this can take 250-300 seconds - 3. use a tftp client (in binary mode!) on your PC to upload the sysupgrade.bin (the u-boot is listening on 192.168.1.1) # tftp 192.168.1.1 binary put openwrt-ipq40xx-meraki_mr33-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 4. wait for it to reboot 5. connect to your MR33 via ssh on 192.168.1.1 For more detailed instructions, please take a look at the: "Flashing Instructions for the MR33" PDF. This can be found on the wiki: <https://openwrt.org/toh/meraki/mr33> (A link to the mr33-uboot.bin + the modified ubootwrite is also there) Thanks to Jerome C. for sending an MR33 to Chris. Signed-off-by: Chris Blake <chrisrblake93@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me> Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-10 09:59:18 +00:00
;;
esac
;;
ipq40xx: add support for OpenMesh A62 * QCA IPQ4019 * 256 MB of RAM * 32 MB of SPI NOR flash (s25fl256s1) - 2x 15 MB available; but one of the 15 MB regions is the recovery image * 2T2R 2.4 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=20,variant=OM-A62 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 36-64) - QCA9888 hw2.0 (PCI) - requires special BDF in QCA9888/hw2.0/board-2.bin bus=pci,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=16,variant=OM-A62 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 100-165) - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=21,variant=OM-A62 * multi-color LED (controlled via red/green/blue GPIOs) * 1x button (reset; kmod-input-gpio-keys compatible) * external watchdog - triggered GPIO * 1x USB (xHCI) * TTL pins are on board (arrow points to VCC, then follows: GND, TX, RX) * 2x gigabit ethernet - phy@mdio3: + Label: Ethernet 1 + gmac0 (ethaddr) in original firmware + 802.3at POE+ - phy@mdio4: + Label: Ethernet 2 + gmac1 (eth1addr) in original firmware + 18-24V passive POE (mode B) * powered only via POE The tool ap51-flash (https://github.com/ap51-flash/ap51-flash) should be used to transfer the factory image to the u-boot when the device boots up. The initramfs image can be started using setenv bootargs 'loglevel=8 earlycon=msm_serial_dm,0x78af000 console=ttyMSM0,115200 mtdparts=spi0.0:256k(0:SBL1),128k(0:MIBIB),384k(0:QSEE),64k(0:CDT),64k(0:DDRPARAMS),64k(0:APPSBLENV),512k(0:APPSBL),64k(0:ART),64k(0:custom),64k(0:KEYS),15552k(inactive),15552k(inactive2)' tftpboot 0x84000000 openwrt-ipq40xx-openmesh_a62-initramfs-fit-uImage.itb set fdt_high 0x85000000 bootm 0x84000000 Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven.eckelmann@openmesh.com>
2017-08-09 11:52:07 +00:00
"ath10k/pre-cal-pci-0000:01:00.0.bin")
case "$board" in
asus,map-ac2200)
caldata_extract_ubi "Factory" 0x9000 0x2f20
ln -sf /lib/firmware/ath10k/pre-cal-pci-0000\:00\:00.0.bin \
/lib/firmware/ath10k/QCA9888/hw2.0/board.bin
;;
ipq40xx: add support for AVM FRITZ!Repeater 3000 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M (NANYA NT5CC128M16JR-EK) FLASH: 128M NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC-XKI) ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac WiFi5: QCA9984 4T4R 4SS n/ac LED: - Connect green/blue/red - Power green BTN: WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz3000' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz3000.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ3000.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-03-11 17:05:32 +00:00
avm,fritzrepeater-3000)
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3D000 -e 0x212 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader0") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C800 -e 0x212 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader0") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C000 -e 0x212 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader0") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3D000 -e 0x212 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader1") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C800 -e 0x212 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader1") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C000 -e 0x212 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader1")
ipq40xx: add support for AVM FRITZ!Repeater 3000 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M (NANYA NT5CC128M16JR-EK) FLASH: 128M NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC-XKI) ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac WiFi5: QCA9984 4T4R 4SS n/ac LED: - Connect green/blue/red - Power green BTN: WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz3000' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz3000.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ3000.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-03-11 17:05:32 +00:00
;;
buffalo,wtr-m2133hp)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x9000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_binary ORGDATA 0x32)
;;
engenius,eap2200 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Plasma Cloud PA2200 Device specifications: * QCA IPQ4019 * 256 MB of RAM * 32 MB of SPI NOR flash (w25q256) - 2x 15 MB available; but one of the 15 MB regions is the recovery image * 2T2R 2.4 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=20,variant=PlasmaCloud-PA2200 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 36-64) - QCA9888 hw2.0 (PCI) - requires special BDF in QCA9888/hw2.0/board-2.bin bus=pci,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=16,variant=PlasmaCloud-PA2200 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 100-165) - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=21,variant=PlasmaCloud-PA2200 * GPIO-LEDs for 2.4GHz, 5GHz-SoC and 5GHz-PCIE * GPIO-LEDs for power (orange) and status (blue) * 1x GPIO-button (reset) * TTL pins are on board (arrow points to VCC, then follows: GND, TX, RX) * 2x gigabit ethernet - phy@mdio3: + Label: Ethernet 1 + gmac0 (ethaddr) in original firmware + used as LAN interface - phy@mdio4: + Label: Ethernet 2 + gmac1 (eth1addr) in original firmware + 802.3at POE+ + used as WAN interface * 12V 2A DC Flashing instructions: The tool ap51-flash (https://github.com/ap51-flash/ap51-flash) should be used to transfer the factory image to the u-boot when the device boots up. Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <marek.lindner@kaiwoo.ai> [sven@narfation.org: prepare commit message, rebase, use all LEDs, switch to dualboot_datachk upgrade script, use eth1 as designated WAN interface] Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven@narfation.org>
2018-12-14 15:46:53 +00:00
openmesh,a62 |\
plasmacloud,pa2200)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x9000 0x2f20
;;
linksys,ea8300 |\
linksys,mr8300)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x9000 0x2f20
ipq40xx: Add support for Linksys EA8300 (Dallas) The Linksys EA8300 is based on QCA4019 and QCA9888 and provides three, independent radios. NAND provides two, alternate kernel/firmware images with fail-over provided by the OEM U-Boot. Installation: "Factory" images may be installed directly through the OEM GUI. Hardware Highlights: * IPQ4019 at 717 MHz (4 CPUs) * 256 MB NAND (Winbond W29N02GV, 8-bit parallel) * 256 MB RAM * Three, fully-functional radios; `iw phy` reports (FCC/US, -CT): * 2.4 GHz radio at 30 dBm * 5 GHz radio on ch. 36-64 at 23 dBm * 5 GHz radio on ch. 100-144 at 23 dBm (DFS), 149-165 at 30 dBm #{ managed } <= 16, #{ AP, mesh point } <= 16, #{ IBSS } <= 1 * All two-stream, MCS 0-9 * 4x GigE LAN, 1x GigE Internet Ethernet jacks with port lights * USB3, single port on rear with LED * WPS and reset buttons * Four status lights on top * Serial pads internal (unpopulated) "Linksys Dallas WiFi AP router based on Qualcomm AP DK07.1-c1" Implementation Notes: The OEM flash layout is preserved at this time with 3 MB kernel and ~69 MB UBIFS for each firmware version. The sysdiag (1 MB) and syscfg (56 MB) partitions are untouched, available as read-only. Serial Connectivity: Serial connectivity is *not* required to flash. Serial may be accessed by opening the device and connecting a 3.3-V adapter using 115200, 8n1. U-Boot access is good, including the ability to load images over TFTP and either run or flash them. Looking at the top of the board, from the front of the unit, J3 can be found on the right edge of the board, near the rear | J3 | |-| | |O| | (3.3V seen, open-circuit) |O| | TXD |O| | RXD |O| | |O| | GND |-| | | Unimplemented: * serial1 "ttyQHS0" (serial0 works as console) * Bluetooth; Qualcomm CSR8811 (potentially conected to serial1) Other Notes: https://wikidevi.com/wiki/Linksys_EA8300 states FCC docs also cover the Linksys EA8250. According to the RF Test Report BT BR+EDR, "All models are identical except for the EA8300 supports 256QAM and the EA8250 disable 256QAM." Signed-off-by: Jeff Kletsky <git-commits@allycomm.com>
2019-04-10 15:34:28 +00:00
# OEM assigns 4 sequential MACs
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_setbit_la $(macaddr_add "$(cat /sys/class/net/eth0/address)" 4))
ipq40xx: Add support for Linksys EA8300 (Dallas) The Linksys EA8300 is based on QCA4019 and QCA9888 and provides three, independent radios. NAND provides two, alternate kernel/firmware images with fail-over provided by the OEM U-Boot. Installation: "Factory" images may be installed directly through the OEM GUI. Hardware Highlights: * IPQ4019 at 717 MHz (4 CPUs) * 256 MB NAND (Winbond W29N02GV, 8-bit parallel) * 256 MB RAM * Three, fully-functional radios; `iw phy` reports (FCC/US, -CT): * 2.4 GHz radio at 30 dBm * 5 GHz radio on ch. 36-64 at 23 dBm * 5 GHz radio on ch. 100-144 at 23 dBm (DFS), 149-165 at 30 dBm #{ managed } <= 16, #{ AP, mesh point } <= 16, #{ IBSS } <= 1 * All two-stream, MCS 0-9 * 4x GigE LAN, 1x GigE Internet Ethernet jacks with port lights * USB3, single port on rear with LED * WPS and reset buttons * Four status lights on top * Serial pads internal (unpopulated) "Linksys Dallas WiFi AP router based on Qualcomm AP DK07.1-c1" Implementation Notes: The OEM flash layout is preserved at this time with 3 MB kernel and ~69 MB UBIFS for each firmware version. The sysdiag (1 MB) and syscfg (56 MB) partitions are untouched, available as read-only. Serial Connectivity: Serial connectivity is *not* required to flash. Serial may be accessed by opening the device and connecting a 3.3-V adapter using 115200, 8n1. U-Boot access is good, including the ability to load images over TFTP and either run or flash them. Looking at the top of the board, from the front of the unit, J3 can be found on the right edge of the board, near the rear | J3 | |-| | |O| | (3.3V seen, open-circuit) |O| | TXD |O| | RXD |O| | |O| | GND |-| | | Unimplemented: * serial1 "ttyQHS0" (serial0 works as console) * Bluetooth; Qualcomm CSR8811 (potentially conected to serial1) Other Notes: https://wikidevi.com/wiki/Linksys_EA8300 states FCC docs also cover the Linksys EA8250. According to the RF Test Report BT BR+EDR, "All models are identical except for the EA8300 supports 256QAM and the EA8250 disable 256QAM." Signed-off-by: Jeff Kletsky <git-commits@allycomm.com>
2019-04-10 15:34:28 +00:00
;;
ipq40xx: add support for Netgear SRR60/SRS60 and RBR50/RBS50 The Netgear SRS60 and SRR60 (sold together as SRK60) are two almost identical AC3000 routers. The SRR60 has one port labeled as wan while the SRS60 not. The RBR50 and RBS50 (sold together as RBK50) have a different external shape but they have an USB 2.0 port on the back. This patch has been tested only on SRS60 and RBR50, but should work on SRR60 and RBS50. Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 (717 MHz, 4 cores 4 threads) RAM: 512MB DDR3 FLASH: 4GB EMMC ETH: - 3x 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet - 1x 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet (WAN) WIFI: - 2.4GHz: 1x IPQ4019 (2x2:2) - 5GHz: 1x IPQ4019 (2x2:2) - 5GHz: 1x QCA9984 (4x4:4) - 6 internal antennas BTN: - 1x Reset button - 1x Sync button - 1x ON/OFF button LEDS: - 8 leds controlled by TLC59208F (they can be switched on/off independendently but the color can by changed by GPIOs) - 1x Red led (Power) - 1x Green led (Power) UART: - 115200-8-N-1 Everything works correctly. Installation ------------ These routers have a dual partition system. However this firmware works only on boot partition 1 and the OEM web interface will always flash on the partition currently not booted. The following steps will use the SRS60 firmware, but you have to chose the right firmware for your router. There are 2 ways to install Openwrt the first time: 1) Using NMRPflash 1. Download nmrpflash (https://github.com/jclehner/nmrpflash) 2. Put the openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_srs60-squashfs-factory.img file in the same folder of the nmrpflash executable 3. Connect your pc to the router using the port near the power button. 4. Run "nmrpflash -i XXX -f openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_srs60-squashfs-factory.img". Replace XXX with your network interface (can be identified by running "nmrpflash -L") 5. Power on the router and wait for the flash to complete. After about a minute the router should boot directly to Openwrt. If nothing happens try to reboot the router. If you have problems flashing try to set "10.164.183.253" as your computer IP address 2) Without NMRPflash The OEM web interface will always flash on the partition currently not booted, so to flash OpenWrt for the first time you have to switch to boot partition 2 and then flash the factory image directly from the OEM web interface. To switch on partition 2 you have to enable telnet first: 1. Go to http://192.168.1.250/debug.htm and check "Enable Telnet". 2. Connect through telent ("telnet 192.168.1.250") and login using admin/password. To read the current boot_part: artmtd -r boot_part To write the new boot_part: artmtd -w boot_part 02 Then reboot the router and then check again the current booted partition Now that you are on boot partition 2 you can flash the factory Openwrt image directly from the OEM web interface. Restore OEM Firmware -------------------- 1. Download the stock firmware from official netgear support. 2. Follow the nmrpflash procedure like above, using the official Netgear firmware (for example SRS60-V2.2.1.210.img) nmrpflash -i XXX -f SRS60-V2.2.1.210.img Notes ----- 1) You can check and edit the boot partition in the Uboot shell using the UART connection. "boot_partition_show" shows the current boot partition "boot_partition_set 1" sets the current boot partition to 1 2) Router mac addresses: LAN XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69 WAN XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6a WIFI 2G XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69 WIFI 5G XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6b WIFI 5G (2nd) XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6c LABEL XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69 Signed-off-by: Davide Fioravanti <pantanastyle@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com> [added 5.10 changes for 901-arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch, moved sysupgrade mmc.sh to here and renamed it, various dtsi changes] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-09-02 00:10:16 +00:00
netgear,rbr50|\
netgear,rbs50|\
netgear,srr60|\
netgear,srs60)
caldata_extract_mmc "0:ART" 0x9000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mmc_get_mac_binary ARTMTD 0x12)
;;
ipq40xx: add support for OpenMesh A62 * QCA IPQ4019 * 256 MB of RAM * 32 MB of SPI NOR flash (s25fl256s1) - 2x 15 MB available; but one of the 15 MB regions is the recovery image * 2T2R 2.4 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=20,variant=OM-A62 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 36-64) - QCA9888 hw2.0 (PCI) - requires special BDF in QCA9888/hw2.0/board-2.bin bus=pci,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=16,variant=OM-A62 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 100-165) - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=21,variant=OM-A62 * multi-color LED (controlled via red/green/blue GPIOs) * 1x button (reset; kmod-input-gpio-keys compatible) * external watchdog - triggered GPIO * 1x USB (xHCI) * TTL pins are on board (arrow points to VCC, then follows: GND, TX, RX) * 2x gigabit ethernet - phy@mdio3: + Label: Ethernet 1 + gmac0 (ethaddr) in original firmware + 802.3at POE+ - phy@mdio4: + Label: Ethernet 2 + gmac1 (eth1addr) in original firmware + 18-24V passive POE (mode B) * powered only via POE The tool ap51-flash (https://github.com/ap51-flash/ap51-flash) should be used to transfer the factory image to the u-boot when the device boots up. The initramfs image can be started using setenv bootargs 'loglevel=8 earlycon=msm_serial_dm,0x78af000 console=ttyMSM0,115200 mtdparts=spi0.0:256k(0:SBL1),128k(0:MIBIB),384k(0:QSEE),64k(0:CDT),64k(0:DDRPARAMS),64k(0:APPSBLENV),512k(0:APPSBL),64k(0:ART),64k(0:custom),64k(0:KEYS),15552k(inactive),15552k(inactive2)' tftpboot 0x84000000 openwrt-ipq40xx-openmesh_a62-initramfs-fit-uImage.itb set fdt_high 0x85000000 bootm 0x84000000 Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven.eckelmann@openmesh.com>
2017-08-09 11:52:07 +00:00
esac
;;
"ath10k/pre-cal-ahb-a000000.wifi.bin")
case "$board" in
8dev,habanero-dvk |\
8dev,jalapeno |\
alfa-network,ap120c-ac |\
ipq40xx: add support for Crisis Innovation Lab MeshPoint.One MeshPoint.One is Wi-Fi hotspot and smart IoT gateway (based upon Jalapeno module from 8Devices). MeshPoint.One (https://meshpointone.com) is a unique Wi-Fi hotspot and smart city gateway that can be installed and powered from street lighting (even solar power in the future). MeshPoint provides up to 27 hours of interrupted Wi-Fi and IoT services from internal battery even when external power is not available. MeshPoint.One can be used for disaster relief efforts in order to provide instant Wi-Fi coverage that can be easily expanded by just adding more devices that create wide area mesh network. MeshPoint.One devices have standard Luci UI for management. Features: - 1x 1Gpbs WAN - 1x 1Gbps LAN - POE input (eth0) - POE output (eth1) - Sensor for temperature, humidity and pressure (Bosch BME280) - current, voltage and power measurement via TI INA230 - Hardware real time clock - optional power via Li-Ion battery - micro USB port with USB to serial chip for easy OpenWrt terminal access - I2C header for connecting additional sensors Installation: ------------- Simply flash the sysupgrade image from stock firmware. Or use the built in Web recovery into bootloader: Hold Reset button for 5 to 20 seconds or use UART and httpd command. Web UI will appear on 192.168.2.100 by default. For web recovery use the factory.ubi image. Signed-off-by: Damir Samardzic <damir.samardzic@sartura.hr> Signed-off-by: Damir Franusic <damir.franusic@sartura.hr> Signed-off-by: Valent Turkovic <valent@meshpoint.me> Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert@meshpoint.me> [commit description long line wrap, usb->USB] Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
2019-11-25 14:25:00 +00:00
cilab,meshpoint-one |\
glinet,gl-ap1300 |\
glinet,gl-b1300 |\
ipq40xx: add support for GL.iNet GL-B2200 This patch adds supports for the GL-B2200 router. Specifications: - SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 ARM Quad-Core - RAM: 512 MiB - Flash: 16 MiB NOR - SPI0 - EMMC: 8GB EMMC - ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 - WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n 2x2 - WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 - WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9886 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 - INPUT: Reset, WPS - LED: Power, Internet - UART1: On board pin header near to LED (3.3V, TX, RX, GND), 3.3V without pin - 115200 8N1 - UART2: On board with BLE module - SPI1: On board socket for Zigbee module Update firmware instructions: Please update the firmware via U-Boot web UI (by default at 192.168.1.1, following instructions found at https://docs.gl-inet.com/en/3/troubleshooting/debrick/). Normal sysupgrade, either via CLI or LuCI, is not possible from stock firmware. Please do use the *gl-b2200-squashfs-emmc.img file, gunzipping the produced *gl-b2200-squashfs-emmc.img.gz one first. What's working: - WiFi 2G, 5G - WPA2/WPA3 Not tested: - Bluetooth LE/Zigbee Credits goes to the original authors of this patch. V1->V2: - updates *arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch correctly (sorry, my mistake) - add uboot-envtools support V2->V3: - Li Zhang updated official patch to fix wrong MAC address on wlan0 (PCI) interface V3->V4: - wire up sysupgrade Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <li.zhang@gl-inet.com> [fix tab and trailing space, document what's working and what's not] Signed-off-by: TruongSinh Tran-Nguyen <i@truongsinh.pro> [rebase on top of master, address remaining comments] Signed-off-by: Enrico Mioso <mrkiko.rs@gmail.com> [remove redundant check in platform.sh] Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
2021-12-01 15:18:17 +00:00
glinet,gl-b2200 |\
