Use renamed build step names for all boards which were not handled by
commit c620409d58 ("mediatek: filogic: add uboot build for mt7981")
and now breaking the build.
Fixes: c620409d58 ("mediatek: filogic: add uboot build for mt7981")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Hardware specification:
SoC: MediaTek MT7981B 2x A53
Flash: ESMT F50L1G41LB 128MB
RAM: MT5CC128M16JR-EK 256MB
Ethernet: 4x 10/100/1000 Mbps
Switch: MediaTek MT7531AE
WiFi: MediaTek MT7976C
Button: Reset, WPS
Power: DC 12V 1A
Flash instructions:
1. Attach UART, boot the stock firmware until
the message about failsafe mode appears.
2. Enter failsafe mode by pressing "f" and "Enter"
3. Type "mount_root", then run
"fw_setenv bootmenu_delay 3"
4. Back up all mtd partitions before flashing.
5. Reboot, U-Boot now presents a menu.
6. Connect to your PC via the Gigabit port of the router,
set a static ip on the ethernet interface of your PC.
(ip 192.168.1.254, gateway 192.168.1.1)
7. Select "Upgrade ATF BL2", then use this file:
openwrt-mediatek-filogic-qihoo_360t7-preloader.bin
8. Select "Upgrade ATF FIP", then use this file:
openwrt-mediatek-filogic-qihoo_360t7-bl31-uboot.fip
9. Download the initramfs image, and type "reset",
waiting for tftp recovery to complete.
a. After openwrt boots up, perform sysupgrade.
Note:
1. Since NMBM is disabled, we must back up all partitions.
2. Flash instructions is based on commit 28df7f7.
Signed-off-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
Add reserved memory for pstore/ramoops to device tree used by Linux
as well as U-Boot.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Couzens <lynxis@fe80.eu>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Pick accepted patches from upstream Linux tree instead of having to
maintain our slightly different downstream patches.
Import pending patch fixing I2C on MT7981 by making sure all clocks
are enabled before accessing I2C registers.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Make sure sub-images on the SD card are size-checked, allow
generating SD card without squashfs and/or initramfs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This add basic device tree support for mediatek MT7988 SoC
Signed-off-by: Sam Shih <sam.shih@mediatek.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The Richtek RT5190A is used on the MT7988 reference board. Backport and
enable the driver on the filogic subtarget, so we can support cpufreq
on the MT7988 reference board.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Add driver for the built-in 2.5G Ethernet PHY found in the MT7988 SoC.
To function the PHY also needs firmware files which have not yet been
published via linux-firmware.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Update driver for MediaTek's built-in Gigabit Ethernet PHYs which can be
found in the MT7981 and MT7988 SoCs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Backport commits adding support for the MT7988 built-in switch to the
mt7530 driver.
This change results in the Kconfig symbol NET_DSA_MT7530 to be extended
by NET_DSA_MT7530_MDIO (everything formally covered by NET_DSA_MT7530)
and NET_DSA_MT7530_MMIO (a new driver for the MMIO-connected built-in
switch of the MT7988 SoC).
Select NET_DSA_MT7530_MDIO for all targets previously selecting
NET_DSA_MT7530, with the exception of mediatek/filogic which also
selects NET_DSA_MT7530_MMIO.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
In order to support Ethernet on the MT7988 SoC add support for NETSYS v3
as well as new paths and USXGMII SerDes to the mtk_eth_soc driver.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This adds provisional pinctrl driver support for the MediaTek MT7988 SoC.
Signed-off-by: Sam Shih <sam.shih@mediatek.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This adds clock drivers for the MediaTek MT7988 SoC
Signed-off-by: Sam Shih <sam.shih@mediatek.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This allows loading modules with large memory requirements, recently needed
while testing on armvirt/32. Past forum discussions [1] and bug reports [2]
also raised this and the ipq806x target already set it in response [3].
Given this increases kernel image size by only ~1KB, is generally useful on
multi-platform kernels, and enabled by default on upstream arm32 Linux, add
it to the generic config.
The setting has similar utility on arm64, is a requirement for KASLR, and
already enabled on most OpenWrt aarch64 targets, so pull this into the
top-level generic config.
