It was found this device uses a single tri-color power/status LED
rather than individual red/orange LEDs, which also supports green.
Add GPIO for green color and use with `boot` and `running` aliases.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schaper <openwrt@sebastianschaper.net>
Reviewed-by: Philip Prindeville <philipp@redfish-solutions.com>
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
- Correct WiFi MACs, they didn't match oem firmware
- Move nvmem-cells to bdinfo partition and remove &bdinfo reference
- Add OEM device model name R13 to SUPPORTED_DEVICES
This allows sysupgrading from Cudy's OpenWrt fork without force
- Label red_led and use it during failsafe mode and upgrades
MAC addresses as verified by OEM firmware:
use address source
LAN b4:4b:d6:2d:c8:4a label
WAN b4:4b:d6:2d:c8:4b label + 1
2g b4:4b:d6:2d:c8:4a label
5g b6:4b:d6:3d:c8:4a label + LA-Bit set + 4th oktet increased
The label MAC address is found in bdinfo 0xde00.
Signed-off-by: Felix Baumann <felix.bau@gmx.de>
[read wifi mac from flash offset]
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This fixes a well known "LZMA ERROR 1" error, reported previously on
numerous of similar devices.
Fixes: #11919
Signed-off-by: Haoan Li <lihaoan1001@163.com>
A patch was added in kernel 5.4 to support the fiber operation of
AR8033 with ramips devices. In kernel 5.18 similar enhancements
were added to the kernel. Those patches are required for other
fiber based devices but when added, build fails for ramips targets.
This commit removes the ramips patch and adds the kernel 5.18 ones.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kestrel <kestrel1974@t-online.de>
[ split commit,refresh patch and improve commit message ]
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
A patch was added in kernel 5.4 to support the fiber operation of
AR8033 with ramips devices. In kernel 5.18 similar enhancements
were added to the kernel. Those patches are required for other
fiber based devices but when added, build fails for ramips targets.
This commit removes the ramips patch and adds the kernel 5.18 ones.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kestrel <kestrel1974@t-online.de>
[ split commit, refresh patch and improve commit title ]
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
The Config partition of some machines is special, and the openwrt script
cannot read the protest_lan_mac correctly. This problem can be solved by
reading the mac address (ascii) in dts.
Signed-off-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
RA75 has 5 physical LEDs under 2 indicators, mixed with light pipes:
Indicator "System":
GPIO0: blue
GPIO2: amber
Indicator "Signal":
GPIO44: blue
GPIO37: amber
GPIO46: red
All except GPIO46 were already added by Jo Deisenhofer. GPIO46 is used for UART1 by
default, so it needs additional pin control change in devicetree to be operational.
Verified on my RA75.
Signed-off-by: Oleksandr Zharov <alex.zeed@gmail.com>
Instead of passing an array of hex bytes for the Sercomm PID we can now use
the --pid-file parameter.
Signed-off-by: Álvaro Fernández Rojas <noltari@gmail.com>
Prevent the BBT translation layer from remapping the UBI used for
storing rootfs.
Explicitly define the number of blocks reserved for remapping.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Add support for OrayBox X1. It is a 802.11n router, based on MediaTek MT7628N.
Specifications:
SoC: MediaTek MT7628N (580MHz)
RAM: 64 MiB
Flash: 16 MiB NOR (Winbond W25Q128JVSIQ)
Wireless: 802.11b/g/n 2x2 2.4GHz (Built In)
Ethernet: 1x 100Mbps only
USB: 1x USB Type-A 2.0 Host Port
Button: 1x "Reset" button
LED: 1x Blue LED + 1x Red LED + 1x White LED
Power: 5V Micro-USB input
Manufacturer Page:
https://pgy.oray.com/router/x1.html/parameter
Flash Layout:
0x000000000000-0x000000030000 : "u-boot"
0x000000030000-0x000000040000 : "kpanic"
0x000000040000-0x000000050000 : "factory"
0x000000050000-0x000000fe0000 : "firmware"
0x000000fe0000-0x000000ff0000 : "bdinfo"
0x000000ff0000-0x000001000000 : "reserve"
Install via SSH:
Original firmware is based on OpenWRT, but SSH is not start by default,
You should enable it first
1. Login into web admin (10.168.1.1), default password is 'admin'
2. Open the following link, and the result should be {"code":0};
SSH is now started, username is root, password is same as web admin password
http://10.168.1.1/cgi-bin/oraybox?_api=ssh_set&enabled=1
4. You can flash firmware via mtd: mtd write /tmp/firmware_image.bin firmware
Signed-off-by: Bin We <me@udp.pw>
PCI paths of the WLAN devices have changed between kernel 5.10 and 5.15;
migrate config so existing wifi-iface definitions don't break.