glinet,gl-s1300 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Linksys EA6350v3 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 RAM: 256 MiB Samsung K4B2G1646F-BYK0 FLASH1: MX25L1605D 2 MB FLASH2: Winbond W25N01GV 128Mb ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN0: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n 2x2 WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 INPUT: WPS, Reset LED: Status - Green SERIAL: Header at J19, Beneath DC Power Jack 1-VCC ; 2-TX ; 3-RX; 4-GND; Serial 115200-8-N-1. Tested and working: - USB (requires extra packages) - LAN Ethernet (Correct MAC-address) - WAN Ethernet (Correct MAC-address) - 2.4 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - 5 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - Factory installation from Web UI - OpenWRT sysupgrade - LED - Reset Button Need Testing: - WPS button Install via Web UI: - Attach to a LAN port on the router. - Connect to the Linksys Smart WiFi Page (default 192.168.1.1) and login - Select the connectivity tab on the left - In the manual update box on the right - Select browse, and browse to openwrt-ipq40xx-linksys_ea6350v3-squashfs-factory.bin - Click update. - Read and accept the warning - The router LED will start blinking. When the router LED goes solid, you can now navigate to 192.168.1.1 to your new OpenWrt installation. Sysupgrade: - Flash the sysupgrade image as usual. Please: try to do a reset everytime you can (doing it with LuCI is easy and can be done in the same step). Recovery (Automatic): - If the device fails to boot after install or upgrade, whilst the unit is turned on: 1 - Wait 15 seconds 2 - Switch Off and Wait 10 seconds 3 - Switch on 4 - Repeat steps 1 to 3, 3 times then go to 5. 5 - U-boot will have now erased the failed update and switched back to the last working firmware - you should be able to access your router on LAN. Recovery (Manual): - The steps for manual recovery are the same as the generic u-boot tftp client method. Back To Stock: - Use the generic recovery using the tftp client method to flash the "civic.img". Also you can strip-and-pad the original image and use the generic "mtd" method by flashing over the "kernel" partition. * Just be careful to flash in the partition that the device is currently booted. Signed-off-by: Ryan Pannell <ryan@osukl.com> Signed-off-by: Oever González <notengobattery@gmail.com> [minor edits, removed second compatible of nand, added dtb entry to 4.19] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-24 03:20:55 +00:00
linksys,ea6350v3 |\
ipq40xx: add support for MobiPromo CM520-79F MobiPromo CM520-79F is an AC1300 dual band router based on IPQ4019 Specification: SoC/Wireless: QCA IPQ4019 RAM: 512MiB Flash: 128MiB SLC NAND Ethernet PHY: QCA8075 Ethernet ports: 1x WAN, 2x LAN LEDs: 7 LEDs 2 (USB, CAN) are GPIO other 5 (2.4G, 5G, LAN1, LAN2, WAN) are connected to a shift register Button: Reset Flash instruction: Disassemble the router, connect UART pins like this: GND TX RX [x x . . x .] [. . . . . .] (QCA8075 and IPQ4019 below) Baud-rate: 115200 Set up TFTP server: IP 192.168.1.188/24 Power on the router and interrupt the booting with UART console env backup (in case you want to go back to stock and need it there): printenv (Copy the output to somewhere save) Set bootenv: setenv set_ubi 'set mtdids nand0=nand0; set mtdparts mtdparts=nand0:0x7480000@0xb80000(fs); ubi part fs' setenv bootkernel 'ubi read 0x84000000 kernel; bootm 0x84000000#config@1' setenv cm520_boot 'run set_ubi; run bootkernel' setenv bootcmd 'run cm520_boot' setenv bootargs saveenv Boot initramfs from TFTP: tftpboot openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-mobipromo_cm520-79f-initramfs-fit-zImage.itb bootm After initramfs image is booted, backup rootfs partition in case of reverting to stock image cat /dev/mtd12 > /tmp/mtd12.bin Then fetch it via SCP Upload nand-factory.ubi to /tmp via SCP, then run mtd erase rootfs mtd write /tmp/*nand-factory.ubi rootfs reboot To revert to stock image, restore default bootenv in uboot UART console setenv bootcmd 'bootipq' printenv use the saved dump you did back when you installed OpenWrt to verify that there are no other differences from back in the day. saveenv upload the backed up mtd12.bin and run tftpboot mtd12.bin nand erase 0xb80000 0x7480000 nand write 0x84000000 0xb80000 0x7480000 The BOOTCONFIG may have been configured to boot from alternate partition (rootfs_1) instead In case of this, set it back to rootfs: cd /tmp cat /dev/mtd7 > mtd7.bin echo -ne '\x0b' | dd of=mtd7.bin conv=notrunc bs=1 count=1 seek=4 for i in 28 48 68 108; do dd if=/dev/zero of=mtd7.bin conv=notrunc bs=1 count=1 seek=$i done mtd write mtd7.bin BOOTCONFIG mtd write mtd7.bin BOOTCONFIG1 Signed-off-by: DENG Qingfang <dengqf6@mail2.sysu.edu.cn> [renamed volume to ubi to support autoboot, as per David Lam's test in PR#2432] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-01-14 14:22:59 +00:00
mobipromo,cm520-79f |\
ipq40xx: add support for P&W R619AC (aka G-DOCK 2.0) P&W R619AC is a IPQ4019 Dual-Band AC1200 router. It is made by P&W (p2w-tech.com) known as P&W R619AC but marketed and sold more popularly as G-DOCK 2.0. Specification: * SOC: Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4019 (717 MHz) * RAM: 512 MiB * Flash: 16 MiB (NOR) + 128 MiB (NAND) * Ethernet: 5 x 10/100/1000 (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) * Wireless: - 2.4 GHz b/g/n Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4019 - 5 GHz a/n/ac Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4019 * USB: 1 x USB 3.0 * LED: 4 x LAN, 1 x WAN, 2 x WiFi, 1 x Power (All Blue LED) * Input: 1 x reset * 1 x MicroSD card slot * Serial console: 115200bps, pinheader J2 on PCB * Power: DC 12V 2A * 1 x Unpopulated mPCIe Slot (see below how to connect it) * 1 x Unpopulated Sim Card Slot Installation: 1. Access to tty console via UART serial 2. Enter failsafe mode and mount rootfs <https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/troubleshooting/failsafe_and_factory_reset> 3. Edit inittab to enable shell on tty console `sed -i 's/#ttyM/ttyM/' /etc/inittab` 4. Reboot and upload `-nand-factory.bin` to the router (using wget) 5. Use `sysupgrade` command to install Another installation method is to hijack the upgrade server domain of stock firmware, because it's using insecure http. This commit is based on @LGA1150(at GitHub)'s work <https://github.com/LGA1150/openwrt/commit/a4932c8d5a275d1fb4297bd20ec03f9270a45d1c> With some changes: 1. Added `qpic_bam` node in dts. I don't know much about this, but I observed other dtses have this node. 2. Removed `ldo` node under `sd_0_pinmux`, because `ldo` cause SD card not working. This fix is from <https://github.com/coolsnowwolf/lede/commit/51143b4c7571f717afe071db60bbb4db1532cbf2> 3. Removed the 32MB NOR variant. 4. Removed `cd-gpios` in `sdhci` node, because it's reported that it makes wlan2g led light up. 5. Added ethphy led config in dts. 6. Changed nand partition label from `rootfs` to `ubi`. About the 128MiB variant: The stock bootloader sets size of nand to 64MiB. But most of this devices have 128MiB nand. If you want to use all 128MiB, you need to modify the `MIBIB` data of bootloader. More details can be found on github: <https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/3691#issuecomment-818770060> For instructions on how to flash the MIBIB partition from u-boot console: <https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/3691#issuecomment-819138232> About the Mini PCIe slot: (from "ygleg") "The REFCLK signals on the Mini PCIe slot is not connected on this board out of the box. If you want to use the Mini PCIe slot on the board, you need to (preferably) solder two 0402 resistors: R436 (REFCLK+) and R444 (REFCLK-)..." This and much more information is provoided in the github comment: <https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/3691#issuecomment-968054670> Signed-off-by: Richard Yu <yurichard3839@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: DENG Qingfang <dqfext@gmail.com> [Added comment about MIBIB+128 MiB variant. Added commit message section about pcie slot. Renamed gpio-leds' subnodes and added color, function+enum properties.] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2021-11-12 03:16:21 +00:00
p2w,r619ac-64m |\
p2w,r619ac-128m |\
qcom,ap-dk01.1-c1)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
;;
ipq40xx: add support for Aruba AP-303H The Aruba AP-303H is the hospitality version of the Aruba AP-303 with a POE-passthrough enabled ethernet switch instead of a sigle PHY. Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4029 RAM: 512M DDR3 FLASH: - 128MB SPI-NAND (Macronix) - 4MB SPI-NOR (Macronix MX25R3235F) TPM: Atmel AT97SC3203 BLE: Texas Instruments CC2540T attached to ttyMSM1 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 LED: WiFi (amber / green) System (red / green /amber) PSE (green) BTN: Reset USB: USB 2.0 To connect to the serial console, you can solder to the labled pads next to the USB port or use your Aruba supplied UARt adapter. Do NOT plug a standard USB cable into the Console labled USB-port! Aruba/HPE simply put UART on the micro-USB pins. You can solder yourself an adapter cable: VCC - NC D+ - TX D- - RX GND - GND The console setting in bootloader and OS is 9600 8N1. Voltage level is 3.3V. To enable a full list of commands in the U-Boot "help" command, execute the literal "diag" command. Installation ------------ 1. Get the OpenWrt initramfs image. Rename it to ipq40xx.ari and put it into the TFTP server root directory. Configure the TFTP server to be reachable at 192.168.1.75/24. Connect the machine running the TFTP server to the E0 (!) ethernet port of the access point, as it only tries to pull from the WAN port. 2. Connect to the serial console. Interrupt autobooting by pressing Enter when prompted. 3. Configure the bootargs and bootcmd for OpenWrt. $ setenv bootargs_openwrt "setenv bootargs console=ttyMSM0,9600n8" $ setenv nandboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; ubi part aos1; ubi read 0x85000000 kernel; set fdt_high 0x87000000; bootm 0x85000000" $ setenv ramboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.105; setenv serverip 192.168.1.75; netget; set fdt_high 0x87000000; bootm" $ setenv bootcmd "run nandboot_openwrt" $ saveenv 4. Load OpenWrt into RAM: $ run ramboot_openwrt 5. After OpenWrt booted, transfer the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the /tmp folder on the device. You will need to plug into E1-E3 ports of the access point to reach OpenWrt, as E0 is the WAN port of the device. 6. Flash OpenWrt: $ ubidetach -p /dev/mtd16 $ ubiformat /dev/mtd16 $ sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin To go back to the stock firmware, simply reset the bootcmd in the bootloader to the original value: $ setenv bootcmd "boot" $ saveenv Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2020-01-11 23:36:42 +00:00
aruba,ap-303 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Aruba AP-365 Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4029 RAM: 512M DDR3 FLASH: - 128MB NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC) - 4MB SPI-NOR (Macronix MX25R3235F) TPM: Atmel AT97SC3203 BLE: Texas Instruments CC2540T attached to ttyMSM0 ETH: Atheros AR8035 LED: System (red / green / amber) BTN: Reset The USB port on the device is (in contrast to other Aruba boards) real USB. The AP uses a CP2101 USB TTY converter on the board. Console baudrate is 9600 8n1. To enable a full list of commands in the U-Boot "help" command, execute the literal "diag" command. Installation ------------ 1. Get the OpenWrt initramfs image. Rename it to ipq40xx.ari and put it into the TFTP server root directory. Configure the TFTP server to be reachable at 192.168.1.75/24. Connect the machine running the TFTP server to the ethernet port of the access point. 2. Connect to the serial console. Interrupt autobooting by pressing Enter when prompted. 3. Configure the bootargs and bootcmd for OpenWrt. $ setenv bootargs_openwrt "setenv bootargs console=ttyMSM1,9600n8" $ setenv nandboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; ubi part aos1; ubi read 0x85000000 kernel; bootm 0x85000000" $ setenv ramboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.105; setenv serverip 192.168.1.75; netget; set fdt_high 0x87000000; bootm" $ setenv bootcmd "run nandboot_openwrt" $ saveenv 4. Load OpenWrt into RAM: $ run ramboot_openwrt 5. After OpenWrt booted, transfer the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the /tmp folder on the device. 6. Flash OpenWrt: Make sure you use the mtd partition with the label "ubi" here! $ ubidetach -p /dev/mtd1 $ ubiformat /dev/mtd1 $ sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin To go back to the stock firmware, simply reset the bootcmd in the bootloader to the original value: $ setenv bootcmd "boot" $ saveenv Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2020-05-07 15:50:57 +00:00
aruba,ap-303h |\
aruba,ap-365)
ipq40xx: add support for Aruba AP-303 Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4029 RAM: 512M DDR3 FLASH: - 128MB NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC) - 4MB SPI-NOR (Macronix MX25R3235F) TPM: Atmel AT97SC3203 BLE: Texas Instruments CC2540T attached to ttyMSM0 ETH: Atheros AR8035 LED: WiFi (amber / green) System (red / green) BTN: Reset To connect to the serial console, you can solder to the labled pads next to the USB port or use your Aruba supplied UARt adapter. Do NOT plug a standard USB cable into the Console labled USB-port! Aruba/HPE simply put UART on the micro-USB pins. You can solder yourself an adapter cable: VCC - NC D+ - TX D- - RX GND - GND The console setting in bootloader and OS is 9600 8N1. Voltage level is 3.3V. To enable a full list of commands in the U-Boot "help" command, execute the literal "diag" command. Installation ------------ 1. Get the OpenWrt initramfs image. Rename it to ipq40xx.ari and put it into the TFTP server root directory. Configure the TFTP server to be reachable at 192.168.1.75/24. Connect the machine running the TFTP server to the ethernet port of the access point. 2. Connect to the serial console. Interrupt autobooting by pressing Enter when prompted. 3. Configure the bootargs and bootcmd for OpenWrt. $ setenv bootargs_openwrt "setenv bootargs console=ttyMSM1,9600n8" $ setenv nandboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; ubi part aos1; ubi read 0x85000000 kernel; bootm 0x85000000" $ setenv ramboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.105; setenv serverip 192.168.1.75; netget; set fdt_high 0x87000000; bootm" $ setenv bootcmd "run nandboot_openwrt" $ saveenv 4. Load OpenWrt into RAM: $ run ramboot_openwrt 5. After OpenWrt booted, transfer the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the /tmp folder on the device. 6. Flash OpenWrt: $ ubidetach -p /dev/mtd1 $ ubiformat /dev/mtd1 $ sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin To go back to the stock firmware, simply reset the bootcmd in the bootloader to the original value: $ setenv bootcmd "boot" $ saveenv Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-10-23 20:25:14 +00:00
caldata_extract "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_binary mfginfo 0x1D)
;;
asus,map-ac2200)
caldata_extract_ubi "Factory" 0x1000 0x2f20
;;
ipq40xx: add support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13 This patch adds support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13. hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 128 MiB DDR3L-1066 @ 537 MHz (1074?) NT5CC64M16GP-DI NOR: 2 MiB Macronix MX25L1606E (for boot, QSEE) NAND: 128 MiB Winbond W25NO1GVZE1G (cal + kernel + root, UBI) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 Gigabit Switch (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) USB: 1 x 3.0 (via Synopsys DesignWare DWC3 controller in the SoC) WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: one Reset and one WPS button LEDS: Status, WAN, WIFI1/2, USB and LAN (one blue LED for each) Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has an unpopulated 1x4 0.1" header. The pinout (VDD, RX, GND, TX) is printed on the PCB right next to the connector. U-Boot Note: The ethernet driver isn't always reliable and can sometime time out... Don't worry, just retry. Access via the serial console is required. As well as a working TFTP-server setup and the initramfs image. (If not provided, it has to be built from the OpenWrt source. Make sure to enable LZMA as the compression for the INITRAMFS!) To install the image permanently, you have to do the following steps in the listed order. 1. Open up the router. There are four phillips screws hiding behind the four plastic feets on the underside. 2. Connect the serial cable (See notes above) 3. Connect your router via one of the four LAN-ports (yellow) to a PC which can set the IP-Address and ssh and scp from. If possible set your PC's IPv4 Address to 192.168.1.70 (As this is the IP-Address the Router's bootloader expects for the tftp server) 4. power up the router and enter the u-boot choose option 1 to upload the initramfs image. And follow through the ipv4 setup. Wait for your router's status LED to stop blinking rapidly and glow just blue. (The LAN LED should also be glowing blue). 3. Connect to the OpenWrt running in RAM The default IPv4-Address of your router will be 192.168.1.1. 1. Copy over the openwrt-sysupgrade.bin image to your router's temporary directory # scp openwrt-sysupgrade.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp 2. ssh from your PC into your router as root. # ssh root@192.168.1.1 The default OpenWrt-Image won't ask for a password. Simply hit the Enter-Key. Once connected...: run the following commands on your temporary installation 3. delete the "jffs2" ubi partition to make room for your new root partition # ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=jffs2 4. install OpenWrt on the NAND Flash. # sysupgrade -v /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin - This will will automatically reboot the router - Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-07 08:13:10 +00:00
asus,rt-ac58u)
CI_UBIPART=UBI_DEV
caldata_extract_ubi "Factory" 0x1000 0x2f20
ipq40xx: add support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13 This patch adds support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13. hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 128 MiB DDR3L-1066 @ 537 MHz (1074?) NT5CC64M16GP-DI NOR: 2 MiB Macronix MX25L1606E (for boot, QSEE) NAND: 128 MiB Winbond W25NO1GVZE1G (cal + kernel + root, UBI) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 Gigabit Switch (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) USB: 1 x 3.0 (via Synopsys DesignWare DWC3 controller in the SoC) WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: one Reset and one WPS button LEDS: Status, WAN, WIFI1/2, USB and LAN (one blue LED for each) Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has an unpopulated 1x4 0.1" header. The pinout (VDD, RX, GND, TX) is printed on the PCB right next to the connector. U-Boot Note: The ethernet driver isn't always reliable and can sometime time out... Don't worry, just retry. Access via the serial console is required. As well as a working TFTP-server setup and the initramfs image. (If not provided, it has to be built from the OpenWrt source. Make sure to enable LZMA as the compression for the INITRAMFS!) To install the image permanently, you have to do the following steps in the listed order. 1. Open up the router. There are four phillips screws hiding behind the four plastic feets on the underside. 2. Connect the serial cable (See notes above) 3. Connect your router via one of the four LAN-ports (yellow) to a PC which can set the IP-Address and ssh and scp from. If possible set your PC's IPv4 Address to 192.168.1.70 (As this is the IP-Address the Router's bootloader expects for the tftp server) 4. power up the router and enter the u-boot choose option 1 to upload the initramfs image. And follow through the ipv4 setup. Wait for your router's status LED to stop blinking rapidly and glow just blue. (The LAN LED should also be glowing blue). 3. Connect to the OpenWrt running in RAM The default IPv4-Address of your router will be 192.168.1.1. 1. Copy over the openwrt-sysupgrade.bin image to your router's temporary directory # scp openwrt-sysupgrade.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp 2. ssh from your PC into your router as root. # ssh root@192.168.1.1 The default OpenWrt-Image won't ask for a password. Simply hit the Enter-Key. Once connected...: run the following commands on your temporary installation 3. delete the "jffs2" ubi partition to make room for your new root partition # ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=jffs2 4. install OpenWrt on the NAND Flash. # sysupgrade -v /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin - This will will automatically reboot the router - Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-07 08:13:10 +00:00
;;
avm,fritzbox-4040)
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x400 -e 0x207 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader_config")
;;
ipq40xx: add support for AVM FRITZ!Repeater 3000 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M (NANYA NT5CC128M16JR-EK) FLASH: 128M NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC-XKI) ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac WiFi5: QCA9984 4T4R 4SS n/ac LED: - Connect green/blue/red - Power green BTN: WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz3000' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz3000.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ3000.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-03-11 17:05:32 +00:00
avm,fritzbox-7530 |\
ipq40xx: add support for AVM FRITZ!Repeater 1200 Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M DDR3 FLASH: 128M NAND WiFi: 2T2R IPQ4019 bgn 2T2R IPQ4019 a/n/ac ETH: Atheros AR8033 RGMII PHY BTN: 1x Connect (WPS) LED: Power (green/red/yellow) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz1200' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz1200.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ1200.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz1200.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz1200.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-09-10 19:07:23 +00:00
avm,fritzrepeater-1200 |\
ipq40xx: add support for AVM FRITZ!Repeater 3000 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M (NANYA NT5CC128M16JR-EK) FLASH: 128M NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC-XKI) ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac WiFi5: QCA9984 4T4R 4SS n/ac LED: - Connect green/blue/red - Power green BTN: WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz3000' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz3000.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ3000.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-03-11 17:05:32 +00:00
avm,fritzrepeater-3000)