[1]: https://forum.openwrt.org/t/vmap-allocation-for-size-442368-failed-use-vmalloc-size-to-increase-size/34545/7
[2]: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/issues/8282
[3]: f81e148eb6 ("ipq806x: update 4.19 kernel config").
Signed-off-by: Tony Ambardar <itugrok@yahoo.com>
Allow building SD card images without having both initramfs and squashfs
present on the card, just like it has already been done for the mt7622
and filogic subtargets.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Zyxel EX5601-T0 specifics
--------------
The operator specific firmware running on the Zyxel branded
EX5601-T0 includes U-Boot modifications affecting the OpenWrt
installation.
Partition Table
| dev | size | erasesize | name |
| ---- | -------- | --------- | ------------- |
| mtd0 | 20000000 | 00040000 | "spi0.1" |
| mtd1 | 00100000 | 00040000 | "BL2" |
| mtd2 | 00080000 | 00040000 | "u-boot-env" |
| mtd3 | 00200000 | 00040000 | "Factory" |
| mtd4 | 001c0000 | 00040000 | "FIP" |
| mtd5 | 00040000 | 00040000 | "zloader" |
| mtd6 | 04000000 | 00040000 | "ubi" |
| mtd7 | 04000000 | 00040000 | "ubi2" |
| mtd8 | 15a80000 | 00040000 | "zyubi" |
The router boots BL2 which than loads FIP (u-boot).
U-boot has hardcoded a command to always launch Zloader "mtd read zloader 0x46000000" and than "bootm". Bootargs are deactivated.
Zloader is the zyxel booloader which allow to dual-boot ubi or ubi2, by default access to zloader is blocked.
Too zloader checks that the firmware contains a particolar file called zyfwinfo.
Additional details regarding Zloader can be found here:
https://hack-gpon.github.io/zyxel/https://forum.openwrt.org/t/adding-openwrt-support-for-zyxel-ex5601-t0/155914
Hardware
--------
SOC: MediaTek MT7986a
CPU: 4 core cortex-a53 (2000MHz)
RAM: 1GB DDR4
FLASH: 512MB SPI-NAND (Micron xxx)
WIFI: Wifi6 Mediatek MT7976 802.11ax 5 GHz 4x4 + 2.4GHZ 4x4
ETH: MediaTek MT7531 Switch + SoC
3 x builtin 1G phy (lan1, lan2, lan3)
1 x MaxLinear GPY211B 2.5 N-Base-T phy5 (lan4)
1 x MaxLinear GPY211B 2.5Gbit xor SFP/N-Base-T phy6 (wan)
USB: 1 x USB 3.2 Enhanced SuperSpeed port
UART: 3V3 115200 8N1 (Pinout: GND KEY RX TX VCC)
VOIP: 2 FXS ports for analog phones
MAC Address Table
-----------------
eth0/lan Factory 0x002a
eth1/wan Factory 0x0024
wifi 2.4Ghz Factory 0x0004
wifi 5Ghz Factory 0x0004 + 1
Serial console (UART)
---------------------
+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
| +3.3V | RX | TX | KEY | GND |
+---+---+-------+-------+-------+-------+
|
+--- Don't connect
Installation
------------
Keep in mind that openwrt can only run on the UBI partition, the openwrt firmware is not able to understand the zloader bootargs.
The procedure allows restoring the UBI partition with the Zyxel firmware and retains all the OEM functionalities.
1. Unlock Zloader (this will allow to swap manually between partitions UBI and UBI2):
- Attach a usb-ttl adapter to your computer and boot the router.
- While the router is booting at some point you will read the following: `Please press Enter to activate this console.`
- As soon as you read that press enter, type root and than press enter again (just do it, don't care about the logs scrolling).
- Most likely the router is still printing the boot log, leave it boot until it stops.
- If everything went ok you should have full root access "root@EX5601-T0:/#".
- Type the following command and press enter: "fw_setenv EngDebugFlag 0x1".
- Reboot the router.
- As soon as you read `Hit any key to stop autoboot:` press Enter.
- If everything went ok you should have the following prompt: "ZHAL>".
- You have successfully unlocked zloader access, this procedure must be done only once.