This is implemented as a hotplug handler rather than a uci-defaults script
as the migration script must run before the 10-wifi-detect hotplug handler.
based on b452af23a8
migration was forgotten when device trees were adjusted in
688697889cc77913be5bfixes#9374
affected devices:
Netgear R6220
Netgear WAC104
Netgear WNDR3700 v5
Zbtlink ZBT-WE1326
Wiflyer WF3526-P
Arcadyan WE420223-99
Beeline Smartbox Flash (Arcadyan WG443223)
MTS WG430223 (Arcadyan WG430223)
Tested-by: Maximilian Baumgartner <aufhaxer@googlemail.com>
Tested-by: Mikhail Zhilkin <csharper2005@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Felix Baumann <felix.bau@gmx.de>
Hanyang Digitech Co., Ltd.
MSIP-CMM-HYD-HYC-G920
CJ-Hello HYC-G920
SoC : MediaTek MT7621AT
RAM : 256M (SK hynix H5TQ2G63FFR)
FLASH : 16MB (Winbond W25Q128BV)
WiFi : MediaTek MT7602EN bgn 2SS
WiFi : MediaTek MT7612EN nac 2SS
BTN : Reset
LED : - Power RED
- WAN Green
- LAN {1-4}
- WiFi 2.4 GHz Blue
- WiFi 5 GHz Blue
- USB Green
**For MT7621 stage1 DDR Test**
UART : J4 GND - 3V3 - TX - RX - GND / 57600-8N1
```
MT7621 stage1 code 10:33:55 (ASIC)
CPU=500000000 HZ BUS=166666666 HZ
```
**For u boot environment**
UART : J4 GND - 3V3 - TX - RX - GND / 115200-8N1
**UART Menu**
```
Please choose the operation:
1: Load system code to SDRAM via TFTP.
2: Load system code then write to Flash via TFTP.
3: Boot system code via Flash (default).
4: Entr boot command line interface.
7: Load Boot Loader code then write to Flash via Serial.
9: Load Boot Loader code then write to Flash via TFTP.
```
**Steps**
Press 4: Entr boot command line interface.
On the pormpt enter.
`setenv firmware_size 0xf60000`
Then enter.
`saveenv`
Then enter.
`reset`
**Device will reboot**
Set your IP 192.168.100.100/24
Connect your lan cable to wan port.
**On the UART Menu**
Press 2: Load system code then write to Flash via TFTP.
Warning!! Erase Linux in Flash then burn new one. Are you sure?(Y/N) **enter** `Y`
Please Input new ones /or Ctrl-C to discard
Input device IP (192.168.100.55) ==:`192.168.100.55`
Input server IP (192.168.100.100) ==:`192.168.100.100`
Input Linux Kernel filename () ==:`openwrt-22.03.0-ramips-mt7621-hanyang_hyc-g920-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin`
After uploading firmware image, device will boot Openwrt.
Signed-off-by: Muhammad AL-Qadhy <m.ismael@gmail.com>
From https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/12280#issuecomment-1489279860
On Ethernet and WLAN, NAPI is threaded for all queues. This means that the
processing work is not stuck on the CPU that fired the IRQ. Under heavy
load, IRQs get disabled anyway, so it should not matter at all which CPUs
the IRQs fire on.
Basic testing indicates this to be true. There's no speedup or slowdown.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
Nests kernel and ubi into firmware partition in-order to be compatible
with OEM firmware. This allows restoring oem firmware from a backup of
firmware2. Add jffs2 partition which is present in the oem firmware.