ipq40xx: add support for FritzBox 7530 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M FLASH: 128M NAND ETH: QCA8075 VDSL: Intel/Lantiq VRX518 PCIe attached currently not supported DECT: Dialog SC14448 currently not supported WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac LED: - Power/DSL green - WLAN green - FON/DECT green - Connect/WPS green - Info green - Info red BTN: - WLAN - FON - WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V (located under the Dialog chip) VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz7530' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz7530.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ7530.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz7530.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz7530.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> [removed pcie-dts range node, refreshed on top of AP120-AC/E2600AC] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-02-18 22:58:34 +00:00
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C000 -e 0x207 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader0") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C800 -e 0x207 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader0") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3D000 -e 0x207 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader0") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C000 -e 0x207 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader1") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C800 -e 0x207 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader1") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3D000 -e 0x207 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader1")
ipq40xx: add support for FritzBox 7530 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M FLASH: 128M NAND ETH: QCA8075 VDSL: Intel/Lantiq VRX518 PCIe attached currently not supported DECT: Dialog SC14448 currently not supported WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac LED: - Power/DSL green - WLAN green - FON/DECT green - Connect/WPS green - Info green - Info red BTN: - WLAN - FON - WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V (located under the Dialog chip) VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz7530' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz7530.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ7530.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz7530.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz7530.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> [removed pcie-dts range node, refreshed on top of AP120-AC/E2600AC] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-02-18 22:58:34 +00:00
;;
buffalo,wtr-m2133hp)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_binary ORGDATA 0x26)
;;
ipq40xx: add support for Cell C RTL30VW Cell C RTL30VW is a LTE router with tho gigabit ethernets and integrated QMI mPCIE modem. This is stripped version of ASKEY RTL0030VW. Hardware: Specification: -CPU: IPQ4019 -RAM: 256MB -Flash: NAND 128MB + NOR 16MB -WiFi: Integrated bgn/ac -LTE: mPCIe card (Modem chipset MDM9230) -LAN: 2 Gigabit Ports -USB: 2x USB2.0 -Serial console: RJ-45 115200 8n1 -Unsupported VoIP Known issues: None so far. Instruction install: There are two methods: Factory web-gui and serial + tftp. Web-gui: 1. Apply factory image via stock web-gui. Serial + initramfs: 1. Rename OpenWrt initramfs image to "image" 2. Connect serial console (115200,8n1) 3. Set IP to different than 192.168.1.11, but 24 bit mask, eg. 192.168.1.4. 4. U-Boot commands: sf probe && sf read 0x80000000 0x180000 0x10000 setenv serverip 192.168.1.4 set fdt_high 0x85000000 tftpboot 0x84000000 image bootm 0x84000000 5. Install sysupgrade image via "sysupgrade -n" Back to stock: All is needed is swap 0x4c byte in mtd8 from 0 to 1 or 1 to 0, do firstboot and factory reset with OFW: 1. read mtd8: dd if=/dev/mtd8 of=/tmp/mtd8 2. go to tmp: cd /tmp/ 3. write first part of partition: dd if=mtd8 of=mtd8.new bs=1 count=76 4. check which layout uses bootloader: cat /proc/mtd 5a. If first are kernel_1 and rootfs_1 write 0: echo -n -e '\x00' >> mtd8.new 5b. If first are kernel and rootfs write 1: echo -n -e '\x01' >> mtd8.new 6. fill with rest of data: dd if=mtd8 bs=1 skip=77 >> mtd8.new 7. CHECK IF mtd8.new HAVE CHANGED ONLY ONE BYTE! e.g with: hexdump mtd8.new 8. write new mtd8 to flash: mtd write mtd8.new /dev/mtd8 9. do firstboot 10.reboot 11. Do back to factory defaults in OFW GUI. Based on work: Cezary Jackiewicz <cezary@eko.one.pl> Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
2020-03-09 20:16:43 +00:00
cellc,rtl30vw |\
compex,wpj419 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
compex,wpj428 |\
edgecore,ecw5211 |\
edgecore,oap100 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
engenius,eap1300 |\
engenius,eap2200 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Luma Home WRTQ-329ACN Luma Home WRTQ-329ACN, also known as Luma WiFi System, is a dual-band wireless access point. Specification SoC: Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4018 RAM: 256 MB DDR3 Flash: 2 MB SPI NOR 128 MB SPI NAND WIFI: 2.4 GHz 2T2R integrated 5 GHz 2T2R integrated Ethernet: 2x 10/100/1000 Mbps QCA8075 USB: 1x 2.0 Bluetooth: 1x 4.0 CSR8510 A10, connected to USB bus LEDS: 16x multicolor LEDs ring, controlled by MSP430G2403 MCU Buttons: 1x GPIO controlled EEPROM: 16 Kbit, compatible with AT24C16 UART: row of 4 holes marked on PCB as J19, starting count from the side of J19 marking on PCB 1. GND, 2. RX, 3. TX, 4. 3.3V baud: 115200, parity: none, flow control: none The device supports OTA or USB flash drive updates, unfotunately they are signed. Until the signing key is known, the UART access is mandatory for installation. The difficult part is disassembling the casing, there are a lot of latches holding it together. Teardown Prepare three thin, but sturdy, prying tools. Place the device with back of it facing upwards. Start with the wall having a small notch. Insert first tool, until You'll feel resistance and keep it there. Repeat the procedure for neighbouring walls. With applying a pressure, one edge of the back cover should pop up. Now carefully slide one of the tools to free the rest of the latches. There's no need to solder pins to the UART holes, You can use hook clips, but wiring them outside the casing, will ease debuging and recovery if problems occur. Installation 1. Prepare TFTP server with OpenWrt initramfs image. 2. Connect to UART port (don't connect the voltage pin). 3. Connect to LAN port. 4. Power on the device, carefully observe the console output and when asked quickly enter the failsafe mode. 5. Invoke 'mount_root'. 6. After the overlayfs is mounted run: fw_setenv bootdelay 3 This will allow to access U-Boot shell. 7. Reboot the device and when prompted to stop autoboot, hit any key. 8. Adjust "ipaddr" and "serverip" addresses in U-Boot environment, use 'setenv' to do that, then run following commands: tftpboot 0x84000000 <openwrt_initramfs_image_name> bootm 0x84000000 and wait till OpenWrt boots. 9. In OpenWrt command line run following commands: fw_setenv openwrt "setenv mtdids nand1=spi_nand; setenv mtdparts mtdparts=spi_nand:-(ubi); ubi part ubi; ubi read 0x84000000 kernel; bootm 0x84000000" fw_setenv bootcmd "run openwrt" 10. Transfer OpenWrt sysupgrade image to /tmp directory and flash it with: ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N ubi_rootfs sysupgrade -v -n /tmp/<openwrt_sysupgrade_image_name> 11. After flashing, the access point will reboot to OpenWrt, then it's ready for configuration. Reverting to OEM firmware 1. Execute installation guide steps: 1, 2, 3, 7, 8. 2. In OpenWrt command line run following commands: ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N rootfs_data ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N rootfs ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N kernel ubirename /dev/ubi0 kernel1 kernel ubi_rootfs1 ubi_rootfs ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -S 34 -N kernel1 ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -S 320 -N ubi_rootfs1 ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -S 264 -N rootfs_data fw_setenv bootcmd bootipq 3. Reboot. Known issues The LEDs ring doesn't have any dedicated driver or application to control it, the only available option atm is to manipulate it with 'i2cset' command. The default action after applying power to device is spinning blue light. This light will stay active at all time. To disable it install 'i2c-tools' with opkg and run: i2cset -y 2 0x48 3 1 0 0 i The light will stay off until next cold boot. Additional information After completing 5. step from installation guide, one can disable asking for root password on OEM firmware by running: sed -e 's/root:x:/root::/' -i /etc/passwd This is useful for investigating the OEM firmware. One can look at the communication between the stock firmware and the vendor's cloud servers or as a way of making a backup of both flash chips. The root password seems to be constant across all sold devices. This is output of 'led_ctl' from OEM firmware to illustrate possibilities of LEDs ring: Usage: led_ctl [status | upgrade | force_upgrade | version] led_ctl solid COLOR <brightness> led_ctl single COLOR INDEX <brightness 0 - 15> led_ctl spinning COLOR <period 1 - 16 (lower = faster)> led_ctl fill COLOR <period 1 - 16 (lower = faster)> ( default is 5 ) led_ctl flashing COLOR <on dur 1 - 128> <off dur 1 - 128> (default is 34) ( default is 34 ) led_ctl pulsing COLOR COLOR: red, green, blue, yellow, purple, cyan, white Signed-off-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tomek_n@o2.pl> [squash "ipq-wifi: add BDFs for Luma Home WRTQ-329ACN" into commit, changed ubi volumes for easier integration, slightly reworded commit message, changed ubi volume layout to use standard names all around] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-08-30 11:28:10 +00:00
luma,wrtq-329acn|\
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
openmesh,a42 |\
openmesh,a62 |\
plasmacloud,pa1200 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Plasma Cloud PA2200 Device specifications: * QCA IPQ4019 * 256 MB of RAM * 32 MB of SPI NOR flash (w25q256) - 2x 15 MB available; but one of the 15 MB regions is the recovery image * 2T2R 2.4 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=20,variant=PlasmaCloud-PA2200 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 36-64) - QCA9888 hw2.0 (PCI) - requires special BDF in QCA9888/hw2.0/board-2.bin bus=pci,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=16,variant=PlasmaCloud-PA2200 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 100-165) - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=21,variant=PlasmaCloud-PA2200 * GPIO-LEDs for 2.4GHz, 5GHz-SoC and 5GHz-PCIE * GPIO-LEDs for power (orange) and status (blue) * 1x GPIO-button (reset) * TTL pins are on board (arrow points to VCC, then follows: GND, TX, RX) * 2x gigabit ethernet - phy@mdio3: + Label: Ethernet 1 + gmac0 (ethaddr) in original firmware + used as LAN interface - phy@mdio4: + Label: Ethernet 2 + gmac1 (eth1addr) in original firmware + 802.3at POE+ + used as WAN interface * 12V 2A DC Flashing instructions: The tool ap51-flash (https://github.com/ap51-flash/ap51-flash) should be used to transfer the factory image to the u-boot when the device boots up. Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <marek.lindner@kaiwoo.ai> [sven@narfation.org: prepare commit message, rebase, use all LEDs, switch to dualboot_datachk upgrade script, use eth1 as designated WAN interface] Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven@narfation.org>
2018-12-14 15:46:53 +00:00
plasmacloud,pa2200 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
qxwlan,e2600ac-c1 |\
ipq40xx: Add support for Unielec U4019 This commit adds support for the 32MB storage/512MB RAM version of the U4019 IPQ4019-based board from Unielec. The board has the following specifications: * Qualcomm IPQ4019 (running at 717MHz) * 512MB DDR3 RAM (optional 256MB/1GB) * 32MB SPI NOR (optional 8/16MB or NAND) * Five gigabit ports (Qualcomm QCA8075) * 1x 2.4 GHz wifi (QCA4019 hw1.0) * 1x 5 Ghz wifi (QCA4019 hw1.0) * 1x mini-PCIe slot (only USB-pins connected) * 1x SIM slot (mini-SIM) * 1x USB2.0 port * 1x button * 1x controllable LED * 1x micro SD-card reader Working: * Ethernet * Wifi * USB-port * mini-PCIe slot + SIM slot * Button * Sysupgrade Not working: * SD card slot (no upstream support) Installation instructions: In order to install OpenWRT on the U4019, you need to go via the initramfs-image. The installation steps are as follows: * Connect to board via serial (header exposed and clearly marked). * Interrupt bootloader by pressing a button. * Copy the initramfs-image to your tftp folder, call the file C0A80079.img. * Give the network interface connected to the U4019 the address 192.168.0.156/24. * Start your tftp-server and run tftpboot on the board. * Run bootm when the file has been transferred, to boot OpenWRT. * Once OpenWRT has booted, copy the sysupgrade-image to the device and run sysupgrade to install OpenWRT on the U4019. Notes: - Since IPQ4019 has been moved to 4.19, I have not added support for kernel 4.14. - There is a bug with hardware encryption on IPQ4019, causing poor performance with TCP and ipsec (see for example FS#2355). In order to improve performance, I have disabled hardware encryption in the DTS. We can enable hw. enc. once/if bug is fixed. - In order for Ethernet to work, the phy has to be reset by setting gpio 47 low/high. Adding support for phy reset via gpio required patching the mdio-driver, and the code added comes from the vendor driver. I do not know if patching the driver is an acceptable approach or not. v1->v2: * Do not use wildcard as identifier in the board.d-scripts (thanks Adrian Schmutzler). Signed-off-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
2019-10-20 09:33:13 +00:00
qxwlan,e2600ac-c2 |\
unielec,u4019-32m)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
;;
ipq40xx: add support for devolo Magic 2 WiFi next SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v71) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 32 MiB ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 (2 ports) PLC: MaxLinear G.hn 88LX5152 WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: RESET, WiFi, PLC Button LEDS: red/white home, white WiFi To modify a retail device to run OpenWRT firmware: 1) Setup a TFTP server on IP address 192.168.0.100 and copy the OpenWRT initramfs (initramfs-fit-uImage.itb) to the TFTP root as 'uploadfile'. 2) Power on the device while pressing the recessed reset button next to the Ethernet ports. This causes the bootloader to retrieve and start the initramfs. 3) Once the initramfs is booted, the device will come up with IP 192.168.1.1. You can then connect through SSH (allow some time for the first connection). 4) On the device shell, run 'fw_printenv' to show the U-boot environment. Backup this information since it contains device unique factory data. 5) Change the boot command to support booting OpenWRT: # fw_setenv bootcmd 'sf probe && sf read 0x84000000 0x180000 0x400000 && bootm' 6) Change directory to /tmp, download the sysupgrade (e.g. through wget) and install it with sysupgrade. The device will reboot into OpenWRT. Notice that there is currently no support for booting the G.hn chip. This requires userland software we lack the rights to share right now. Signed-off-by: Stefan Schake <stefan.schake@devolo.de>
2020-10-02 12:32:55 +00:00
devolo,magic-2-wifi-next)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_ascii APPSBLENV WiFiMacAddress0)
;;
ipq40xx: Add support for D-Link DAP-2610 Specifications ============== - SOC: IPQ4018 - RAM: DDR3 256MB - Flash: SPI NOR 16MB - WiFi: - 2.4GHz: IPQ4018, 2x2, front end SKY85303-11 - 5GHz: IPQ4018, 2x2, front end SKY85717-21 - Ethernet: 1x 10/100/1000Mbps, POE 802.3af - PHY: QCA8072 - UART: GND, blocked, 3.3V, RX, TX / 115200 8N1 - LED: 1x red / green - Button: 1x reset / factory default - U-Boot bootloader with tftp and "emergency web server" accessible using serial port. Installation ============ Flash factory image from D-Link web UI. Constraints in the D-Link web UI makes the factory image unnecessarily large. Flash again using sysupgrade from inside OpenWrt to reclaim some flash space. Return to stock D-Link firmware =============================== Partition layout is preserved, and it is possible to return to the stock firmware simply by downloading it from D-Link and writing it to the firmware partition. # mtd -r write dap2610-firmware.bin firmware Quirks ====== To be flashable from the D-Link http server, the firmware must be larger then 6MB, and the size in the firmware header must match the actual file size. Also, the boot loader verifies the checksum of the firmware before each boot, thus the jffs2 must be after the checksum covered part. This is solved in the factory image by having the rootfs at the very end of the image (without pad-rootfs). The sysupgrade image which does not have to be flashable from the D-Link web UI may be smaller, and the checksum in the firmware header only covers the kernel part of the image. Signed-off-by: Fredrik Olofsson <fredrik.olofsson@anyfinetworks.com> [added WRGG Variables to DEVICE_VARS, squashed spi pinconf/mux, added emd1's gmac0 config,fix dtc warnings] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-09-10 09:25:53 +00:00
dlink,dap-2610)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_ascii bdcfg wlanmac)
;;
engenius,emd1)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_ascii 0:APPSBLENV wlanaddr)
;;
engenius,emr3500)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_ascii 0:APPSBLENV ethaddr)
;;
ipq40xx: add support for EnGenius ENS620EXT Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4018 RAM: 256M FLASH: 32M SPI NOR W25Q256 ETH: QCA8075 WiFi2: IPQ4018 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4018 2T2R 2SS n/ac LED: - Power amber - LAN1(PoE) green - LAN2 green - Wi-Fi 2.4GHz green - Wi-Fi 5GHz green BTN: - WPS UART: 115200n8 3.3V J1 VCC(1) - GND(2) - TX(3) - RX(4) Added basic support to get the device up and running for a sysupgrade image only. There is currently no way back to factory firmware, so this is a one-way street to OpenWRT. Install from factory condition is convoluted, and may brick your device: 1) Enable SSH and disable the CLI on the factory device from the web user interface (Management->Advanced) 2) Reboot the device 3) Override the default, limited SSH shell: a) Get into the ssh shell: ssh admin@192.168.1.1 /bin/sh --login b) Change the dropbear script to disable the limited shell. At the empty command prompt type: sed -i '/login_ssh/s/^/#/g’ dropbear /etc/init.d/dropbear restart exit 4) ssh in to a (now-) normal OpenWRT SSH session 5) Flash your built image a) scp openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin admin@192.168.1.1:/tmp/ b) ssh admin@192.168.1.1 c) sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 6) After flash completes (it may say "Upgrade failed" followed by "Upgrade completed") and device reboots, log in to newly flashed system. Note you will now need to ssh as root rather than admin. Signed-off-by: Steve Glennon <s.glennon@cablelabs.com> [whitespace fixes, reordered partitions, removed rng node from 4.14, fixed 901-arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-02-27 22:48:23 +00:00
engenius,ens620ext)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(mtd_get_mac_ascii u-boot-env ethaddr) 2)
ipq40xx: add support for EnGenius ENS620EXT Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4018 RAM: 256M FLASH: 32M SPI NOR W25Q256 ETH: QCA8075 WiFi2: IPQ4018 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4018 2T2R 2SS n/ac LED: - Power amber - LAN1(PoE) green - LAN2 green - Wi-Fi 2.4GHz green - Wi-Fi 5GHz green BTN: - WPS UART: 115200n8 3.3V J1 VCC(1) - GND(2) - TX(3) - RX(4) Added basic support to get the device up and running for a sysupgrade image only. There is currently no way back to factory firmware, so this is a one-way street to OpenWRT. Install from factory condition is convoluted, and may brick your device: 1) Enable SSH and disable the CLI on the factory device from the web user interface (Management->Advanced) 2) Reboot the device 3) Override the default, limited SSH shell: a) Get into the ssh shell: ssh admin@192.168.1.1 /bin/sh --login b) Change the dropbear script to disable the limited shell. At the empty command prompt type: sed -i '/login_ssh/s/^/#/g’ dropbear /etc/init.d/dropbear restart exit 4) ssh in to a (now-) normal OpenWRT SSH session 5) Flash your built image a) scp openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin admin@192.168.1.1:/tmp/ b) ssh admin@192.168.1.1 c) sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 6) After flash completes (it may say "Upgrade failed" followed by "Upgrade completed") and device reboots, log in to newly flashed system. Note you will now need to ssh as root rather than admin. Signed-off-by: Steve Glennon <s.glennon@cablelabs.com> [whitespace fixes, reordered partitions, removed rng node from 4.14, fixed 901-arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-02-27 22:48:23 +00:00
;;
linksys,ea8300 |\
linksys,mr8300)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add "$(cat /sys/class/net/eth0/address)" 2)
ipq40xx: Add support for Linksys EA8300 (Dallas) The Linksys EA8300 is based on QCA4019 and QCA9888 and provides three, independent radios. NAND provides two, alternate kernel/firmware images with fail-over provided by the OEM U-Boot. Installation: "Factory" images may be installed directly through the OEM GUI. Hardware Highlights: * IPQ4019 at 717 MHz (4 CPUs) * 256 MB NAND (Winbond W29N02GV, 8-bit parallel) * 256 MB RAM * Three, fully-functional radios; `iw phy` reports (FCC/US, -CT): * 2.4 GHz radio at 30 dBm * 5 GHz radio on ch. 36-64 at 23 dBm * 5 GHz radio on ch. 100-144 at 23 dBm (DFS), 149-165 at 30 dBm #{ managed } <= 16, #{ AP, mesh point } <= 16, #{ IBSS } <= 1 * All two-stream, MCS 0-9 * 4x GigE LAN, 1x GigE Internet Ethernet jacks with port lights * USB3, single port on rear with LED * WPS and reset buttons * Four status lights on top * Serial pads internal (unpopulated) "Linksys Dallas WiFi AP router based on Qualcomm AP DK07.1-c1" Implementation Notes: The OEM flash layout is preserved at this time with 3 MB kernel and ~69 MB UBIFS for each firmware version. The sysdiag (1 MB) and syscfg (56 MB) partitions are untouched, available as read-only. Serial Connectivity: Serial connectivity is *not* required to flash. Serial may be accessed by opening the device and connecting a 3.3-V adapter using 115200, 8n1. U-Boot access is good, including the ability to load images over TFTP and either run or flash them. Looking at the top of the board, from the front of the unit, J3 can be found on the right edge of the board, near the rear | J3 | |-| | |O| | (3.3V seen, open-circuit) |O| | TXD |O| | RXD |O| | |O| | GND |-| | | Unimplemented: * serial1 "ttyQHS0" (serial0 works as console) * Bluetooth; Qualcomm CSR8811 (potentially conected to serial1) Other Notes: https://wikidevi.com/wiki/Linksys_EA8300 states FCC docs also cover the Linksys EA8250. According to the RF Test Report BT BR+EDR, "All models are identical except for the EA8300 supports 256QAM and the EA8250 disable 256QAM." Signed-off-by: Jeff Kletsky <git-commits@allycomm.com>