2. Check the current active partition:
- Boot the router and repeat the steps above to gain root access.
- Type the following command to check the current active image: "cat /proc/cmdline".
- If `rootubi=ubi` it means that the active partition is `mtd6`
- If `rootubi=ubi2` it means that the active partition is `mtd7`
- As mentioned earlier we need to flash openwrt into ubi/mtd6 and never overwrite ubi2/mtd7 to be able to fully roll-back.
- To activate and boot from mtd7 (ubi2) enter into ZHAL> command prompt and type the following commands:
atbt 1 # unlock write
atsw # swap boot partition
atsr # reboot the router
- After rebooting check again with "cat /proc/cmdline" that you are correctly booting from mtd7/ubi2
- If yes proceed with the installation guide. If not probably you don't have a firmware into ubi2 or you did something wrong.
3. Flashing:
- Download the sysupgrade file for the router from openwrt, than we need to add the zyfwinfo file into the sysupgrade tar.
Zloader only checks for the magic (which is a fixed value 'EXYZ') and the crc of the file itself (256bytes).
I created a script to create a valid zyfwinfo file but you can use anything that does exactly the same:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pameruoso/OpenWRT-Zyxel-EX5601-T0/main/gen_zyfwinfo.sh
- Add the zyfwinfo file into the sysupgrade tar.
- Enter via telnet or ssh into the router with admin credentials
- Enter the following commands to disable the firmware and model checks
"zycli fwidcheck off" and "zycli modelcheck off"
- Open the router web interface and in the update firmware page select the "restore default settings option"
- Select the sysupgrade file and click on upload.
- The router will flash and reboot itself into openwrt from UBI
4. Restoring and going back to Zyxel firmware.
- Use the ZHAL> command line to manually swap the boot parition to UBI2 with the following:
atbt 1 # unlock write
atsw # swap boot partition
atsr # reboot the router
- You will boot again the Zyxel firmware you have into UBI2 and you can flash the zyxel firmware to overwrite the UBI partition and openwrt.
Working features
----------------
3 gbit lan ports
Wifi
Zyxel partitioning for coexistance with Zloader and dual boot.
WAN SFP port (only after exporting pins 57 and 10. gpiobase411)
leds
reset button
serial interface
usb port
lan ethernet 2.5 gbit port (autosense)
wan ethernet 2.5 gbit port (autosense)
Not working
----------------
voip (missing drivers or proper zyxel platform software)
Swapping the wan ethernet/sfp xor port
----------------
The way to swap the wan port between sfp and ethernet is the following:
export the pins 57 and 10.
Pin 57 is used to probe if an sfp is present.
If pin 57 value is 0 it means that an sfp is present into the cage (cat /sys/class/gpio/gpio468/value).
If pin 57 value is 1 it means that no sfp is inserted into the cage.
In conclusion by default both 57 an 10 pins are by default 1, which means that the active port is the ethernet one.
After inserting an SFP pin 57 will become 0 and you have to manually change the value of pin 10 to 0 too.
This is totally scriptable of course.
Leds description
------------
All the leds are working out of the box but the leds managed by the 2 maxlinear phy (phy 5 lan, phy6 wan).
To activate the phy5 led (rj45 ethernet port led on the back of the router) you have to use mdio-tools.
To activate the phy6 led (led on the front of the router for 2.5gbit link) you have to use mdio-tools.
Example:
Set lan5 led to fast blink on 2500/1000, slow blink on 10/100:
mdio mdio-bus mmd 5:30 raw 0x0001 0x33FC
Set wan 2.5gbit led to constant on when wan is 2.5gbit:
mdio mdio-bus mmd 6:30 raw 0x0001 0x0080
Signed-off-by: Pietro Ameruoso <p.ameruoso@live.it>
Use same logic as in append-metadata so build doesn't fail in case of
missing build-key (it was previously failing on the buildbot runners).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Manually adjusted before running quilt due to new location in tree:
backport-5.15/780-v5.16-bus-mhi-pci_generic-Introduce-Sierra-EM919X-support.patch
backport-5.15/781-v6.1-bus-mhi-host-always-print-detected-modem-name.patch
pending-5.15/790-bus-mhi-core-add-SBL-state-callback.patch
All other patches automatically rebased.