Add support for mediatek NMBM (wear leveling on newer mediatek devices).
Exclude UBI partition from NMBM management.
Continues PR #10685.
Tested-by: Felix Baumann <felix.bau@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Felix Baumann <felix.bau@gmx.de>
It isn't feasible to literally backport all upstream phylink_pcs changes
down to Linux 5.15: It's just too many patches, and many downstream
drivers and hacks are likely to break. We are too close to branching off
to risk this, and it's also just too much work.
Instead just add helper functions used by modern PCS drivers while keeping
the original functions instact as well. While this may add a kilobyte or
two of extra kernel size, it has the advantage that we get the best of both
worlds: None of the existing codepaths are touched, but yet we have the
option to backport singular improvements to Ethernet drivers where needed.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
General specification:
SoC Type: MediaTek MT7620N (580MHz)
ROM: 8 MB SPI-NOR (W25Q64FV)
RAM: 64 MB DDR (EM6AB160TSD-5G)
Switch: MediaTek MT7530
Ethernet: 5 ports - 5×100MbE (WAN, LAN1-4)
Wireless: 2.4 GHz (MediaTek RT5390): b/g/n
Buttons: 3 button (POWER, RESET, WPS)
Slide switch: 4 position (BASE, ADAPTER, BOOSTER, ACCESS POINT)
Bootloader: U-Boot 1.1.3
Power: 9 VDC, 0.6 A
MAC in stock:
|- + |
| LAN | RF-EEPROM + 0x04 |
| WLAN | RF-EEPROM + 0x04 |
| WAN | RF-EEPROM + 0x28 |
OEM easy installation
1. Use a PC to browse to http://my.keenetic.net.
2. Go to the System section and open the Files tab.
3. Under the Files tab, there will be a list of system
files. Click on the Firmware file.
4. When a modal window appears, click on the Choose File
button and upload the firmware image.
5. Wait for the router to flash and reboot.
OEM installation using the TFTP method
1. Download the latest firmware image and rename it to
klite3_recovery.bin.
2. Set up a Tftp server on a PC (e.g. Tftpd32) and place the
firmware image to the root directory of the server.
3. Power off the router and use a twisted pair cable to connect
the PC to any of the router's LAN ports.
4. Configure the network adapter of the PC to use IP address
192.168.1.2 and subnet mask 255.255.255.0.
5. Power up the router while holding the reset button pressed.
6. Wait approximately for 5 seconds and then release the
reset button.
7. The router should download the firmware via TFTP and
complete flashing in a few minutes.
After flashing is complete, use the PC to browse to
http://192.168.1.1 or ssh to proceed with the configuration.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Bartenev <41exey@proton.me>
One user reported that his SIMAX1800T couldn't boot like the others. After
debugging, I found that this was caused by the disabled PCIe port. I cannot
reproduce this issue on my SIMAX1800T. But when I disabled pcie2 on the
ASUS RT-AC57U, I got the same result.
It seems that disabling these unused PCIe ports on some mt7621 revisions
will cause PCIe to fail to initialize. So we'd better to re-enable them on
all related mt7621 devices.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
There's no valid mac address for the second band in the eeprom.
The vendor fw uses 2.4G mac + 4 as the mac for 5G radio.
Do the same in our firmware.
Fixes: 23be410b3d ("ramips: add support for TOTOLINK X5000R")
Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
Hardware
========
- SoC: MediaTek MT7621AT (880MHz, Duel-Core)
- RAM: DDR3 128MB
- Flash: Winbond W25Q128JV (SPI-NOR 16MB)
- WiFi: MediaTek MT7915D (2.4GHz, 5GHz, DBDC)
- Ethernet: MediaTek MT7530 (WAN x1, LAN x3, SoC)
- UART: >TX RX GND 3v3 (115200 8N1, J1)
Do not connect 3v3. TX is marked with an arrow.
Installation
============
Flash factory image. This can be done using stock web ui.
Revert to stock firmware
========================
Flash stock firmware via OEM Web UI Recovery mode.