2019-04-10 15:34:28 +00:00
;;
ipq40xx: add Cisco Meraki MR33 Support This patch adds support for Cisco Meraki MR33 hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4029 Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB DDR3L-1600 @ 627 MHz Micron MT41K128M16JT-125IT NAND: 128 MiB SLC NAND Spansion S34ML01G200TFV00 (106 MiB usable) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros AR8035 Gigabit PHY (1 x LAN/WAN) + PoE WLAN1: QCA9887 (168c:0050) PCIe 1x1:1 802.11abgn ac Dualband VHT80 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 VHT80 LEDS: 1 x Programmable RGB+White Status LED (driven by Ti LP5562 on i2c-1) 1 x Orange LED Fault Indicator (shared with LP5562) 2 x LAN Activity / Speed LEDs (On the RJ45 Port) BUTTON: one Reset button MISC: Bluetooth LE Ti cc2650 PG2.3 4x4mm - BL_CONFIG at 0x0001FFD8 AT24C64 8KiB EEPROM Kensington Lock Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has a populated 1x4 0.1" header with half-height/low profile pins. The pinout is: VCC (little white arrow), RX, TX, GND. Flashing needs a serial adaptor, as well as patched ubootwrite utility (needs Little-Endian support). And a modified u-boot (enabled Ethernet). Meraki's original u-boot source can be found in: <https://github.com/riptidewave93/meraki-uboot/tree/mr33-20170427> Add images to do an installation via bootloader: 0. open up the MR33 and connect the serial console. 1. start the 2nd stage bootloader transfer from client pc: # ubootwrite.py --write=mr33-uboot.bin (The ubootwrite tool will interrupt the boot-process and hence it needs to listen for cues. If the connection is bad (due to the low-profile pins), the tool can fail multiple times and in weird ways. If you are not sure, just use a terminal program and see what the device is doing there. 2. power on the MR33 (with ethernet + serial cables attached) Warning: Make sure you do this in a private LAN that has no connection to the internet. - let it upload the u-boot this can take 250-300 seconds - 3. use a tftp client (in binary mode!) on your PC to upload the sysupgrade.bin (the u-boot is listening on 192.168.1.1) # tftp 192.168.1.1 binary put openwrt-ipq40xx-meraki_mr33-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 4. wait for it to reboot 5. connect to your MR33 via ssh on 192.168.1.1 For more detailed instructions, please take a look at the: "Flashing Instructions for the MR33" PDF. This can be found on the wiki: <https://openwrt.org/toh/meraki/mr33> (A link to the mr33-uboot.bin + the modified ubootwrite is also there) Thanks to Jerome C. for sending an MR33 to Chris. Signed-off-by: Chris Blake <chrisrblake93@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me> Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-10 09:59:18 +00:00
meraki,mr33)
caldata_extract_ubi "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
caldata_valid "202f" || caldata_extract "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(get_mac_binary "/sys/bus/i2c/devices/0-0050/eeprom" 0x66) 2)
ipq40xx: add Cisco Meraki MR33 Support This patch adds support for Cisco Meraki MR33 hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4029 Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB DDR3L-1600 @ 627 MHz Micron MT41K128M16JT-125IT NAND: 128 MiB SLC NAND Spansion S34ML01G200TFV00 (106 MiB usable) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros AR8035 Gigabit PHY (1 x LAN/WAN) + PoE WLAN1: QCA9887 (168c:0050) PCIe 1x1:1 802.11abgn ac Dualband VHT80 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 VHT80 LEDS: 1 x Programmable RGB+White Status LED (driven by Ti LP5562 on i2c-1) 1 x Orange LED Fault Indicator (shared with LP5562) 2 x LAN Activity / Speed LEDs (On the RJ45 Port) BUTTON: one Reset button MISC: Bluetooth LE Ti cc2650 PG2.3 4x4mm - BL_CONFIG at 0x0001FFD8 AT24C64 8KiB EEPROM Kensington Lock Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has a populated 1x4 0.1" header with half-height/low profile pins. The pinout is: VCC (little white arrow), RX, TX, GND. Flashing needs a serial adaptor, as well as patched ubootwrite utility (needs Little-Endian support). And a modified u-boot (enabled Ethernet). Meraki's original u-boot source can be found in: <https://github.com/riptidewave93/meraki-uboot/tree/mr33-20170427> Add images to do an installation via bootloader: 0. open up the MR33 and connect the serial console. 1. start the 2nd stage bootloader transfer from client pc: # ubootwrite.py --write=mr33-uboot.bin (The ubootwrite tool will interrupt the boot-process and hence it needs to listen for cues. If the connection is bad (due to the low-profile pins), the tool can fail multiple times and in weird ways. If you are not sure, just use a terminal program and see what the device is doing there. 2. power on the MR33 (with ethernet + serial cables attached) Warning: Make sure you do this in a private LAN that has no connection to the internet. - let it upload the u-boot this can take 250-300 seconds - 3. use a tftp client (in binary mode!) on your PC to upload the sysupgrade.bin (the u-boot is listening on 192.168.1.1) # tftp 192.168.1.1 binary put openwrt-ipq40xx-meraki_mr33-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 4. wait for it to reboot 5. connect to your MR33 via ssh on 192.168.1.1 For more detailed instructions, please take a look at the: "Flashing Instructions for the MR33" PDF. This can be found on the wiki: <https://openwrt.org/toh/meraki/mr33> (A link to the mr33-uboot.bin + the modified ubootwrite is also there) Thanks to Jerome C. for sending an MR33 to Chris. Signed-off-by: Chris Blake <chrisrblake93@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me> Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-10 09:59:18 +00:00
;;
mikrotik,hap-ac2 |\
mikrotik,hap-ac3)
wlan_data="/sys/firmware/mikrotik/hard_config/wlan_data"
( [ -f "$wlan_data" ] && caldata_sysfsload_from_file "$wlan_data" 0x0 0x2f20 ) || \
( [ -d "$wlan_data" ] && caldata_sysfsload_from_file "$wlan_data/data_0" 0x0 0x2f20 )
;;
ipq40xx: add support for Netgear SRR60/SRS60 and RBR50/RBS50 The Netgear SRS60 and SRR60 (sold together as SRK60) are two almost identical AC3000 routers. The SRR60 has one port labeled as wan while the SRS60 not. The RBR50 and RBS50 (sold together as RBK50) have a different external shape but they have an USB 2.0 port on the back. This patch has been tested only on SRS60 and RBR50, but should work on SRR60 and RBS50. Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 (717 MHz, 4 cores 4 threads) RAM: 512MB DDR3 FLASH: 4GB EMMC ETH: - 3x 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet - 1x 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet (WAN) WIFI: - 2.4GHz: 1x IPQ4019 (2x2:2) - 5GHz: 1x IPQ4019 (2x2:2) - 5GHz: 1x QCA9984 (4x4:4) - 6 internal antennas BTN: - 1x Reset button - 1x Sync button - 1x ON/OFF button LEDS: - 8 leds controlled by TLC59208F (they can be switched on/off independendently but the color can by changed by GPIOs) - 1x Red led (Power) - 1x Green led (Power) UART: - 115200-8-N-1 Everything works correctly. Installation ------------ These routers have a dual partition system. However this firmware works only on boot partition 1 and the OEM web interface will always flash on the partition currently not booted. The following steps will use the SRS60 firmware, but you have to chose the right firmware for your router. There are 2 ways to install Openwrt the first time: 1) Using NMRPflash 1. Download nmrpflash (https://github.com/jclehner/nmrpflash) 2. Put the openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_srs60-squashfs-factory.img file in the same folder of the nmrpflash executable 3. Connect your pc to the router using the port near the power button. 4. Run "nmrpflash -i XXX -f openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_srs60-squashfs-factory.img". Replace XXX with your network interface (can be identified by running "nmrpflash -L") 5. Power on the router and wait for the flash to complete. After about a minute the router should boot directly to Openwrt. If nothing happens try to reboot the router. If you have problems flashing try to set "10.164.183.253" as your computer IP address 2) Without NMRPflash The OEM web interface will always flash on the partition currently not booted, so to flash OpenWrt for the first time you have to switch to boot partition 2 and then flash the factory image directly from the OEM web interface. To switch on partition 2 you have to enable telnet first: 1. Go to http://192.168.1.250/debug.htm and check "Enable Telnet". 2. Connect through telent ("telnet 192.168.1.250") and login using admin/password. To read the current boot_part: artmtd -r boot_part To write the new boot_part: artmtd -w boot_part 02 Then reboot the router and then check again the current booted partition Now that you are on boot partition 2 you can flash the factory Openwrt image directly from the OEM web interface. Restore OEM Firmware -------------------- 1. Download the stock firmware from official netgear support. 2. Follow the nmrpflash procedure like above, using the official Netgear firmware (for example SRS60-V2.2.1.210.img) nmrpflash -i XXX -f SRS60-V2.2.1.210.img Notes ----- 1) You can check and edit the boot partition in the Uboot shell using the UART connection. "boot_partition_show" shows the current boot partition "boot_partition_set 1" sets the current boot partition to 1 2) Router mac addresses: LAN XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69 WAN XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6a WIFI 2G XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69 WIFI 5G XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6b WIFI 5G (2nd) XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6c LABEL XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69 Signed-off-by: Davide Fioravanti <pantanastyle@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com> [added 5.10 changes for 901-arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch, moved sysupgrade mmc.sh to here and renamed it, various dtsi changes] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-09-02 00:10:16 +00:00
netgear,rbr50|\
netgear,rbs50|\
netgear,srr60|\
netgear,srs60)
caldata_extract_mmc "0:ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mmc_get_mac_binary ARTMTD 0x0)
;;
ipq40xx: add netgear wac510 support This adds support for the Netgear WAC510 Insight Managed Smart Cloud Wireless Access Point, an indoor dual-band, dual-radio 802.11ac business-class wireless AP with integrated omnidirectional antennae and two 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet ports. For more information see: <https://www.netgear.com/business/wifi/access-points/wac510> Specifications: SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 (DAKOTA) ARM Quad-Core RAM: 256 MiB Flash1: 2 MiB Winbond W25Q16JV SPI-NOR Flash2: 128 MiB Winbond W25N01GVZEIG SPI-NAND Ethernet: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC, QCA8072 PHY), 2x 1000/100/10 port, WAN port active IEEE 802.3af/at PoE in Wireless1: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC) 802.11b/g/n 2x2:2, 3 dBi antennae Wireless2: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC) 802.11a/n/ac 2x2:2, 4 dBi antennae Input: (Optional) Barrel 12 V 2.5 A Power, Reset button SW1 LEDs: Power, Insight, WAN PoE, LAN, 2.4G WLAN, 5G WLAN Serial: Header J2 1 - 3.3 Volt (Do NOT connect!) 2 - TX 3 - RX 4 - Ground WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3.3 volt level converter! The Serial settings are 115200-8-N-1. Installation via Stock Web Interface: BTW: The default factory console/web interface login user/password are admin/password. In the web interface navigating to Management - Maintenance - Upgrade - 'Firmware Upgrade' will show you what is currently installed e.g.: Manage Firmware Current Firmware Version: V5.0.10.2 Backup Firmware Version: V1.2.5.11 Under 'Upgrade Options' choose Local (alternatively SFTP would be available) then click/select 'Browse File' on the right side, choose openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_wac510-squashfs-nand-factory.tar and hit the Upgrade button below. After a minute or two your browser should indicate completion printing 'Firmware update complete.' and 'Rebooting AP...'. Note that OpenWrt will use the WAN PoE port as actual WAN port defaulting to DHCP client but NOT allowing LuCI access, use LAN port defaulting to 192.168.1.1/24 to access LuCI. Installation via TFTP Requiring Serial U-Boot Access: Connect to the device's serial port and hit any key to stop autoboot. Upload and boot the initramfs based OpenWrt image as follows: (IPQ40xx) # setenv serverip 192.168.1.1 (IPQ40xx) # setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.2 (IPQ40xx) # tftpboot openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_wac510-initramfs-fit-uImage.itb (IPQ40xx) # bootm Note: This only runs OpenWrt from RAM and has not installed anything to flash as of yet. One may permanently install OpenWrt as follows: Check the MTD device number of the active partition: root@OpenWrt:/# dmesg | grep 'set to be root filesystem' [ 1.010084] mtd: device 9 (rootfs) set to be root filesystem Upload the factory image ending with .ubi to /tmp (e.g. using scp or tftp). Then flash the image as follows (substituting the 9 in mtd9 below with whatever number reported above): root@OpenWrt:/# ubiformat /dev/mtd9 -f /tmp/openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_wac510-squashfs-nand-factory.ubi And reboot. Dual Image Configuration: The default U-Boot boot command bootipq uses the U-Boot environment variables primary/secondary to decide which image to boot. E.g. primary=0, secondary=3800000 uses rootfs while primary=3800000, secondary=0 uses rootfs_1. Switching their values changes the active partition. E.g. from within U-Boot: (IPQ40xx) # setenv primary 0 (IPQ40xx) # setenv secondary 3800000 (IPQ40xx) # saveenv Or from a OpenWrt userspace serial/SSH console: fw_setenv primary 0 fw_setenv secondary 3800000 Note that if you install two copies of OpenWrt then each will have its independent configuration not like when switching partitions on the stock firmware. BTW: The kernel log shows which boot partition is active: [ 2.439050] ubi0: attached mtd9 (name "rootfs", size 56 MiB) vs. [ 2.978785] ubi0: attached mtd10 (name "rootfs_1", size 56 MiB) Note: After 3 failed boot attempts it automatically switches partition. Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Marcel Ziswiler <marcel@ziswiler.com> [squashed netgear-tar commit into main and rename netgear-tar for now, until it is made generic.] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-11-25 13:23:58 +00:00
netgear,wac510)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_binary "0:MANUDATA" 0x6)
;;
ipq40xx: Add support for Teltonika RUTX10 This patch adds support for the Teltonika RUTX10. This device is an industrial DIN-rail router with 4 ethernet ports, 2.4G/5G dualband WiFi, Bluetooth, a USB 2.0 port and two GPIOs. The RUTX series devices are very similiar so common parts of the DTS are kept in a DTSI file. They are based on the QCA AP-DK01.1-C1 dev board. See https://teltonika-networks.com/product/rutx10 for more info. Hardware: SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 RAM: 256MB DDR3 SPI Flash 1: XTX XT25F128B (16MB, NOR) SPI Flash 2: XTX XT26G02AWS (256MB, NAND) Ethernet: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC, QCA8075), 4x 10/100/1000 ports WiFi 1: Qualcomm QCA4019 IEEE 802.11b/g/n Wifi 2: Qualcomm QCA4019 IEEE 802.11a/n/ac USB Hub: Genesys Logic GL852GT Bluetooth: Qualcomm CSR8510 (A10U) LED/GPIO controller: STM32F030 with custom firmware Buttons: Reset button Leds: Power (green, cannot be controlled) WiFi 2.4G activity (green) WiFi 5G activity (green) MACs Details verified with the stock firmware: eth0: Partition 0:CONFIG Offset: 0x0 eth1: = eth0 + 1 radio0 (2.4 GHz): = eth0 + 2 radio1 (5.0 GHz): = eth0 + 3 Label MAC address is from eth0. The LED/GPIO controller needs a separate kernel driver to function. The driver was extracted from the Teltonika GPL sources and can be found at following feed: https://github.com/0xFelix/teltonika-rutx-openwrt USB detection of the bluetooth interface is sometimes a bit flaky. When not detected power cycle the device. When the bluetooth interface was detected properly it can be used with bluez / bluetoothctl. Flash instructions via stock web interface (sysupgrade based): 1. Set PC to fixed ip address 192.168.1.100 2. Push reset button and power on the device 3. Open u-boot HTTP recovery at http://192.168.1.1 4. Upload latest stock firmware and wait until the device is rebooted 5. Open stock web interface at http://192.168.1.1 6. Set some password so the web interface is happy 7. Go to firmware upgrade settings 8. Choose openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-teltonika_rutx10-squashfs-nand-factory.ubi 9. Set 'Keep settings' to off 10. Click update, when warned that it is not a signed image proceed Return to stock firmware: 1. Set PC to fixed ip address 192.168.1.100 2. Push reset button and power on the device 3. Open u-boot HTTP recovery at http://192.168.1.1 4. Upload latest stock firmware and wait until the device is rebooted Note: The DTS expects OpenWrt to be running from the second rootfs partition. u-boot on these devices hot-patches the DTS so running from the first rootfs partition should also be possible. If you want to be save follow the instructions above. u-boot HTTP recovery restores the device so that when flashing OpenWrt from stock firmware it is flashed to the second rootfs partition and the DTS matches. Signed-off-by: Felix Matouschek <felix@matouschek.org>
2021-07-15 19:48:11 +00:00
teltonika,rutx10)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(mtd_get_mac_binary "0:CONFIG" 0x0) 2)
;;
ipq40xx: add support for the ZyXEL NBG6617 This patch adds support for ZyXEL NBG6617 Hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB DDR3L-1600/1866 Nanya NT5CC128M16IP-DI @ 537 MHz NOR: 32 MiB Macronix MX25L25635F ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 Gigabit Switch (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) USB: 1 x 3.0 (via Synopsys DesignWare DWC3 controller in the SoC) WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: RESET Button, WIFI/Rfkill Togglebutton, WPS Button LEDS: Power, WAN, LAN 1-4, WLAN 2.4GHz, WLAN 5GHz, USB, WPS Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3.3v level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The 1x4 .1" header comes pre-soldered. Pinout: 1. 3v3 (Label printed on the PCB), 2. RX, 3. GND, 4. TX first install / debricking / restore stock: 0. Have a PC running a tftp-server @ 192.168.1.99/24 1. connect the PC to any LAN-Ports 2. put the openwrt...-factory.bin (or V1.00(ABCT.X).bin for stock) file into the tftp-server root directory and rename it to just "ras.bin". 3. power-cycle the router and hold down the the WPS button (for 30sek) 4. Wait (for a long time - the serial console provides some progress reports. The u-boot says it best: "Please be patient". 5. Once the power LED starts to flashes slowly and the USB + WPS LEDs flashes fast at the same time. You have to reboot the device and it should then come right up. Installation via Web-UI: 0. Connect a PC to the powered-on router. It will assign your PC a IP-address via DHCP 1. Access the Web-UI at 192.168.1.1 (Default Passwort: 1234) 2. Go to the "Expert Mode" 3. Under "Maintenance", select "Firmware-Upgrade" 4. Upload the OpenWRT factory image 5. Wait for the Device to finish. It will reboot into OpenWRT without any additional actions needed. To open the ZyXEL NBG6617: 0. remove the four rubber feet glued on the backside 1. remove the four philips screws and pry open the top cover (by applying force between the plastic top housing from the backside/lan-port side) Access the real u-boot shell: ZyXEL uses a proprietary loader/shell on top of u-boot: "ZyXEL zloader v2.02" When the device is starting up, the user can enter the the loader shell by simply pressing a key within the 3 seconds once the following string appears on the serial console: | Hit any key to stop autoboot: 3 The user is then dropped to a locked shell. |NBG6617> HELP |ATEN x[,y] set BootExtension Debug Flag (y=password) |ATSE x show the seed of password generator |ATSH dump manufacturer related data in ROM |ATRT [x,y,z,u] RAM read/write test (x=level, y=start addr, z=end addr, u=iterations) |ATGO boot up whole system |ATUR x upgrade RAS image (filename) |NBG6617> In order to escape/unlock a password challenge has to be passed. Note: the value is dynamic! you have to calculate your own! First use ATSE $MODELNAME (MODELNAME is the hostname in u-boot env) to get the challange value/seed. |NBG6617> ATSE NBG6617 |012345678901 This seed/value can be converted to the password with the help of this bash script (Thanks to http://www.adslayuda.com/Zyxel650-9.html authors): - tool.sh - ror32() { echo $(( ($1 >> $2) | (($1 << (32 - $2) & (2**32-1)) ) )) } v="0x$1" a="0x${v:2:6}" b=$(( $a + 0x10F0A563)) c=$(( 0x${v:12:14} & 7 )) p=$(( $(ror32 $b $c) ^ $a )) printf "ATEN 1,%X\n" $p - end of tool.sh - |# bash ./tool.sh 012345678901 | |ATEN 1,879C711 copy and paste the result into the shell to unlock zloader. |NBG6617> ATEN 1,0046B0017430 If the entered code was correct the shell will change to use the ATGU command to enter the real u-boot shell. |NBG6617> ATGU |NBG6617# Co-authored-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@googlemail.com> Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2018-06-21 12:24:59 +00:00