Build system: x86_64
Build-tested: bcm2711/RPi4B, ramips/tplink_archer-a6-v3, filogic/xiaomi_redmi-router-ax6000-ubootmod
Run-tested: bcm2711/RPi4B, ramips/tplink_archer-a6-v3, filogic/xiaomi_redmi-router-ax6000-ubootmod
Signed-off-by: John Audia <therealgraysky@proton.me>
When adding support for the GL.iNet GL-MT3000 a reference to the
non-existent make_gl_metadata.py script was accidentally added.
Remove it, flashing from vendor firmware also works fine without that.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Hardware
--------
MediaTek MT7981 WiSoC
256MB DDR3 RAM
16MB SPI-NOR (XMC XM25QH128C)
MediaTek MT7981 2x2 DBDC 802.11ax 2T2R (2.4 / 5)
UART: 115200 8N1 3.3V
[LEDS] VCC-GND-RX-TX [ETH]
Header is located below the heatsink
Case
----
Unscrew the 4 bottom screws. Remove the top of the case by inserting a
small screwdriver into the ventilation holes and lift the top cover.
This works best by beginning near the ETH-ports. The top is clipped on
the front near the LEDs with two plastic clips. The back has a single
clip in the middle. Start at one of the back edges.
MAC-Addresses
-------------
80:AF:CA:00:F9:C6 LAN
80:AF:CA:00:F9:C7 WAN
80:AF:CA:00:F9:C6 W2
82:AF:CA:30:F9:C6 W5
Installation
------------
1. Connect to the serial port as described in the "Hardware" section.
2. Power on the device. Keep pressing the "0" key to enter the U-Boot
shell.
3. Download the OpenWrt initramfs image. Place it on an TFTP server
connected to the Cudy LAN ports. Make sure the server is reachable at
192.168.1.2. Rename the image to "cudy3000.bin"
4. Download and boot the OpenWrt initramfs image.
$ tftpboot 0x46000000 cudy3000.bin; bootm 0x46000000
5. Transfer the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the device using scp.
Install with sysupgrade.
Note: Cudy does not yet provide a image for disabling their
signature-protection. This has happened in the past. Make sure to check
the wiki for a possible easier installation method.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
The OF LED configuration patch fails on MT7621, as the necessary headers
were only included for the mediatek subtarget with an additional patch.
Fixes: 242fe8634e ("generic: add hack for MT753x LED configuration")
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Apply the same LED configuration used by the vendor-firmware for the
GPY211 controlled WAN LED in OpenWrt.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
As we can now configure the switch LED configuration, write the switch
LED configuration values from the vendor firmware to the switch-IC.
Previously, the switch-LEDs did not show any acitvity or link-status
whatsoever.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Fix following error when building 32bit arm targets with kmod-crypto-sha512
ERROR: module '/home/user/openwrt/build_dir/target-arm_xscale_musl_eabi/linux-kirkwood_generic/linux-5.15.109/arch/arm/crypto/sha512-arm.ko' is missing.
Signed-off-by: Lu jicong <jiconglu58@gmail.com>
Kernel setting CONFIG_IO_URING supports high-performance I/O for file
access and servers, generally for more performant platforms, and adds
~45 KB to kernel sizes. The need for this on less "beefy" devices is
questionable, as is the size cost considering many platforms have kernel
size limits which require tricky repartitioning if outgrown. The size
cost is also large relative to the ~180 KB bump expected between major
OpenWRT kernel releases.
No OpenWrt packages have hard dependencies on this; samba4 and mariadb
can take advantage if available (+KERNEL_IO_URING:liburing) but
otherwise build and work fine.
Since CONFIG_IO_URING is already managed via the KERNEL_IO_URING setting
in Config-kernel.in (default Y), remove it from those target configs
which unconditionally enable it, and update the defaults to enable it
conditionally only on more powerful 64-bit x86 and arm devices. It may
still be manually enabled as needed for high-performance custom builds.