Web UI Recovery method
======================
1. Unplug the router
2. Plug in and hold reset button 5~10 secs
3. Set your computer IP address manually to 192.168.1.x / 255.255.255.0
4. Flash image with web browser to 192.168.1.1
Co-authored-by: Robert Senderek <robert.senderek@10g.pl>
Co-authored-by: Yoonji Park <koreapyj@dcmys.kr>
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
The original claim about conflicting MAC addresses is wrong. mac80211
does increment the first octet and sets the LA bit.
This means our "workaround" actually leads to the issue while
incrementing the last octet is safe.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Cases have been reported in which certain devices do not boot correctly
or have errors. After various tests by users who have such errors it has
been concluded that the SPI frequency should be reduced to 40Mhz, at
this speed it appears that all devices work correctly.
Signed-off-by: Óscar García Amor <ogarcia@connectical.com>
Manually rebased:
ramips/patches-5.10/810-uvc-add-iPassion-iP2970-support.patch
All other patches automatically rebased.
Signed-off-by: John Audia <therealgraysky@proton.me>
This commit includes some additional changes:
- better handling of iv and keys in openssl/wolfssl variants
- fix compiler warnings and whitespace
- build all 3 variants as separate packages
- adjust the new package name in targets' DEVICE_PACKAGES
- remove PKG_FLAGS:=nonshared
[Beeline SmartBox Flash - OK]
Tested-by: Mikhail Zhilkin <csharper2005@gmail.com>
[after test: replaced a hardcoded IV size of 16 by cipher_info->iv_size]
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
Hardware
--------
CPU: MediaTek MT7621 DAT
RAM: 128MB DDR3 (integrated)
FLASH: 16MB SPI-NOR ()
WiFi: MediaTek MT7905 + MT7975 (2.4 / 5 DBDC) 802.11ax
SERIAL: 115200 8N1
LEDs - (3V3 - GND - RX - TX) - ETH ports
Installation
------------
Upload the factory image using the Web-UI.
Web-Recovery
------------
The router supports a HTTP recovery mode by holding the reset-button
when powering on. The interface is reachable at 192.168.0.1 and supports
installation using the factory image.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Add the missing definitions for the PoE passthrough functionality.
The relevant pin is already being exported, but it is missing from
the initial board configuration file. With this change, the user is
now able to toggle the PoE passthorough functionality via the uci cli
Signed-off-by: André Fonseca <mail@andrefonseca.pt>
Wrong pcie port number for WLAN causes missing 5g WLAN interface with 5.15
kernel on Arcadyan WE420223-99 (KPN Experia WiFi).
This changes port from pcie0 to pcie1.
[1.331556] mt7621-pci 1e140000.pcie: pcie0 no card, disable it (RST & CLK)
[1.345299] mt7621-pci 1e140000.pcie: pcie2 no card, disable it (RST & CLK)
[1.359116] mt7621-pci 1e140000.pcie: PCIE1 enabled
Signed-off-by: Mikhail Zhilkin <csharper2005@gmail.com>
Specifications:
* SoC: MT7621AT
* RAM: 256MB (NT5CC64M16GP-DI)
* Flash: 16MB NOR SPI flash (GD25Q127CSIG, using GD25Q128C driver)
* WiFi: MT7615DN (2.4GHz+5Ghz) with DBDC
* Ethernet: 4x1000M LAN, 1x 1000M WAN
* LEDs: Power Blue+Orange,Wan Blue+Orange,WPS Blue,"2.4G"Blue, "5G" Blue,
USB Blue
* Buttons: Reset,WPS, Wifi
* Serial interface: on board but not populated, pinout (from the DC jack
side to the WAN port side) is "3.3V Input Output Gnd". Baud rate is 57600,
settings are 8 data bits, no parity bit, one stop bit, and no flow control.