zyxel,nbg6617 |\
ipq40xx: add support for ZyXEL WRE6606 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 (DAKOTA) ARM Quad-Core RAM: 128 MB Nanya NT5CC64M16GP-DI FLASH: 16 MiB Macronix MX25L12845EMI-12G ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n 2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 INPUT: WPS, Mode-toggle-switch LED: Power, WLAN 2.4GHz, WLAN 5GHz, LAN, WPS (LAN not controllable by software) (WLAN each green / red) SERIAL: Header next to eth-phy. VCC, TX, GND, RX (Square hole is VCC) The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. Tested and working: - Ethernet (Correct MAC-address) - 2.4 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - 5 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - Factory installation from tftp - OpenWRT sysupgrade - LEDs - WPS Button Not Working: - Mode-toggle-switch Install via TFTP: Connect to the devices serial. Hit Enter-Key in bootloader to stop autobooting. Command `tftpboot` will pull an initramfs image named `C0A86302.img` from a tftp server at `192.168.99.08/24`. After successfull transfer, boot the image with `bootm`. To persistently write the firmware, flash an openwrt sysupgrade image from inside the initramfs, for example transfer via `scp <sysupgrade> root@192.168.1.1:/tmp` and flash on the device with `sysupgrade -n /tmp/<sysupgrade>`. append-cmdline patch taken from chunkeeys work on the NBG6617. Signed-off-by: Magnus Frühling <skorpy@frankfurt.ccc.de> Co-authored-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> Co-authored-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@googlemail.com>
2018-06-11 21:10:43 +00:00
zyxel,wre6606)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x1000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(cat /sys/class/net/eth0/address) -2)
ipq40xx: add support for ZyXEL WRE6606 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 (DAKOTA) ARM Quad-Core RAM: 128 MB Nanya NT5CC64M16GP-DI FLASH: 16 MiB Macronix MX25L12845EMI-12G ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n 2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 INPUT: WPS, Mode-toggle-switch LED: Power, WLAN 2.4GHz, WLAN 5GHz, LAN, WPS (LAN not controllable by software) (WLAN each green / red) SERIAL: Header next to eth-phy. VCC, TX, GND, RX (Square hole is VCC) The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. Tested and working: - Ethernet (Correct MAC-address) - 2.4 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - 5 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - Factory installation from tftp - OpenWRT sysupgrade - LEDs - WPS Button Not Working: - Mode-toggle-switch Install via TFTP: Connect to the devices serial. Hit Enter-Key in bootloader to stop autobooting. Command `tftpboot` will pull an initramfs image named `C0A86302.img` from a tftp server at `192.168.99.08/24`. After successfull transfer, boot the image with `bootm`. To persistently write the firmware, flash an openwrt sysupgrade image from inside the initramfs, for example transfer via `scp <sysupgrade> root@192.168.1.1:/tmp` and flash on the device with `sysupgrade -n /tmp/<sysupgrade>`. append-cmdline patch taken from chunkeeys work on the NBG6617. Signed-off-by: Magnus Frühling <skorpy@frankfurt.ccc.de> Co-authored-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> Co-authored-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@googlemail.com>
2018-06-11 21:10:43 +00:00
;;
esac
;;
"ath10k/pre-cal-ahb-a800000.wifi.bin")
case "$board" in
8dev,habanero-dvk |\
8dev,jalapeno |\
alfa-network,ap120c-ac |\
ipq40xx: add support for Crisis Innovation Lab MeshPoint.One MeshPoint.One is Wi-Fi hotspot and smart IoT gateway (based upon Jalapeno module from 8Devices). MeshPoint.One (https://meshpointone.com) is a unique Wi-Fi hotspot and smart city gateway that can be installed and powered from street lighting (even solar power in the future). MeshPoint provides up to 27 hours of interrupted Wi-Fi and IoT services from internal battery even when external power is not available. MeshPoint.One can be used for disaster relief efforts in order to provide instant Wi-Fi coverage that can be easily expanded by just adding more devices that create wide area mesh network. MeshPoint.One devices have standard Luci UI for management. Features: - 1x 1Gpbs WAN - 1x 1Gbps LAN - POE input (eth0) - POE output (eth1) - Sensor for temperature, humidity and pressure (Bosch BME280) - current, voltage and power measurement via TI INA230 - Hardware real time clock - optional power via Li-Ion battery - micro USB port with USB to serial chip for easy OpenWrt terminal access - I2C header for connecting additional sensors Installation: ------------- Simply flash the sysupgrade image from stock firmware. Or use the built in Web recovery into bootloader: Hold Reset button for 5 to 20 seconds or use UART and httpd command. Web UI will appear on 192.168.2.100 by default. For web recovery use the factory.ubi image. Signed-off-by: Damir Samardzic <damir.samardzic@sartura.hr> Signed-off-by: Damir Franusic <damir.franusic@sartura.hr> Signed-off-by: Valent Turkovic <valent@meshpoint.me> Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert@meshpoint.me> [commit description long line wrap, usb->USB] Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
2019-11-25 14:25:00 +00:00
cilab,meshpoint-one |\
glinet,gl-ap1300 |\
glinet,gl-b1300 |\
ipq40xx: add support for GL.iNet GL-B2200 This patch adds supports for the GL-B2200 router. Specifications: - SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 ARM Quad-Core - RAM: 512 MiB - Flash: 16 MiB NOR - SPI0 - EMMC: 8GB EMMC - ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 - WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n 2x2 - WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 - WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9886 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 - INPUT: Reset, WPS - LED: Power, Internet - UART1: On board pin header near to LED (3.3V, TX, RX, GND), 3.3V without pin - 115200 8N1 - UART2: On board with BLE module - SPI1: On board socket for Zigbee module Update firmware instructions: Please update the firmware via U-Boot web UI (by default at 192.168.1.1, following instructions found at https://docs.gl-inet.com/en/3/troubleshooting/debrick/). Normal sysupgrade, either via CLI or LuCI, is not possible from stock firmware. Please do use the *gl-b2200-squashfs-emmc.img file, gunzipping the produced *gl-b2200-squashfs-emmc.img.gz one first. What's working: - WiFi 2G, 5G - WPA2/WPA3 Not tested: - Bluetooth LE/Zigbee Credits goes to the original authors of this patch. V1->V2: - updates *arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch correctly (sorry, my mistake) - add uboot-envtools support V2->V3: - Li Zhang updated official patch to fix wrong MAC address on wlan0 (PCI) interface V3->V4: - wire up sysupgrade Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <li.zhang@gl-inet.com> [fix tab and trailing space, document what's working and what's not] Signed-off-by: TruongSinh Tran-Nguyen <i@truongsinh.pro> [rebase on top of master, address remaining comments] Signed-off-by: Enrico Mioso <mrkiko.rs@gmail.com> [remove redundant check in platform.sh] Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
2021-12-01 15:18:17 +00:00
glinet,gl-b2200 |\
glinet,gl-s1300 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Linksys EA6350v3 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 RAM: 256 MiB Samsung K4B2G1646F-BYK0 FLASH1: MX25L1605D 2 MB FLASH2: Winbond W25N01GV 128Mb ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN0: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n 2x2 WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 INPUT: WPS, Reset LED: Status - Green SERIAL: Header at J19, Beneath DC Power Jack 1-VCC ; 2-TX ; 3-RX; 4-GND; Serial 115200-8-N-1. Tested and working: - USB (requires extra packages) - LAN Ethernet (Correct MAC-address) - WAN Ethernet (Correct MAC-address) - 2.4 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - 5 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - Factory installation from Web UI - OpenWRT sysupgrade - LED - Reset Button Need Testing: - WPS button Install via Web UI: - Attach to a LAN port on the router. - Connect to the Linksys Smart WiFi Page (default 192.168.1.1) and login - Select the connectivity tab on the left - In the manual update box on the right - Select browse, and browse to openwrt-ipq40xx-linksys_ea6350v3-squashfs-factory.bin - Click update. - Read and accept the warning - The router LED will start blinking. When the router LED goes solid, you can now navigate to 192.168.1.1 to your new OpenWrt installation. Sysupgrade: - Flash the sysupgrade image as usual. Please: try to do a reset everytime you can (doing it with LuCI is easy and can be done in the same step). Recovery (Automatic): - If the device fails to boot after install or upgrade, whilst the unit is turned on: 1 - Wait 15 seconds 2 - Switch Off and Wait 10 seconds 3 - Switch on 4 - Repeat steps 1 to 3, 3 times then go to 5. 5 - U-boot will have now erased the failed update and switched back to the last working firmware - you should be able to access your router on LAN. Recovery (Manual): - The steps for manual recovery are the same as the generic u-boot tftp client method. Back To Stock: - Use the generic recovery using the tftp client method to flash the "civic.img". Also you can strip-and-pad the original image and use the generic "mtd" method by flashing over the "kernel" partition. * Just be careful to flash in the partition that the device is currently booted. Signed-off-by: Ryan Pannell <ryan@osukl.com> Signed-off-by: Oever González <notengobattery@gmail.com> [minor edits, removed second compatible of nand, added dtb entry to 4.19] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-24 03:20:55 +00:00
linksys,ea6350v3 |\
ipq40xx: add support for MobiPromo CM520-79F MobiPromo CM520-79F is an AC1300 dual band router based on IPQ4019 Specification: SoC/Wireless: QCA IPQ4019 RAM: 512MiB Flash: 128MiB SLC NAND Ethernet PHY: QCA8075 Ethernet ports: 1x WAN, 2x LAN LEDs: 7 LEDs 2 (USB, CAN) are GPIO other 5 (2.4G, 5G, LAN1, LAN2, WAN) are connected to a shift register Button: Reset Flash instruction: Disassemble the router, connect UART pins like this: GND TX RX [x x . . x .] [. . . . . .] (QCA8075 and IPQ4019 below) Baud-rate: 115200 Set up TFTP server: IP 192.168.1.188/24 Power on the router and interrupt the booting with UART console env backup (in case you want to go back to stock and need it there): printenv (Copy the output to somewhere save) Set bootenv: setenv set_ubi 'set mtdids nand0=nand0; set mtdparts mtdparts=nand0:0x7480000@0xb80000(fs); ubi part fs' setenv bootkernel 'ubi read 0x84000000 kernel; bootm 0x84000000#config@1' setenv cm520_boot 'run set_ubi; run bootkernel' setenv bootcmd 'run cm520_boot' setenv bootargs saveenv Boot initramfs from TFTP: tftpboot openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-mobipromo_cm520-79f-initramfs-fit-zImage.itb bootm After initramfs image is booted, backup rootfs partition in case of reverting to stock image cat /dev/mtd12 > /tmp/mtd12.bin Then fetch it via SCP Upload nand-factory.ubi to /tmp via SCP, then run mtd erase rootfs mtd write /tmp/*nand-factory.ubi rootfs reboot To revert to stock image, restore default bootenv in uboot UART console setenv bootcmd 'bootipq' printenv use the saved dump you did back when you installed OpenWrt to verify that there are no other differences from back in the day. saveenv upload the backed up mtd12.bin and run tftpboot mtd12.bin nand erase 0xb80000 0x7480000 nand write 0x84000000 0xb80000 0x7480000 The BOOTCONFIG may have been configured to boot from alternate partition (rootfs_1) instead In case of this, set it back to rootfs: cd /tmp cat /dev/mtd7 > mtd7.bin echo -ne '\x0b' | dd of=mtd7.bin conv=notrunc bs=1 count=1 seek=4 for i in 28 48 68 108; do dd if=/dev/zero of=mtd7.bin conv=notrunc bs=1 count=1 seek=$i done mtd write mtd7.bin BOOTCONFIG mtd write mtd7.bin BOOTCONFIG1 Signed-off-by: DENG Qingfang <dengqf6@mail2.sysu.edu.cn> [renamed volume to ubi to support autoboot, as per David Lam's test in PR#2432] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-01-14 14:22:59 +00:00
mobipromo,cm520-79f |\
ipq40xx: add support for P&W R619AC (aka G-DOCK 2.0) P&W R619AC is a IPQ4019 Dual-Band AC1200 router. It is made by P&W (p2w-tech.com) known as P&W R619AC but marketed and sold more popularly as G-DOCK 2.0. Specification: * SOC: Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4019 (717 MHz) * RAM: 512 MiB * Flash: 16 MiB (NOR) + 128 MiB (NAND) * Ethernet: 5 x 10/100/1000 (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) * Wireless: - 2.4 GHz b/g/n Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4019 - 5 GHz a/n/ac Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4019 * USB: 1 x USB 3.0 * LED: 4 x LAN, 1 x WAN, 2 x WiFi, 1 x Power (All Blue LED) * Input: 1 x reset * 1 x MicroSD card slot * Serial console: 115200bps, pinheader J2 on PCB * Power: DC 12V 2A * 1 x Unpopulated mPCIe Slot (see below how to connect it) * 1 x Unpopulated Sim Card Slot Installation: 1. Access to tty console via UART serial 2. Enter failsafe mode and mount rootfs <https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/troubleshooting/failsafe_and_factory_reset> 3. Edit inittab to enable shell on tty console `sed -i 's/#ttyM/ttyM/' /etc/inittab` 4. Reboot and upload `-nand-factory.bin` to the router (using wget) 5. Use `sysupgrade` command to install Another installation method is to hijack the upgrade server domain of stock firmware, because it's using insecure http. This commit is based on @LGA1150(at GitHub)'s work <https://github.com/LGA1150/openwrt/commit/a4932c8d5a275d1fb4297bd20ec03f9270a45d1c> With some changes: 1. Added `qpic_bam` node in dts. I don't know much about this, but I observed other dtses have this node. 2. Removed `ldo` node under `sd_0_pinmux`, because `ldo` cause SD card not working. This fix is from <https://github.com/coolsnowwolf/lede/commit/51143b4c7571f717afe071db60bbb4db1532cbf2> 3. Removed the 32MB NOR variant. 4. Removed `cd-gpios` in `sdhci` node, because it's reported that it makes wlan2g led light up. 5. Added ethphy led config in dts. 6. Changed nand partition label from `rootfs` to `ubi`. About the 128MiB variant: The stock bootloader sets size of nand to 64MiB. But most of this devices have 128MiB nand. If you want to use all 128MiB, you need to modify the `MIBIB` data of bootloader. More details can be found on github: <https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/3691#issuecomment-818770060> For instructions on how to flash the MIBIB partition from u-boot console: <https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/3691#issuecomment-819138232> About the Mini PCIe slot: (from "ygleg") "The REFCLK signals on the Mini PCIe slot is not connected on this board out of the box. If you want to use the Mini PCIe slot on the board, you need to (preferably) solder two 0402 resistors: R436 (REFCLK+) and R444 (REFCLK-)..." This and much more information is provoided in the github comment: <https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/3691#issuecomment-968054670> Signed-off-by: Richard Yu <yurichard3839@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: DENG Qingfang <dqfext@gmail.com> [Added comment about MIBIB+128 MiB variant. Added commit message section about pcie slot. Renamed gpio-leds' subnodes and added color, function+enum properties.] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2021-11-12 03:16:21 +00:00
p2w,r619ac-64m |\
p2w,r619ac-128m |\
qcom,ap-dk01.1-c1)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
;;
ipq40xx: add support for Aruba AP-303H The Aruba AP-303H is the hospitality version of the Aruba AP-303 with a POE-passthrough enabled ethernet switch instead of a sigle PHY. Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4029 RAM: 512M DDR3 FLASH: - 128MB SPI-NAND (Macronix) - 4MB SPI-NOR (Macronix MX25R3235F) TPM: Atmel AT97SC3203 BLE: Texas Instruments CC2540T attached to ttyMSM1 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 LED: WiFi (amber / green) System (red / green /amber) PSE (green) BTN: Reset USB: USB 2.0 To connect to the serial console, you can solder to the labled pads next to the USB port or use your Aruba supplied UARt adapter. Do NOT plug a standard USB cable into the Console labled USB-port! Aruba/HPE simply put UART on the micro-USB pins. You can solder yourself an adapter cable: VCC - NC D+ - TX D- - RX GND - GND The console setting in bootloader and OS is 9600 8N1. Voltage level is 3.3V. To enable a full list of commands in the U-Boot "help" command, execute the literal "diag" command. Installation ------------ 1. Get the OpenWrt initramfs image. Rename it to ipq40xx.ari and put it into the TFTP server root directory. Configure the TFTP server to be reachable at 192.168.1.75/24. Connect the machine running the TFTP server to the E0 (!) ethernet port of the access point, as it only tries to pull from the WAN port. 2. Connect to the serial console. Interrupt autobooting by pressing Enter when prompted. 3. Configure the bootargs and bootcmd for OpenWrt. $ setenv bootargs_openwrt "setenv bootargs console=ttyMSM0,9600n8" $ setenv nandboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; ubi part aos1; ubi read 0x85000000 kernel; set fdt_high 0x87000000; bootm 0x85000000" $ setenv ramboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.105; setenv serverip 192.168.1.75; netget; set fdt_high 0x87000000; bootm" $ setenv bootcmd "run nandboot_openwrt" $ saveenv 4. Load OpenWrt into RAM: $ run ramboot_openwrt 5. After OpenWrt booted, transfer the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the /tmp folder on the device. You will need to plug into E1-E3 ports of the access point to reach OpenWrt, as E0 is the WAN port of the device. 6. Flash OpenWrt: $ ubidetach -p /dev/mtd16 $ ubiformat /dev/mtd16 $ sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin To go back to the stock firmware, simply reset the bootcmd in the bootloader to the original value: $ setenv bootcmd "boot" $ saveenv Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2020-01-11 23:36:42 +00:00
aruba,ap-303 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Aruba AP-365 Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4029 RAM: 512M DDR3 FLASH: - 128MB NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC) - 4MB SPI-NOR (Macronix MX25R3235F) TPM: Atmel AT97SC3203 BLE: Texas Instruments CC2540T attached to ttyMSM0 ETH: Atheros AR8035 LED: System (red / green / amber) BTN: Reset The USB port on the device is (in contrast to other Aruba boards) real USB. The AP uses a CP2101 USB TTY converter on the board. Console baudrate is 9600 8n1. To enable a full list of commands in the U-Boot "help" command, execute the literal "diag" command. Installation ------------ 1. Get the OpenWrt initramfs image. Rename it to ipq40xx.ari and put it into the TFTP server root directory. Configure the TFTP server to be reachable at 192.168.1.75/24. Connect the machine running the TFTP server to the ethernet port of the access point. 2. Connect to the serial console. Interrupt autobooting by pressing Enter when prompted. 3. Configure the bootargs and bootcmd for OpenWrt. $ setenv bootargs_openwrt "setenv bootargs console=ttyMSM1,9600n8" $ setenv nandboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; ubi part aos1; ubi read 0x85000000 kernel; bootm 0x85000000" $ setenv ramboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.105; setenv serverip 192.168.1.75; netget; set fdt_high 0x87000000; bootm" $ setenv bootcmd "run nandboot_openwrt" $ saveenv 4. Load OpenWrt into RAM: $ run ramboot_openwrt 5. After OpenWrt booted, transfer the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the /tmp folder on the device. 6. Flash OpenWrt: Make sure you use the mtd partition with the label "ubi" here! $ ubidetach -p /dev/mtd1 $ ubiformat /dev/mtd1 $ sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin To go back to the stock firmware, simply reset the bootcmd in the bootloader to the original value: $ setenv bootcmd "boot" $ saveenv Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2020-05-07 15:50:57 +00:00
aruba,ap-303h |\
aruba,ap-365)
ipq40xx: add support for Aruba AP-303 Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4029 RAM: 512M DDR3 FLASH: - 128MB NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC) - 4MB SPI-NOR (Macronix MX25R3235F) TPM: Atmel AT97SC3203 BLE: Texas Instruments CC2540T attached to ttyMSM0 ETH: Atheros AR8035 LED: WiFi (amber / green) System (red / green) BTN: Reset To connect to the serial console, you can solder to the labled pads next to the USB port or use your Aruba supplied UARt adapter. Do NOT plug a standard USB cable into the Console labled USB-port! Aruba/HPE simply put UART on the micro-USB pins. You can solder yourself an adapter cable: VCC - NC D+ - TX D- - RX GND - GND The console setting in bootloader and OS is 9600 8N1. Voltage level is 3.3V. To enable a full list of commands in the U-Boot "help" command, execute the literal "diag" command. Installation ------------ 1. Get the OpenWrt initramfs image. Rename it to ipq40xx.ari and put it into the TFTP server root directory. Configure the TFTP server to be reachable at 192.168.1.75/24. Connect the machine running the TFTP server to the ethernet port of the access point. 2. Connect to the serial console. Interrupt autobooting by pressing Enter when prompted. 3. Configure the bootargs and bootcmd for OpenWrt. $ setenv bootargs_openwrt "setenv bootargs console=ttyMSM1,9600n8" $ setenv nandboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; ubi part aos1; ubi read 0x85000000 kernel; bootm 0x85000000" $ setenv ramboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.105; setenv serverip 192.168.1.75; netget; set fdt_high 0x87000000; bootm" $ setenv bootcmd "run nandboot_openwrt" $ saveenv 4. Load OpenWrt into RAM: $ run ramboot_openwrt 5. After OpenWrt booted, transfer the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the /tmp folder on the device. 6. Flash OpenWrt: $ ubidetach -p /dev/mtd1 $ ubiformat /dev/mtd1 $ sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin To go back to the stock firmware, simply reset the bootcmd in the bootloader to the original value: $ setenv bootcmd "boot" $ saveenv Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-10-23 20:25:14 +00:00