Signed-off-by: Tony Ambardar <itugrok@yahoo.com>
Since CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG is already managed via the KERNEL_DYNAMIC_DEBUG
setting in Config-kernel.in (default N), remove or disable it in target
configs which unconditionally enable it, along with the related setting
CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG_CORE. This saves several KB in the kernels for
ipq40xx, ipq806x, filogic, mt7622, qoriq, and sunxi.
Signed-off-by: Tony Ambardar <itugrok@yahoo.com>
The RealTek 2.5G PHY providing the WAN port of the Netgear WAX206 has
previously been hard-coded in the device tree. Now that the PHY can be
probed correctly also via Clause-45 MDIO, use that instead.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This deactivates the CONFIG_COMPAT kernel option.
With CONFIG_COMPAT the kernel will provide syscall interfaces for arm32
binaries in addition to the interfaces needed for arm64 binaries.
In OpenWrt the complete userspace is compiled for this specific
architecture and support for 32 bit ARM applications is not needed.
This reduces the size and the attack surface for the systems.
On all other targets CONFIG_COMPAT is already deactivated.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This activates the CONFIG_ARM64_SW_TTBR0_PAN option for all arm64
kernels by default.
The CONFIG_ARM64_SW_TTBR0_PAN option prevents the kernel form accessing
user space memory directly. This makes it harder to exploit the kernel.
This is activated by default and was already activate on all other arm64
targets before.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This activates CONFIG_HARDENED_USERCOPY for the remaining targets. This
adds additional checks in the copy_from_user() and copy_to_user()
functions.
This was not activated for ARCHS38 before because of a bug in the Linux
kernel 5.4 till 5.14, which as fixed and is described here:
https://github.com/foss-for-synopsys-dwc-arc-processors/linux/issues/15
I do not know why this was deactivated for mt7629 and rockchip.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Hardware specification:
SoC: MediaTek MT7986A 4x A53
Flash: ESMT F50L1G41LB 128MB
RAM: ESMT M15T4G16256A 512MB
Ethernet (Max Speed):
XDR4288: 1x 2.5G Wan, 1x 2.5G Lan, 4x 1G Lan
XDR6086: 1x 2.5G Wan, 1x 2.5G Lan, 1x 1G Lan
XDR6088: 1x 2.5G Wan, 1x 2.5G Lan, 4x 1G Lan
WiFi:
XDR4288: MT7976DAN (2.4G 2T2R, 5G 3T3R)
XDR6086/XDR6088:
WiFi1: MT7976GN 2.4GHz 4T4R
WiFi2: MT7976AN 5GHz 4T4R
Button: Reset, WPS, Turbo
USB: 1 x USB 3.0
Power: DC 12V 4A
Flash instructions:
1. Execute the following operation to open nc shell:
https://openwrt.org/inbox/toh/tp-link/xdr-6086#rooting
2. Replace the stock bootloader to OpenWrt's:
dd bs=131072 conv=sync of=/dev/mtdblock9 if=/tmp/xxx-preloader.bin
dd bs=131072 conv=sync of=/dev/mtdblock9 seek=28 if=/tmp/xxx-bl31-uboot.fip
3. Connect to your PC via the Gigabit port of the router,
set a static ip on the ethernet interface of your PC.
(ip 192.168.1.254, gateway 192.168.1.1)
4. Download the initramfs image, and restart the router,
waiting for tftp recovery to complete.
5. After openwrt boots up, perform sysupgrade.
Signed-off-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
[Add uboot build, fit and sysupgrade support, fix RealTek PHYs]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Fix the network configuration according to the device tree.
Fixes: 5faff99 ("mediatek: filogic: fix mt7986a ethernet devicetree entries")
Signed-off-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
According to SinoVoip up to 3A @ 3.3V are available for both
SFP modules together. Raise energy limit from 1W (default) to 3W,
however, be aware that using modules consuming more than 1W will
require active cooling!
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
MEMREAD is a new ioctl for MTD character devices that was first included
in Linux 6.1. It allows userspace applications to use the Linux
kernel's OOB autoplacement mechanism while reading data from NAND
devices. The Yafut tool needs this ioctl to do its job.
Signed-off-by: Michał Kępień <openwrt@kempniu.pl>
Now that new pinconf features have been backported sync pinctrl-mt7981
and pinctrl-m7986 with bleeding-edge upstream versions.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>