caldata_extract "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(mtd_get_mac_binary mfginfo 0x1D) 1)
ipq40xx: add support for Aruba AP-303 Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4029 RAM: 512M DDR3 FLASH: - 128MB NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC) - 4MB SPI-NOR (Macronix MX25R3235F) TPM: Atmel AT97SC3203 BLE: Texas Instruments CC2540T attached to ttyMSM0 ETH: Atheros AR8035 LED: WiFi (amber / green) System (red / green) BTN: Reset To connect to the serial console, you can solder to the labled pads next to the USB port or use your Aruba supplied UARt adapter. Do NOT plug a standard USB cable into the Console labled USB-port! Aruba/HPE simply put UART on the micro-USB pins. You can solder yourself an adapter cable: VCC - NC D+ - TX D- - RX GND - GND The console setting in bootloader and OS is 9600 8N1. Voltage level is 3.3V. To enable a full list of commands in the U-Boot "help" command, execute the literal "diag" command. Installation ------------ 1. Get the OpenWrt initramfs image. Rename it to ipq40xx.ari and put it into the TFTP server root directory. Configure the TFTP server to be reachable at 192.168.1.75/24. Connect the machine running the TFTP server to the ethernet port of the access point. 2. Connect to the serial console. Interrupt autobooting by pressing Enter when prompted. 3. Configure the bootargs and bootcmd for OpenWrt. $ setenv bootargs_openwrt "setenv bootargs console=ttyMSM1,9600n8" $ setenv nandboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; ubi part aos1; ubi read 0x85000000 kernel; bootm 0x85000000" $ setenv ramboot_openwrt "run bootargs_openwrt; setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.105; setenv serverip 192.168.1.75; netget; set fdt_high 0x87000000; bootm" $ setenv bootcmd "run nandboot_openwrt" $ saveenv 4. Load OpenWrt into RAM: $ run ramboot_openwrt 5. After OpenWrt booted, transfer the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the /tmp folder on the device. 6. Flash OpenWrt: $ ubidetach -p /dev/mtd1 $ ubiformat /dev/mtd1 $ sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin To go back to the stock firmware, simply reset the bootcmd in the bootloader to the original value: $ setenv bootcmd "boot" $ saveenv Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-10-23 20:25:14 +00:00
;;
asus,map-ac2200)
caldata_extract_ubi "Factory" 0x5000 0x2f20
;;
ipq40xx: add support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13 This patch adds support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13. hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 128 MiB DDR3L-1066 @ 537 MHz (1074?) NT5CC64M16GP-DI NOR: 2 MiB Macronix MX25L1606E (for boot, QSEE) NAND: 128 MiB Winbond W25NO1GVZE1G (cal + kernel + root, UBI) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 Gigabit Switch (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) USB: 1 x 3.0 (via Synopsys DesignWare DWC3 controller in the SoC) WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: one Reset and one WPS button LEDS: Status, WAN, WIFI1/2, USB and LAN (one blue LED for each) Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has an unpopulated 1x4 0.1" header. The pinout (VDD, RX, GND, TX) is printed on the PCB right next to the connector. U-Boot Note: The ethernet driver isn't always reliable and can sometime time out... Don't worry, just retry. Access via the serial console is required. As well as a working TFTP-server setup and the initramfs image. (If not provided, it has to be built from the OpenWrt source. Make sure to enable LZMA as the compression for the INITRAMFS!) To install the image permanently, you have to do the following steps in the listed order. 1. Open up the router. There are four phillips screws hiding behind the four plastic feets on the underside. 2. Connect the serial cable (See notes above) 3. Connect your router via one of the four LAN-ports (yellow) to a PC which can set the IP-Address and ssh and scp from. If possible set your PC's IPv4 Address to 192.168.1.70 (As this is the IP-Address the Router's bootloader expects for the tftp server) 4. power up the router and enter the u-boot choose option 1 to upload the initramfs image. And follow through the ipv4 setup. Wait for your router's status LED to stop blinking rapidly and glow just blue. (The LAN LED should also be glowing blue). 3. Connect to the OpenWrt running in RAM The default IPv4-Address of your router will be 192.168.1.1. 1. Copy over the openwrt-sysupgrade.bin image to your router's temporary directory # scp openwrt-sysupgrade.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp 2. ssh from your PC into your router as root. # ssh root@192.168.1.1 The default OpenWrt-Image won't ask for a password. Simply hit the Enter-Key. Once connected...: run the following commands on your temporary installation 3. delete the "jffs2" ubi partition to make room for your new root partition # ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=jffs2 4. install OpenWrt on the NAND Flash. # sysupgrade -v /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin - This will will automatically reboot the router - Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-07 08:13:10 +00:00
asus,rt-ac58u)
CI_UBIPART=UBI_DEV
caldata_extract_ubi "Factory" 0x5000 0x2f20
ipq40xx: add support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13 This patch adds support for ASUS RT-AC58U/RT-ACRH13. hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 128 MiB DDR3L-1066 @ 537 MHz (1074?) NT5CC64M16GP-DI NOR: 2 MiB Macronix MX25L1606E (for boot, QSEE) NAND: 128 MiB Winbond W25NO1GVZE1G (cal + kernel + root, UBI) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 Gigabit Switch (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) USB: 1 x 3.0 (via Synopsys DesignWare DWC3 controller in the SoC) WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: one Reset and one WPS button LEDS: Status, WAN, WIFI1/2, USB and LAN (one blue LED for each) Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has an unpopulated 1x4 0.1" header. The pinout (VDD, RX, GND, TX) is printed on the PCB right next to the connector. U-Boot Note: The ethernet driver isn't always reliable and can sometime time out... Don't worry, just retry. Access via the serial console is required. As well as a working TFTP-server setup and the initramfs image. (If not provided, it has to be built from the OpenWrt source. Make sure to enable LZMA as the compression for the INITRAMFS!) To install the image permanently, you have to do the following steps in the listed order. 1. Open up the router. There are four phillips screws hiding behind the four plastic feets on the underside. 2. Connect the serial cable (See notes above) 3. Connect your router via one of the four LAN-ports (yellow) to a PC which can set the IP-Address and ssh and scp from. If possible set your PC's IPv4 Address to 192.168.1.70 (As this is the IP-Address the Router's bootloader expects for the tftp server) 4. power up the router and enter the u-boot choose option 1 to upload the initramfs image. And follow through the ipv4 setup. Wait for your router's status LED to stop blinking rapidly and glow just blue. (The LAN LED should also be glowing blue). 3. Connect to the OpenWrt running in RAM The default IPv4-Address of your router will be 192.168.1.1. 1. Copy over the openwrt-sysupgrade.bin image to your router's temporary directory # scp openwrt-sysupgrade.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp 2. ssh from your PC into your router as root. # ssh root@192.168.1.1 The default OpenWrt-Image won't ask for a password. Simply hit the Enter-Key. Once connected...: run the following commands on your temporary installation 3. delete the "jffs2" ubi partition to make room for your new root partition # ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=jffs2 4. install OpenWrt on the NAND Flash. # sysupgrade -v /tmp/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin - This will will automatically reboot the router - Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-07 08:13:10 +00:00
;;
avm,fritzbox-4040)
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x400 -e 0x208 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader_config")
;;
ipq40xx: add support for AVM FRITZ!Repeater 3000 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M (NANYA NT5CC128M16JR-EK) FLASH: 128M NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC-XKI) ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac WiFi5: QCA9984 4T4R 4SS n/ac LED: - Connect green/blue/red - Power green BTN: WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz3000' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz3000.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ3000.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-03-11 17:05:32 +00:00
avm,fritzbox-7530 |\
ipq40xx: add support for AVM FRITZ!Repeater 1200 Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M DDR3 FLASH: 128M NAND WiFi: 2T2R IPQ4019 bgn 2T2R IPQ4019 a/n/ac ETH: Atheros AR8033 RGMII PHY BTN: 1x Connect (WPS) LED: Power (green/red/yellow) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz1200' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz1200.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ1200.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz1200.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz1200.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-09-10 19:07:23 +00:00
avm,fritzrepeater-1200 |\
ipq40xx: add support for AVM FRITZ!Repeater 3000 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M (NANYA NT5CC128M16JR-EK) FLASH: 128M NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC-XKI) ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac WiFi5: QCA9984 4T4R 4SS n/ac LED: - Connect green/blue/red - Power green BTN: WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz3000' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz3000.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ3000.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz3000.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2019-03-11 17:05:32 +00:00
avm,fritzrepeater-3000)
ipq40xx: add support for FritzBox 7530 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M FLASH: 128M NAND ETH: QCA8075 VDSL: Intel/Lantiq VRX518 PCIe attached currently not supported DECT: Dialog SC14448 currently not supported WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac LED: - Power/DSL green - WLAN green - FON/DECT green - Connect/WPS green - Info green - Info red BTN: - WLAN - FON - WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V (located under the Dialog chip) VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz7530' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz7530.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ7530.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz7530.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz7530.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> [removed pcie-dts range node, refreshed on top of AP120-AC/E2600AC] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-02-18 22:58:34 +00:00
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C800 -e 0x208 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader0") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3D000 -e 0x208 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader0") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C000 -e 0x208 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader0") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C800 -e 0x208 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader1") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3D000 -e 0x208 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader1") || \
/usr/bin/fritz_cal_extract -i 1 -s 0x3C000 -e 0x208 -l 12064 -o /lib/firmware/$FIRMWARE $(find_mtd_chardev "urlader1")
ipq40xx: add support for FritzBox 7530 Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4019 RAM: 256M FLASH: 128M NAND ETH: QCA8075 VDSL: Intel/Lantiq VRX518 PCIe attached currently not supported DECT: Dialog SC14448 currently not supported WiFi2: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4019 2T2R 2SS n/ac LED: - Power/DSL green - WLAN green - FON/DECT green - Connect/WPS green - Info green - Info red BTN: - WLAN - FON - WPS/Connect UART: 115200n8 3.3V (located under the Dialog chip) VCC - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC) Installation ------------ 1. Grab the uboot for the Device from the 'u-boot-fritz7530' subdirectory. Place it in the same directory as the 'eva_ramboot.py' script. It is located in the 'scripts/flashing' subdirectory of the OpenWRT tree. 2. Assign yourself the IP address 192.168.178.10/24. Connect your Computer to one of the boxes LAN ports. 3. Connect Power to the Box. As soon as the LAN port of your computer shows link, load the U-Boot to the box using following command. > ./eva_ramboot.py --offset 0x85000000 192.168.178.1 uboot-fritz7530.bin 4. The U-Boot will now start. Now assign yourself the IP address 192.168.1.70/24. Copy the OpenWRT initramfs (!) image to a TFTP server root directory and rename it to 'FRITZ7530.bin'. 5. The Box will now boot OpenWRT from RAM. This can take up to two minutes. 6. Copy the U-Boot and the OpenWRT sysupgrade (!) image to the Box using scp. SSH into the Box and first write the Bootloader to both previous kernel partitions. > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz7530.bin uboot0 > mtd write /path/to/uboot-fritz7530.bin uboot1 7. Remove the AVM filesystem partitions to make room for our kernel + rootfs + overlayfs. > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_0 > ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 --name=avm_filesys_1 8. Flash OpenWRT peristently using sysupgrade. > sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt-sysupgrade.bin Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> [removed pcie-dts range node, refreshed on top of AP120-AC/E2600AC] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-02-18 22:58:34 +00:00
;;
buffalo,wtr-m2133hp)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_binary ORGDATA 0x2c)
;;
ipq40xx: add support for Cell C RTL30VW Cell C RTL30VW is a LTE router with tho gigabit ethernets and integrated QMI mPCIE modem. This is stripped version of ASKEY RTL0030VW. Hardware: Specification: -CPU: IPQ4019 -RAM: 256MB -Flash: NAND 128MB + NOR 16MB -WiFi: Integrated bgn/ac -LTE: mPCIe card (Modem chipset MDM9230) -LAN: 2 Gigabit Ports -USB: 2x USB2.0 -Serial console: RJ-45 115200 8n1 -Unsupported VoIP Known issues: None so far. Instruction install: There are two methods: Factory web-gui and serial + tftp. Web-gui: 1. Apply factory image via stock web-gui. Serial + initramfs: 1. Rename OpenWrt initramfs image to "image" 2. Connect serial console (115200,8n1) 3. Set IP to different than 192.168.1.11, but 24 bit mask, eg. 192.168.1.4. 4. U-Boot commands: sf probe && sf read 0x80000000 0x180000 0x10000 setenv serverip 192.168.1.4 set fdt_high 0x85000000 tftpboot 0x84000000 image bootm 0x84000000 5. Install sysupgrade image via "sysupgrade -n" Back to stock: All is needed is swap 0x4c byte in mtd8 from 0 to 1 or 1 to 0, do firstboot and factory reset with OFW: 1. read mtd8: dd if=/dev/mtd8 of=/tmp/mtd8 2. go to tmp: cd /tmp/ 3. write first part of partition: dd if=mtd8 of=mtd8.new bs=1 count=76 4. check which layout uses bootloader: cat /proc/mtd 5a. If first are kernel_1 and rootfs_1 write 0: echo -n -e '\x00' >> mtd8.new 5b. If first are kernel and rootfs write 1: echo -n -e '\x01' >> mtd8.new 6. fill with rest of data: dd if=mtd8 bs=1 skip=77 >> mtd8.new 7. CHECK IF mtd8.new HAVE CHANGED ONLY ONE BYTE! e.g with: hexdump mtd8.new 8. write new mtd8 to flash: mtd write mtd8.new /dev/mtd8 9. do firstboot 10.reboot 11. Do back to factory defaults in OFW GUI. Based on work: Cezary Jackiewicz <cezary@eko.one.pl> Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
2020-03-09 20:16:43 +00:00
cellc,rtl30vw |\
compex,wpj419 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
compex,wpj428 |\
edgecore,ecw5211 |\
edgecore,oap100 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
engenius,eap1300 |\
engenius,eap2200 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Luma Home WRTQ-329ACN Luma Home WRTQ-329ACN, also known as Luma WiFi System, is a dual-band wireless access point. Specification SoC: Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4018 RAM: 256 MB DDR3 Flash: 2 MB SPI NOR 128 MB SPI NAND WIFI: 2.4 GHz 2T2R integrated 5 GHz 2T2R integrated Ethernet: 2x 10/100/1000 Mbps QCA8075 USB: 1x 2.0 Bluetooth: 1x 4.0 CSR8510 A10, connected to USB bus LEDS: 16x multicolor LEDs ring, controlled by MSP430G2403 MCU Buttons: 1x GPIO controlled EEPROM: 16 Kbit, compatible with AT24C16 UART: row of 4 holes marked on PCB as J19, starting count from the side of J19 marking on PCB 1. GND, 2. RX, 3. TX, 4. 3.3V baud: 115200, parity: none, flow control: none The device supports OTA or USB flash drive updates, unfotunately they are signed. Until the signing key is known, the UART access is mandatory for installation. The difficult part is disassembling the casing, there are a lot of latches holding it together. Teardown Prepare three thin, but sturdy, prying tools. Place the device with back of it facing upwards. Start with the wall having a small notch. Insert first tool, until You'll feel resistance and keep it there. Repeat the procedure for neighbouring walls. With applying a pressure, one edge of the back cover should pop up. Now carefully slide one of the tools to free the rest of the latches. There's no need to solder pins to the UART holes, You can use hook clips, but wiring them outside the casing, will ease debuging and recovery if problems occur. Installation 1. Prepare TFTP server with OpenWrt initramfs image. 2. Connect to UART port (don't connect the voltage pin). 3. Connect to LAN port. 4. Power on the device, carefully observe the console output and when asked quickly enter the failsafe mode. 5. Invoke 'mount_root'. 6. After the overlayfs is mounted run: fw_setenv bootdelay 3 This will allow to access U-Boot shell. 7. Reboot the device and when prompted to stop autoboot, hit any key. 8. Adjust "ipaddr" and "serverip" addresses in U-Boot environment, use 'setenv' to do that, then run following commands: tftpboot 0x84000000 <openwrt_initramfs_image_name> bootm 0x84000000 and wait till OpenWrt boots. 9. In OpenWrt command line run following commands: fw_setenv openwrt "setenv mtdids nand1=spi_nand; setenv mtdparts mtdparts=spi_nand:-(ubi); ubi part ubi; ubi read 0x84000000 kernel; bootm 0x84000000" fw_setenv bootcmd "run openwrt" 10. Transfer OpenWrt sysupgrade image to /tmp directory and flash it with: ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N ubi_rootfs sysupgrade -v -n /tmp/<openwrt_sysupgrade_image_name> 11. After flashing, the access point will reboot to OpenWrt, then it's ready for configuration. Reverting to OEM firmware 1. Execute installation guide steps: 1, 2, 3, 7, 8. 2. In OpenWrt command line run following commands: ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N rootfs_data ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N rootfs ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N kernel ubirename /dev/ubi0 kernel1 kernel ubi_rootfs1 ubi_rootfs ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -S 34 -N kernel1 ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -S 320 -N ubi_rootfs1 ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -S 264 -N rootfs_data fw_setenv bootcmd bootipq 3. Reboot. Known issues The LEDs ring doesn't have any dedicated driver or application to control it, the only available option atm is to manipulate it with 'i2cset' command. The default action after applying power to device is spinning blue light. This light will stay active at all time. To disable it install 'i2c-tools' with opkg and run: i2cset -y 2 0x48 3 1 0 0 i The light will stay off until next cold boot. Additional information After completing 5. step from installation guide, one can disable asking for root password on OEM firmware by running: sed -e 's/root:x:/root::/' -i /etc/passwd This is useful for investigating the OEM firmware. One can look at the communication between the stock firmware and the vendor's cloud servers or as a way of making a backup of both flash chips. The root password seems to be constant across all sold devices. This is output of 'led_ctl' from OEM firmware to illustrate possibilities of LEDs ring: Usage: led_ctl [status | upgrade | force_upgrade | version] led_ctl solid COLOR <brightness> led_ctl single COLOR INDEX <brightness 0 - 15> led_ctl spinning COLOR <period 1 - 16 (lower = faster)> led_ctl fill COLOR <period 1 - 16 (lower = faster)> ( default is 5 ) led_ctl flashing COLOR <on dur 1 - 128> <off dur 1 - 128> (default is 34) ( default is 34 ) led_ctl pulsing COLOR COLOR: red, green, blue, yellow, purple, cyan, white Signed-off-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tomek_n@o2.pl> [squash "ipq-wifi: add BDFs for Luma Home WRTQ-329ACN" into commit, changed ubi volumes for easier integration, slightly reworded commit message, changed ubi volume layout to use standard names all around] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-08-30 11:28:10 +00:00
luma,wrtq-329acn|\
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
openmesh,a42 |\
openmesh,a62 |\
plasmacloud,pa1200 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Plasma Cloud PA2200 Device specifications: * QCA IPQ4019 * 256 MB of RAM * 32 MB of SPI NOR flash (w25q256) - 2x 15 MB available; but one of the 15 MB regions is the recovery image * 2T2R 2.4 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=20,variant=PlasmaCloud-PA2200 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 36-64) - QCA9888 hw2.0 (PCI) - requires special BDF in QCA9888/hw2.0/board-2.bin bus=pci,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=16,variant=PlasmaCloud-PA2200 * 2T2R 5 GHz (channel 100-165) - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) - requires special BDF in QCA4019/hw1.0/board-2.bin with bus=ahb,bmi-chip-id=0,bmi-board-id=21,variant=PlasmaCloud-PA2200 * GPIO-LEDs for 2.4GHz, 5GHz-SoC and 5GHz-PCIE * GPIO-LEDs for power (orange) and status (blue) * 1x GPIO-button (reset) * TTL pins are on board (arrow points to VCC, then follows: GND, TX, RX) * 2x gigabit ethernet - phy@mdio3: + Label: Ethernet 1 + gmac0 (ethaddr) in original firmware + used as LAN interface - phy@mdio4: + Label: Ethernet 2 + gmac1 (eth1addr) in original firmware + 802.3at POE+ + used as WAN interface * 12V 2A DC Flashing instructions: The tool ap51-flash (https://github.com/ap51-flash/ap51-flash) should be used to transfer the factory image to the u-boot when the device boots up. Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <marek.lindner@kaiwoo.ai> [sven@narfation.org: prepare commit message, rebase, use all LEDs, switch to dualboot_datachk upgrade script, use eth1 as designated WAN interface] Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven@narfation.org>
2018-12-14 15:46:53 +00:00
plasmacloud,pa2200 |\
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
qxwlan,e2600ac-c1 |\
qxwlan,e2600ac-c2 |\
ipq40xx: Add support for Unielec U4019 This commit adds support for the 32MB storage/512MB RAM version of the U4019 IPQ4019-based board from Unielec. The board has the following specifications: * Qualcomm IPQ4019 (running at 717MHz) * 512MB DDR3 RAM (optional 256MB/1GB) * 32MB SPI NOR (optional 8/16MB or NAND) * Five gigabit ports (Qualcomm QCA8075) * 1x 2.4 GHz wifi (QCA4019 hw1.0) * 1x 5 Ghz wifi (QCA4019 hw1.0) * 1x mini-PCIe slot (only USB-pins connected) * 1x SIM slot (mini-SIM) * 1x USB2.0 port * 1x button * 1x controllable LED * 1x micro SD-card reader Working: * Ethernet * Wifi * USB-port * mini-PCIe slot + SIM slot * Button * Sysupgrade Not working: * SD card slot (no upstream support) Installation instructions: In order to install OpenWRT on the U4019, you need to go via the initramfs-image. The installation steps are as follows: * Connect to board via serial (header exposed and clearly marked). * Interrupt bootloader by pressing a button. * Copy the initramfs-image to your tftp folder, call the file C0A80079.img. * Give the network interface connected to the U4019 the address 192.168.0.156/24. * Start your tftp-server and run tftpboot on the board. * Run bootm when the file has been transferred, to boot OpenWRT. * Once OpenWRT has booted, copy the sysupgrade-image to the device and run sysupgrade to install OpenWRT on the U4019. Notes: - Since IPQ4019 has been moved to 4.19, I have not added support for kernel 4.14. - There is a bug with hardware encryption on IPQ4019, causing poor performance with TCP and ipsec (see for example FS#2355). In order to improve performance, I have disabled hardware encryption in the DTS. We can enable hw. enc. once/if bug is fixed. - In order for Ethernet to work, the phy has to be reset by setting gpio 47 low/high. Adding support for phy reset via gpio required patching the mdio-driver, and the code added comes from the vendor driver. I do not know if patching the driver is an acceptable approach or not. v1->v2: * Do not use wildcard as identifier in the board.d-scripts (thanks Adrian Schmutzler). Signed-off-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
2019-10-20 09:33:13 +00:00
unielec,u4019-32m)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ipq40xx: add support for Qxwlan E2600AC C1 and C2 Qxwlan E2600AC C1 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB FLASH: 32 MiB Winbond W25Q256 ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power ,6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) UUSB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "sysupgrade" filename to "firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "sysupgrade" image and click the upgrade button. Qxwlan E2600AC C2 based on IPQ4019 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 16 MiB Winbond W25Q128 NAND: 128MiB Micron MT29F1G08ABAEAWP ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 WLAN: 5G + 5G/2.4G * 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) * 2T2R 5 GHz - QCA4019 hw1.0 (SoC) INPUT: Reset buutton LED: 1x Power, 6 driven by gpio SERIAL: UART (J5) USB: USB3.0 POWER: 1x DC jack for main power input (9-24 V) SLOT: Pcie (J25), sim card (J11), SD card (J51) Flash instruction (using U-Boot CLI and tftp server): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.10 and tftp server. - Rename "ubi" filename to "ubi-firmware.bin" and place it in tftp server directory. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, power up the board and press "enter" key to access U-Boot CLI. - Use the following command to update the device to OpenWrt: "run lfw". Flash instruction (using U-Boot web-based recovery): - Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.xxx(2-254)/24. - Connect PC with one of RJ45 ports, press the reset button, power up the board and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until LEDs start flashing. - Open your browser and enter 192.168.1.1, select "ubi" image and click the upgrade button. Signed-off-by: 张鹏 <sd20@qxwlan.com> [ added rng node. whitespace fixes, ported 02_network, ipq-wifi Makefile, misc dts fixes, trivial message changes ] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-01-21 05:28:32 +00:00
;;
ipq40xx: add support for devolo Magic 2 WiFi next SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v71) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB NOR: 32 MiB ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 (2 ports) PLC: MaxLinear G.hn 88LX5152 WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: RESET, WiFi, PLC Button LEDS: red/white home, white WiFi To modify a retail device to run OpenWRT firmware: 1) Setup a TFTP server on IP address 192.168.0.100 and copy the OpenWRT initramfs (initramfs-fit-uImage.itb) to the TFTP root as 'uploadfile'. 2) Power on the device while pressing the recessed reset button next to the Ethernet ports. This causes the bootloader to retrieve and start the initramfs. 3) Once the initramfs is booted, the device will come up with IP 192.168.1.1. You can then connect through SSH (allow some time for the first connection). 4) On the device shell, run 'fw_printenv' to show the U-boot environment. Backup this information since it contains device unique factory data. 5) Change the boot command to support booting OpenWRT: # fw_setenv bootcmd 'sf probe && sf read 0x84000000 0x180000 0x400000 && bootm' 6) Change directory to /tmp, download the sysupgrade (e.g. through wget) and install it with sysupgrade. The device will reboot into OpenWRT. Notice that there is currently no support for booting the G.hn chip. This requires userland software we lack the rights to share right now. Signed-off-by: Stefan Schake <stefan.schake@devolo.de>
2020-10-02 12:32:55 +00:00
devolo,magic-2-wifi-next)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_ascii APPSBLENV WiFiMacAddress1)
;;
ipq40xx: Add support for D-Link DAP-2610 Specifications ============== - SOC: IPQ4018 - RAM: DDR3 256MB - Flash: SPI NOR 16MB - WiFi: - 2.4GHz: IPQ4018, 2x2, front end SKY85303-11 - 5GHz: IPQ4018, 2x2, front end SKY85717-21 - Ethernet: 1x 10/100/1000Mbps, POE 802.3af - PHY: QCA8072 - UART: GND, blocked, 3.3V, RX, TX / 115200 8N1 - LED: 1x red / green - Button: 1x reset / factory default - U-Boot bootloader with tftp and "emergency web server" accessible using serial port. Installation ============ Flash factory image from D-Link web UI. Constraints in the D-Link web UI makes the factory image unnecessarily large. Flash again using sysupgrade from inside OpenWrt to reclaim some flash space. Return to stock D-Link firmware =============================== Partition layout is preserved, and it is possible to return to the stock firmware simply by downloading it from D-Link and writing it to the firmware partition. # mtd -r write dap2610-firmware.bin firmware Quirks ====== To be flashable from the D-Link http server, the firmware must be larger then 6MB, and the size in the firmware header must match the actual file size. Also, the boot loader verifies the checksum of the firmware before each boot, thus the jffs2 must be after the checksum covered part. This is solved in the factory image by having the rootfs at the very end of the image (without pad-rootfs). The sysupgrade image which does not have to be flashable from the D-Link web UI may be smaller, and the checksum in the firmware header only covers the kernel part of the image. Signed-off-by: Fredrik Olofsson <fredrik.olofsson@anyfinetworks.com> [added WRGG Variables to DEVICE_VARS, squashed spi pinconf/mux, added emd1's gmac0 config,fix dtc warnings] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-09-10 09:25:53 +00:00
dlink,dap-2610)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mtd_get_mac_ascii bdcfg wlanmac_a)
;;
engenius,emd1)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(mtd_get_mac_ascii 0:APPSBLENV wlanaddr) 1)
;;
engenius,emr3500)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(mtd_get_mac_ascii 0:APPSBLENV ethaddr) 1)
;;
ipq40xx: add support for EnGenius ENS620EXT Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4018 RAM: 256M FLASH: 32M SPI NOR W25Q256 ETH: QCA8075 WiFi2: IPQ4018 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4018 2T2R 2SS n/ac LED: - Power amber - LAN1(PoE) green - LAN2 green - Wi-Fi 2.4GHz green - Wi-Fi 5GHz green BTN: - WPS UART: 115200n8 3.3V J1 VCC(1) - GND(2) - TX(3) - RX(4) Added basic support to get the device up and running for a sysupgrade image only. There is currently no way back to factory firmware, so this is a one-way street to OpenWRT. Install from factory condition is convoluted, and may brick your device: 1) Enable SSH and disable the CLI on the factory device from the web user interface (Management->Advanced) 2) Reboot the device 3) Override the default, limited SSH shell: a) Get into the ssh shell: ssh admin@192.168.1.1 /bin/sh --login b) Change the dropbear script to disable the limited shell. At the empty command prompt type: sed -i '/login_ssh/s/^/#/g’ dropbear /etc/init.d/dropbear restart exit 4) ssh in to a (now-) normal OpenWRT SSH session 5) Flash your built image a) scp openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin admin@192.168.1.1:/tmp/ b) ssh admin@192.168.1.1 c) sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 6) After flash completes (it may say "Upgrade failed" followed by "Upgrade completed") and device reboots, log in to newly flashed system. Note you will now need to ssh as root rather than admin. Signed-off-by: Steve Glennon <s.glennon@cablelabs.com> [whitespace fixes, reordered partitions, removed rng node from 4.14, fixed 901-arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-02-27 22:48:23 +00:00
engenius,ens620ext)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(mtd_get_mac_ascii u-boot-env ethaddr) 3)
ipq40xx: add support for EnGenius ENS620EXT Hardware -------- CPU: Qualcomm IPQ4018 RAM: 256M FLASH: 32M SPI NOR W25Q256 ETH: QCA8075 WiFi2: IPQ4018 2T2R 2SS b/g/n WiFi5: IPQ4018 2T2R 2SS n/ac LED: - Power amber - LAN1(PoE) green - LAN2 green - Wi-Fi 2.4GHz green - Wi-Fi 5GHz green BTN: - WPS UART: 115200n8 3.3V J1 VCC(1) - GND(2) - TX(3) - RX(4) Added basic support to get the device up and running for a sysupgrade image only. There is currently no way back to factory firmware, so this is a one-way street to OpenWRT. Install from factory condition is convoluted, and may brick your device: 1) Enable SSH and disable the CLI on the factory device from the web user interface (Management->Advanced) 2) Reboot the device 3) Override the default, limited SSH shell: a) Get into the ssh shell: ssh admin@192.168.1.1 /bin/sh --login b) Change the dropbear script to disable the limited shell. At the empty command prompt type: sed -i '/login_ssh/s/^/#/g’ dropbear /etc/init.d/dropbear restart exit 4) ssh in to a (now-) normal OpenWRT SSH session 5) Flash your built image a) scp openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin admin@192.168.1.1:/tmp/ b) ssh admin@192.168.1.1 c) sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 6) After flash completes (it may say "Upgrade failed" followed by "Upgrade completed") and device reboots, log in to newly flashed system. Note you will now need to ssh as root rather than admin. Signed-off-by: Steve Glennon <s.glennon@cablelabs.com> [whitespace fixes, reordered partitions, removed rng node from 4.14, fixed 901-arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2019-02-27 22:48:23 +00:00
;;
linksys,ea8300 |\
linksys,mr8300)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add "$(cat /sys/class/net/eth0/address)" 3)
ipq40xx: Add support for Linksys EA8300 (Dallas) The Linksys EA8300 is based on QCA4019 and QCA9888 and provides three, independent radios. NAND provides two, alternate kernel/firmware images with fail-over provided by the OEM U-Boot. Installation: "Factory" images may be installed directly through the OEM GUI. Hardware Highlights: * IPQ4019 at 717 MHz (4 CPUs) * 256 MB NAND (Winbond W29N02GV, 8-bit parallel) * 256 MB RAM * Three, fully-functional radios; `iw phy` reports (FCC/US, -CT): * 2.4 GHz radio at 30 dBm * 5 GHz radio on ch. 36-64 at 23 dBm * 5 GHz radio on ch. 100-144 at 23 dBm (DFS), 149-165 at 30 dBm #{ managed } <= 16, #{ AP, mesh point } <= 16, #{ IBSS } <= 1 * All two-stream, MCS 0-9 * 4x GigE LAN, 1x GigE Internet Ethernet jacks with port lights * USB3, single port on rear with LED * WPS and reset buttons * Four status lights on top * Serial pads internal (unpopulated) "Linksys Dallas WiFi AP router based on Qualcomm AP DK07.1-c1" Implementation Notes: The OEM flash layout is preserved at this time with 3 MB kernel and ~69 MB UBIFS for each firmware version. The sysdiag (1 MB) and syscfg (56 MB) partitions are untouched, available as read-only. Serial Connectivity: Serial connectivity is *not* required to flash. Serial may be accessed by opening the device and connecting a 3.3-V adapter using 115200, 8n1. U-Boot access is good, including the ability to load images over TFTP and either run or flash them. Looking at the top of the board, from the front of the unit, J3 can be found on the right edge of the board, near the rear | J3 | |-| | |O| | (3.3V seen, open-circuit) |O| | TXD |O| | RXD |O| | |O| | GND |-| | | Unimplemented: * serial1 "ttyQHS0" (serial0 works as console) * Bluetooth; Qualcomm CSR8811 (potentially conected to serial1) Other Notes: https://wikidevi.com/wiki/Linksys_EA8300 states FCC docs also cover the Linksys EA8250. According to the RF Test Report BT BR+EDR, "All models are identical except for the EA8300 supports 256QAM and the EA8250 disable 256QAM." Signed-off-by: Jeff Kletsky <git-commits@allycomm.com>
2019-04-10 15:34:28 +00:00
;;
ipq40xx: add Cisco Meraki MR33 Support This patch adds support for Cisco Meraki MR33 hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4029 Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB DDR3L-1600 @ 627 MHz Micron MT41K128M16JT-125IT NAND: 128 MiB SLC NAND Spansion S34ML01G200TFV00 (106 MiB usable) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros AR8035 Gigabit PHY (1 x LAN/WAN) + PoE WLAN1: QCA9887 (168c:0050) PCIe 1x1:1 802.11abgn ac Dualband VHT80 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 VHT80 LEDS: 1 x Programmable RGB+White Status LED (driven by Ti LP5562 on i2c-1) 1 x Orange LED Fault Indicator (shared with LP5562) 2 x LAN Activity / Speed LEDs (On the RJ45 Port) BUTTON: one Reset button MISC: Bluetooth LE Ti cc2650 PG2.3 4x4mm - BL_CONFIG at 0x0001FFD8 AT24C64 8KiB EEPROM Kensington Lock Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has a populated 1x4 0.1" header with half-height/low profile pins. The pinout is: VCC (little white arrow), RX, TX, GND. Flashing needs a serial adaptor, as well as patched ubootwrite utility (needs Little-Endian support). And a modified u-boot (enabled Ethernet). Meraki's original u-boot source can be found in: <https://github.com/riptidewave93/meraki-uboot/tree/mr33-20170427> Add images to do an installation via bootloader: 0. open up the MR33 and connect the serial console. 1. start the 2nd stage bootloader transfer from client pc: # ubootwrite.py --write=mr33-uboot.bin (The ubootwrite tool will interrupt the boot-process and hence it needs to listen for cues. If the connection is bad (due to the low-profile pins), the tool can fail multiple times and in weird ways. If you are not sure, just use a terminal program and see what the device is doing there. 2. power on the MR33 (with ethernet + serial cables attached) Warning: Make sure you do this in a private LAN that has no connection to the internet. - let it upload the u-boot this can take 250-300 seconds - 3. use a tftp client (in binary mode!) on your PC to upload the sysupgrade.bin (the u-boot is listening on 192.168.1.1) # tftp 192.168.1.1 binary put openwrt-ipq40xx-meraki_mr33-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 4. wait for it to reboot 5. connect to your MR33 via ssh on 192.168.1.1 For more detailed instructions, please take a look at the: "Flashing Instructions for the MR33" PDF. This can be found on the wiki: <https://openwrt.org/toh/meraki/mr33> (A link to the mr33-uboot.bin + the modified ubootwrite is also there) Thanks to Jerome C. for sending an MR33 to Chris. Signed-off-by: Chris Blake <chrisrblake93@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me> Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-10 09:59:18 +00:00
meraki,mr33)
caldata_extract_ubi "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
caldata_valid "202f" || caldata_extract "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(get_mac_binary "/sys/bus/i2c/devices/0-0050/eeprom" 0x66) 3)
ipq40xx: add Cisco Meraki MR33 Support This patch adds support for Cisco Meraki MR33 hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4029 Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB DDR3L-1600 @ 627 MHz Micron MT41K128M16JT-125IT NAND: 128 MiB SLC NAND Spansion S34ML01G200TFV00 (106 MiB usable) ETH: Qualcomm Atheros AR8035 Gigabit PHY (1 x LAN/WAN) + PoE WLAN1: QCA9887 (168c:0050) PCIe 1x1:1 802.11abgn ac Dualband VHT80 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN3: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4029 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 VHT80 LEDS: 1 x Programmable RGB+White Status LED (driven by Ti LP5562 on i2c-1) 1 x Orange LED Fault Indicator (shared with LP5562) 2 x LAN Activity / Speed LEDs (On the RJ45 Port) BUTTON: one Reset button MISC: Bluetooth LE Ti cc2650 PG2.3 4x4mm - BL_CONFIG at 0x0001FFD8 AT24C64 8KiB EEPROM Kensington Lock Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3V3 level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The board has a populated 1x4 0.1" header with half-height/low profile pins. The pinout is: VCC (little white arrow), RX, TX, GND. Flashing needs a serial adaptor, as well as patched ubootwrite utility (needs Little-Endian support). And a modified u-boot (enabled Ethernet). Meraki's original u-boot source can be found in: <https://github.com/riptidewave93/meraki-uboot/tree/mr33-20170427> Add images to do an installation via bootloader: 0. open up the MR33 and connect the serial console. 1. start the 2nd stage bootloader transfer from client pc: # ubootwrite.py --write=mr33-uboot.bin (The ubootwrite tool will interrupt the boot-process and hence it needs to listen for cues. If the connection is bad (due to the low-profile pins), the tool can fail multiple times and in weird ways. If you are not sure, just use a terminal program and see what the device is doing there. 2. power on the MR33 (with ethernet + serial cables attached) Warning: Make sure you do this in a private LAN that has no connection to the internet. - let it upload the u-boot this can take 250-300 seconds - 3. use a tftp client (in binary mode!) on your PC to upload the sysupgrade.bin (the u-boot is listening on 192.168.1.1) # tftp 192.168.1.1 binary put openwrt-ipq40xx-meraki_mr33-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin 4. wait for it to reboot 5. connect to your MR33 via ssh on 192.168.1.1 For more detailed instructions, please take a look at the: "Flashing Instructions for the MR33" PDF. This can be found on the wiki: <https://openwrt.org/toh/meraki/mr33> (A link to the mr33-uboot.bin + the modified ubootwrite is also there) Thanks to Jerome C. for sending an MR33 to Chris. Signed-off-by: Chris Blake <chrisrblake93@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me> Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2018-03-10 09:59:18 +00:00
;;
mikrotik,hap-ac2 |\
mikrotik,hap-ac3 |\
mikrotik,sxtsq-5-ac)
wlan_data="/sys/firmware/mikrotik/hard_config/wlan_data"
( [ -f "$wlan_data" ] && caldata_sysfsload_from_file "$wlan_data" 0x8000 0x2f20 ) || \
( [ -d "$wlan_data" ] && caldata_sysfsload_from_file "$wlan_data/data_2" 0x0 0x2f20 )
;;
ipq40xx: add support for Netgear SRR60/SRS60 and RBR50/RBS50 The Netgear SRS60 and SRR60 (sold together as SRK60) are two almost identical AC3000 routers. The SRR60 has one port labeled as wan while the SRS60 not. The RBR50 and RBS50 (sold together as RBK50) have a different external shape but they have an USB 2.0 port on the back. This patch has been tested only on SRS60 and RBR50, but should work on SRR60 and RBS50. Hardware -------- SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 (717 MHz, 4 cores 4 threads) RAM: 512MB DDR3 FLASH: 4GB EMMC ETH: - 3x 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet - 1x 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet (WAN) WIFI: - 2.4GHz: 1x IPQ4019 (2x2:2) - 5GHz: 1x IPQ4019 (2x2:2) - 5GHz: 1x QCA9984 (4x4:4) - 6 internal antennas BTN: - 1x Reset button - 1x Sync button - 1x ON/OFF button LEDS: - 8 leds controlled by TLC59208F (they can be switched on/off independendently but the color can by changed by GPIOs) - 1x Red led (Power) - 1x Green led (Power) UART: - 115200-8-N-1 Everything works correctly. Installation ------------ These routers have a dual partition system. However this firmware works only on boot partition 1 and the OEM web interface will always flash on the partition currently not booted. The following steps will use the SRS60 firmware, but you have to chose the right firmware for your router. There are 2 ways to install Openwrt the first time: 1) Using NMRPflash 1. Download nmrpflash (https://github.com/jclehner/nmrpflash) 2. Put the openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_srs60-squashfs-factory.img file in the same folder of the nmrpflash executable 3. Connect your pc to the router using the port near the power button. 4. Run "nmrpflash -i XXX -f openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_srs60-squashfs-factory.img". Replace XXX with your network interface (can be identified by running "nmrpflash -L") 5. Power on the router and wait for the flash to complete. After about a minute the router should boot directly to Openwrt. If nothing happens try to reboot the router. If you have problems flashing try to set "10.164.183.253" as your computer IP address 2) Without NMRPflash The OEM web interface will always flash on the partition currently not booted, so to flash OpenWrt for the first time you have to switch to boot partition 2 and then flash the factory image directly from the OEM web interface. To switch on partition 2 you have to enable telnet first: 1. Go to http://192.168.1.250/debug.htm and check "Enable Telnet". 2. Connect through telent ("telnet 192.168.1.250") and login using admin/password. To read the current boot_part: artmtd -r boot_part To write the new boot_part: artmtd -w boot_part 02 Then reboot the router and then check again the current booted partition Now that you are on boot partition 2 you can flash the factory Openwrt image directly from the OEM web interface. Restore OEM Firmware -------------------- 1. Download the stock firmware from official netgear support. 2. Follow the nmrpflash procedure like above, using the official Netgear firmware (for example SRS60-V2.2.1.210.img) nmrpflash -i XXX -f SRS60-V2.2.1.210.img Notes ----- 1) You can check and edit the boot partition in the Uboot shell using the UART connection. "boot_partition_show" shows the current boot partition "boot_partition_set 1" sets the current boot partition to 1 2) Router mac addresses: LAN XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69 WAN XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6a WIFI 2G XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69 WIFI 5G XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6b WIFI 5G (2nd) XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6c LABEL XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69 Signed-off-by: Davide Fioravanti <pantanastyle@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com> [added 5.10 changes for 901-arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch, moved sysupgrade mmc.sh to here and renamed it, various dtsi changes] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-09-02 00:10:16 +00:00
netgear,rbr50|\
netgear,rbs50|\
netgear,srr60|\
netgear,srs60)
caldata_extract_mmc "0:ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(mmc_get_mac_binary ARTMTD 0xc)
;;
ipq40xx: add netgear wac510 support This adds support for the Netgear WAC510 Insight Managed Smart Cloud Wireless Access Point, an indoor dual-band, dual-radio 802.11ac business-class wireless AP with integrated omnidirectional antennae and two 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet ports. For more information see: <https://www.netgear.com/business/wifi/access-points/wac510> Specifications: SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 (DAKOTA) ARM Quad-Core RAM: 256 MiB Flash1: 2 MiB Winbond W25Q16JV SPI-NOR Flash2: 128 MiB Winbond W25N01GVZEIG SPI-NAND Ethernet: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC, QCA8072 PHY), 2x 1000/100/10 port, WAN port active IEEE 802.3af/at PoE in Wireless1: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC) 802.11b/g/n 2x2:2, 3 dBi antennae Wireless2: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC) 802.11a/n/ac 2x2:2, 4 dBi antennae Input: (Optional) Barrel 12 V 2.5 A Power, Reset button SW1 LEDs: Power, Insight, WAN PoE, LAN, 2.4G WLAN, 5G WLAN Serial: Header J2 1 - 3.3 Volt (Do NOT connect!) 2 - TX 3 - RX 4 - Ground WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3.3 volt level converter! The Serial settings are 115200-8-N-1. Installation via Stock Web Interface: BTW: The default factory console/web interface login user/password are admin/password. In the web interface navigating to Management - Maintenance - Upgrade - 'Firmware Upgrade' will show you what is currently installed e.g.: Manage Firmware Current Firmware Version: V5.0.10.2 Backup Firmware Version: V1.2.5.11 Under 'Upgrade Options' choose Local (alternatively SFTP would be available) then click/select 'Browse File' on the right side, choose openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_wac510-squashfs-nand-factory.tar and hit the Upgrade button below. After a minute or two your browser should indicate completion printing 'Firmware update complete.' and 'Rebooting AP...'. Note that OpenWrt will use the WAN PoE port as actual WAN port defaulting to DHCP client but NOT allowing LuCI access, use LAN port defaulting to 192.168.1.1/24 to access LuCI. Installation via TFTP Requiring Serial U-Boot Access: Connect to the device's serial port and hit any key to stop autoboot. Upload and boot the initramfs based OpenWrt image as follows: (IPQ40xx) # setenv serverip 192.168.1.1 (IPQ40xx) # setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.2 (IPQ40xx) # tftpboot openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_wac510-initramfs-fit-uImage.itb (IPQ40xx) # bootm Note: This only runs OpenWrt from RAM and has not installed anything to flash as of yet. One may permanently install OpenWrt as follows: Check the MTD device number of the active partition: root@OpenWrt:/# dmesg | grep 'set to be root filesystem' [ 1.010084] mtd: device 9 (rootfs) set to be root filesystem Upload the factory image ending with .ubi to /tmp (e.g. using scp or tftp). Then flash the image as follows (substituting the 9 in mtd9 below with whatever number reported above): root@OpenWrt:/# ubiformat /dev/mtd9 -f /tmp/openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_wac510-squashfs-nand-factory.ubi And reboot. Dual Image Configuration: The default U-Boot boot command bootipq uses the U-Boot environment variables primary/secondary to decide which image to boot. E.g. primary=0, secondary=3800000 uses rootfs while primary=3800000, secondary=0 uses rootfs_1. Switching their values changes the active partition. E.g. from within U-Boot: (IPQ40xx) # setenv primary 0 (IPQ40xx) # setenv secondary 3800000 (IPQ40xx) # saveenv Or from a OpenWrt userspace serial/SSH console: fw_setenv primary 0 fw_setenv secondary 3800000 Note that if you install two copies of OpenWrt then each will have its independent configuration not like when switching partitions on the stock firmware. BTW: The kernel log shows which boot partition is active: [ 2.439050] ubi0: attached mtd9 (name "rootfs", size 56 MiB) vs. [ 2.978785] ubi0: attached mtd10 (name "rootfs_1", size 56 MiB) Note: After 3 failed boot attempts it automatically switches partition. Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Marcel Ziswiler <marcel@ziswiler.com> [squashed netgear-tar commit into main and rename netgear-tar for now, until it is made generic.] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-11-25 13:23:58 +00:00
netgear,wac510)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(mtd_get_mac_binary "0:MANUDATA" 0x6) 16)
ipq40xx: add netgear wac510 support This adds support for the Netgear WAC510 Insight Managed Smart Cloud Wireless Access Point, an indoor dual-band, dual-radio 802.11ac business-class wireless AP with integrated omnidirectional antennae and two 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet ports. For more information see: <https://www.netgear.com/business/wifi/access-points/wac510> Specifications: SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 (DAKOTA) ARM Quad-Core RAM: 256 MiB Flash1: 2 MiB Winbond W25Q16JV SPI-NOR Flash2: 128 MiB Winbond W25N01GVZEIG SPI-NAND Ethernet: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC, QCA8072 PHY), 2x 1000/100/10 port, WAN port active IEEE 802.3af/at PoE in Wireless1: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC) 802.11b/g/n 2x2:2, 3 dBi antennae Wireless2: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC) 802.11a/n/ac 2x2:2, 4 dBi antennae Input: (Optional) Barrel 12 V 2.5 A Power, Reset button SW1 LEDs: Power, Insight, WAN PoE, LAN, 2.4G WLAN, 5G WLAN Serial: Header J2 1 - 3.3 Volt (Do NOT connect!) 2 - TX 3 - RX 4 - Ground WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3.3 volt level converter! The Serial settings are 115200-8-N-1. Installation via Stock Web Interface: BTW: The default factory console/web interface login user/password are admin/password. In the web interface navigating to Management - Maintenance - Upgrade - 'Firmware Upgrade' will show you what is currently installed e.g.: Manage Firmware Current Firmware Version: V5.0.10.2 Backup Firmware Version: V1.2.5.11 Under 'Upgrade Options' choose Local (alternatively SFTP would be available) then click/select 'Browse File' on the right side, choose openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_wac510-squashfs-nand-factory.tar and hit the Upgrade button below. After a minute or two your browser should indicate completion printing 'Firmware update complete.' and 'Rebooting AP...'. Note that OpenWrt will use the WAN PoE port as actual WAN port defaulting to DHCP client but NOT allowing LuCI access, use LAN port defaulting to 192.168.1.1/24 to access LuCI. Installation via TFTP Requiring Serial U-Boot Access: Connect to the device's serial port and hit any key to stop autoboot. Upload and boot the initramfs based OpenWrt image as follows: (IPQ40xx) # setenv serverip 192.168.1.1 (IPQ40xx) # setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.2 (IPQ40xx) # tftpboot openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_wac510-initramfs-fit-uImage.itb (IPQ40xx) # bootm Note: This only runs OpenWrt from RAM and has not installed anything to flash as of yet. One may permanently install OpenWrt as follows: Check the MTD device number of the active partition: root@OpenWrt:/# dmesg | grep 'set to be root filesystem' [ 1.010084] mtd: device 9 (rootfs) set to be root filesystem Upload the factory image ending with .ubi to /tmp (e.g. using scp or tftp). Then flash the image as follows (substituting the 9 in mtd9 below with whatever number reported above): root@OpenWrt:/# ubiformat /dev/mtd9 -f /tmp/openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_wac510-squashfs-nand-factory.ubi And reboot. Dual Image Configuration: The default U-Boot boot command bootipq uses the U-Boot environment variables primary/secondary to decide which image to boot. E.g. primary=0, secondary=3800000 uses rootfs while primary=3800000, secondary=0 uses rootfs_1. Switching their values changes the active partition. E.g. from within U-Boot: (IPQ40xx) # setenv primary 0 (IPQ40xx) # setenv secondary 3800000 (IPQ40xx) # saveenv Or from a OpenWrt userspace serial/SSH console: fw_setenv primary 0 fw_setenv secondary 3800000 Note that if you install two copies of OpenWrt then each will have its independent configuration not like when switching partitions on the stock firmware. BTW: The kernel log shows which boot partition is active: [ 2.439050] ubi0: attached mtd9 (name "rootfs", size 56 MiB) vs. [ 2.978785] ubi0: attached mtd10 (name "rootfs_1", size 56 MiB) Note: After 3 failed boot attempts it automatically switches partition. Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Marcel Ziswiler <marcel@ziswiler.com> [squashed netgear-tar commit into main and rename netgear-tar for now, until it is made generic.] Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
2020-11-25 13:23:58 +00:00
;;
ipq40xx: Add support for Teltonika RUTX10 This patch adds support for the Teltonika RUTX10. This device is an industrial DIN-rail router with 4 ethernet ports, 2.4G/5G dualband WiFi, Bluetooth, a USB 2.0 port and two GPIOs. The RUTX series devices are very similiar so common parts of the DTS are kept in a DTSI file. They are based on the QCA AP-DK01.1-C1 dev board. See https://teltonika-networks.com/product/rutx10 for more info. Hardware: SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 RAM: 256MB DDR3 SPI Flash 1: XTX XT25F128B (16MB, NOR) SPI Flash 2: XTX XT26G02AWS (256MB, NAND) Ethernet: Built-in IPQ4018 (SoC, QCA8075), 4x 10/100/1000 ports WiFi 1: Qualcomm QCA4019 IEEE 802.11b/g/n Wifi 2: Qualcomm QCA4019 IEEE 802.11a/n/ac USB Hub: Genesys Logic GL852GT Bluetooth: Qualcomm CSR8510 (A10U) LED/GPIO controller: STM32F030 with custom firmware Buttons: Reset button Leds: Power (green, cannot be controlled) WiFi 2.4G activity (green) WiFi 5G activity (green) MACs Details verified with the stock firmware: eth0: Partition 0:CONFIG Offset: 0x0 eth1: = eth0 + 1 radio0 (2.4 GHz): = eth0 + 2 radio1 (5.0 GHz): = eth0 + 3 Label MAC address is from eth0. The LED/GPIO controller needs a separate kernel driver to function. The driver was extracted from the Teltonika GPL sources and can be found at following feed: https://github.com/0xFelix/teltonika-rutx-openwrt USB detection of the bluetooth interface is sometimes a bit flaky. When not detected power cycle the device. When the bluetooth interface was detected properly it can be used with bluez / bluetoothctl. Flash instructions via stock web interface (sysupgrade based): 1. Set PC to fixed ip address 192.168.1.100 2. Push reset button and power on the device 3. Open u-boot HTTP recovery at http://192.168.1.1 4. Upload latest stock firmware and wait until the device is rebooted 5. Open stock web interface at http://192.168.1.1 6. Set some password so the web interface is happy 7. Go to firmware upgrade settings 8. Choose openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-teltonika_rutx10-squashfs-nand-factory.ubi 9. Set 'Keep settings' to off 10. Click update, when warned that it is not a signed image proceed Return to stock firmware: 1. Set PC to fixed ip address 192.168.1.100 2. Push reset button and power on the device 3. Open u-boot HTTP recovery at http://192.168.1.1 4. Upload latest stock firmware and wait until the device is rebooted Note: The DTS expects OpenWrt to be running from the second rootfs partition. u-boot on these devices hot-patches the DTS so running from the first rootfs partition should also be possible. If you want to be save follow the instructions above. u-boot HTTP recovery restores the device so that when flashing OpenWrt from stock firmware it is flashed to the second rootfs partition and the DTS matches. Signed-off-by: Felix Matouschek <felix@matouschek.org>
2021-07-15 19:48:11 +00:00
teltonika,rutx10)
caldata_extract "0:ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(mtd_get_mac_binary "0:CONFIG" 0x0) 3)
;;
ipq40xx: add support for the ZyXEL NBG6617 This patch adds support for ZyXEL NBG6617 Hardware highlights: SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7 DRAM: 256 MiB DDR3L-1600/1866 Nanya NT5CC128M16IP-DI @ 537 MHz NOR: 32 MiB Macronix MX25L25635F ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8075 Gigabit Switch (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN) USB: 1 x 3.0 (via Synopsys DesignWare DWC3 controller in the SoC) WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2 INPUT: RESET Button, WIFI/Rfkill Togglebutton, WPS Button LEDS: Power, WAN, LAN 1-4, WLAN 2.4GHz, WLAN 5GHz, USB, WPS Serial: WARNING: The serial port needs a TTL/RS-232 3.3v level converter! The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. The 1x4 .1" header comes pre-soldered. Pinout: 1. 3v3 (Label printed on the PCB), 2. RX, 3. GND, 4. TX first install / debricking / restore stock: 0. Have a PC running a tftp-server @ 192.168.1.99/24 1. connect the PC to any LAN-Ports 2. put the openwrt...-factory.bin (or V1.00(ABCT.X).bin for stock) file into the tftp-server root directory and rename it to just "ras.bin". 3. power-cycle the router and hold down the the WPS button (for 30sek) 4. Wait (for a long time - the serial console provides some progress reports. The u-boot says it best: "Please be patient". 5. Once the power LED starts to flashes slowly and the USB + WPS LEDs flashes fast at the same time. You have to reboot the device and it should then come right up. Installation via Web-UI: 0. Connect a PC to the powered-on router. It will assign your PC a IP-address via DHCP 1. Access the Web-UI at 192.168.1.1 (Default Passwort: 1234) 2. Go to the "Expert Mode" 3. Under "Maintenance", select "Firmware-Upgrade" 4. Upload the OpenWRT factory image 5. Wait for the Device to finish. It will reboot into OpenWRT without any additional actions needed. To open the ZyXEL NBG6617: 0. remove the four rubber feet glued on the backside 1. remove the four philips screws and pry open the top cover (by applying force between the plastic top housing from the backside/lan-port side) Access the real u-boot shell: ZyXEL uses a proprietary loader/shell on top of u-boot: "ZyXEL zloader v2.02" When the device is starting up, the user can enter the the loader shell by simply pressing a key within the 3 seconds once the following string appears on the serial console: | Hit any key to stop autoboot: 3 The user is then dropped to a locked shell. |NBG6617> HELP |ATEN x[,y] set BootExtension Debug Flag (y=password) |ATSE x show the seed of password generator |ATSH dump manufacturer related data in ROM |ATRT [x,y,z,u] RAM read/write test (x=level, y=start addr, z=end addr, u=iterations) |ATGO boot up whole system |ATUR x upgrade RAS image (filename) |NBG6617> In order to escape/unlock a password challenge has to be passed. Note: the value is dynamic! you have to calculate your own! First use ATSE $MODELNAME (MODELNAME is the hostname in u-boot env) to get the challange value/seed. |NBG6617> ATSE NBG6617 |012345678901 This seed/value can be converted to the password with the help of this bash script (Thanks to http://www.adslayuda.com/Zyxel650-9.html authors): - tool.sh - ror32() { echo $(( ($1 >> $2) | (($1 << (32 - $2) & (2**32-1)) ) )) } v="0x$1" a="0x${v:2:6}" b=$(( $a + 0x10F0A563)) c=$(( 0x${v:12:14} & 7 )) p=$(( $(ror32 $b $c) ^ $a )) printf "ATEN 1,%X\n" $p - end of tool.sh - |# bash ./tool.sh 012345678901 | |ATEN 1,879C711 copy and paste the result into the shell to unlock zloader. |NBG6617> ATEN 1,0046B0017430 If the entered code was correct the shell will change to use the ATGU command to enter the real u-boot shell. |NBG6617> ATGU |NBG6617# Co-authored-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@googlemail.com> Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
2018-06-21 12:24:59 +00:00
zyxel,nbg6617 |\
ipq40xx: add support for ZyXEL WRE6606 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 (DAKOTA) ARM Quad-Core RAM: 128 MB Nanya NT5CC64M16GP-DI FLASH: 16 MiB Macronix MX25L12845EMI-12G ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n 2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 INPUT: WPS, Mode-toggle-switch LED: Power, WLAN 2.4GHz, WLAN 5GHz, LAN, WPS (LAN not controllable by software) (WLAN each green / red) SERIAL: Header next to eth-phy. VCC, TX, GND, RX (Square hole is VCC) The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. Tested and working: - Ethernet (Correct MAC-address) - 2.4 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - 5 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - Factory installation from tftp - OpenWRT sysupgrade - LEDs - WPS Button Not Working: - Mode-toggle-switch Install via TFTP: Connect to the devices serial. Hit Enter-Key in bootloader to stop autobooting. Command `tftpboot` will pull an initramfs image named `C0A86302.img` from a tftp server at `192.168.99.08/24`. After successfull transfer, boot the image with `bootm`. To persistently write the firmware, flash an openwrt sysupgrade image from inside the initramfs, for example transfer via `scp <sysupgrade> root@192.168.1.1:/tmp` and flash on the device with `sysupgrade -n /tmp/<sysupgrade>`. append-cmdline patch taken from chunkeeys work on the NBG6617. Signed-off-by: Magnus Frühling <skorpy@frankfurt.ccc.de> Co-authored-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> Co-authored-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@googlemail.com>
2018-06-11 21:10:43 +00:00
zyxel,wre6606)
caldata_extract "ART" 0x5000 0x2f20
ath10k_patch_mac $(macaddr_add $(cat /sys/class/net/eth0/address) -1)
ipq40xx: add support for ZyXEL WRE6606 Specifications: SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4018 (DAKOTA) ARM Quad-Core RAM: 128 MB Nanya NT5CC64M16GP-DI FLASH: 16 MiB Macronix MX25L12845EMI-12G ETH: Qualcomm QCA8072 WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n 2x2 WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11n/ac W2 2x2 INPUT: WPS, Mode-toggle-switch LED: Power, WLAN 2.4GHz, WLAN 5GHz, LAN, WPS (LAN not controllable by software) (WLAN each green / red) SERIAL: Header next to eth-phy. VCC, TX, GND, RX (Square hole is VCC) The Serial setting is 115200-8-N-1. Tested and working: - Ethernet (Correct MAC-address) - 2.4 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - 5 GHz WiFi (Correct MAC-address) - Factory installation from tftp - OpenWRT sysupgrade - LEDs - WPS Button Not Working: - Mode-toggle-switch Install via TFTP: Connect to the devices serial. Hit Enter-Key in bootloader to stop autobooting. Command `tftpboot` will pull an initramfs image named `C0A86302.img` from a tftp server at `192.168.99.08/24`. After successfull transfer, boot the image with `bootm`. To persistently write the firmware, flash an openwrt sysupgrade image from inside the initramfs, for example transfer via `scp <sysupgrade> root@192.168.1.1:/tmp` and flash on the device with `sysupgrade -n /tmp/<sysupgrade>`. append-cmdline patch taken from chunkeeys work on the NBG6617. Signed-off-by: Magnus Frühling <skorpy@frankfurt.ccc.de> Co-authored-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net> Co-authored-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@googlemail.com>
2018-06-11 21:10:43 +00:00
;;
esac
;;
*)
exit 1
;;
esac