Stock flash layout:
```
GD25Q128C(c8 40180000) (16384 Kbytes)
mtd .name = raspi, .size = 0x01000000 (16M) .erasesize = 0x00010000 (64K)
.numeraseregions = 0
Creating 7 MTD partitions on "raspi":
0x000000000000-0x000001000000 : "ALL"
0x000000000000-0x000000030000 : "Bootloader"
0x000000030000-0x000000040000 : "Config"
0x000000040000-0x000000050000 : "Factory"
0x000000050000-0x000000060000 : "Config2"
0x000000060000-0x000000fb0000 : "Kernel"
0x000000fb0000-0x000001000000 : "Private"
```
The kernel partition will be replaced with the OpenWrt image, the other
partitions are left untouched.
"Config2" seems to be the config storage used by the stock firmware.
"Private" is a 320kB empty JFFS2 partition that comes with the stock
firmware. One can get a larger space for OpenWrt by merging it with
"Kernel".
OpenWrt flash layout:
```
0x000000000000-0x000000030000 : "u-boot"
0x000000030000-0x000000040000 : "u-boot-env"
0x000000040000-0x000000050000 : "factory"
0x000000050000-0x000000060000 : "config2_stock"
0x000000060000-0x000000fb0000 : "firmware"
0x000000fb0000-0x000001000000 : "private_stock"
```
The OpenWrt image must have 96 bytes of padding in the header.
MAC addresses on OEM firmware:
| | location on the flash | notes |
|------ |----------------------- |---------- |
| lan (eth2) | factory + 0xe000 | on label |
| wan (eth3) | factory + 0xe006 | |
| 2.4g (rax0) | not on flash | lan + 1 |
| 5g (ra0) | not on flash | lan + 2 |
Mac addresses of the 2.4g and 5g interface are stored as ASCII strings in
the u-boot-env partition, but they are not used. OpenWrt calculates
Wifi Mac addresses based on the LAN Mac.
Flash and test instructions:
Flash the encrypted image (available in the OpenWrt forum) through the
stock D-Dink web interface.
1. Open the case, and solder the 4-pin header near the WAN port.
2. Connect it to a USB-UART TTL (3.3V) adapter, no need to connect VCC.
3. Open a terminal emulator (e.g. `screen /dev/ttyUSB0` on linux) with
the settings mentioned above.
4. Setup a TFTP server on your PC that can serve
`xxx-ramips-mt7621-dlink_dir-853-a1-initramfs-kernel.bin`.
5. Connect any LAN port to your PC and set a static IPv4 address to
192.168.0.101 (netmask 255.255.255.0).
6. Power on the device and keeps pressing 1 until you see the prompt.
7. Use default IP addresses and enter the file name accordingly, then hit
enter.
8. Wait until it boots to OpenWrt, the default IP address is 192.168.1.1,
you need to change your PC network adapter to use DHCP in order to access
LUCI.
9. So far, the OpenWrt runs in RAM and the flash contents are not touched.
You can try OpenWrt without having to overwrite the stock firmware, a
reboot clears all changes.
10. Optionally, backup the stock firmware (the "firmware" partition) in
Luci.
11. To permantly install OpenWrt to the device , click
on "System -> Backup/Flash Firmware" in Luci and flash
`xxx-ramips-mt7621-dlink_dir-853-a1-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin`
Known problems:
* WLAN0 defaults to 5G after a fresh installation, to enable 2.4G network,
you need to config it manually in LUCI.
* If you see jffs2 related warnings/errors after updating from the stock
web interface, you need to do a reset in LUCI. The error will be gone after
a cold reboot.
Signed-off-by: Hang Zhou <929513338qq@gmail.com>
Several devices depend on fw_printenv during sysupgrade. Make sure
it always is present in all images, including initramfs images built
by the buildbots.
Fixes: 2449a63208 ("ramips: mt7621: Add support for ZyXEL NR7101")
Signed-off-by: Bjørn Mork <bjorn@mork.no>
MT7621 uses a new PCIe driver in the 5.15+ kernel. Allocating wrong PCIe
port will cause the PCIe NIC to not work properly. This commit fixes
the wrong port numbers on Netgear R6220, WAC104 and WNDR3700 v5.
According to bootlog, MT7612E (5GHz) is connected to pcie0, and
MT7603E (2GHz) is connected to pcie2:
[2.758986] mt7621-pci 1e140000.pcie: pcie1 no card, disable it (RST & CLK)
[2.772862] mt7621-pci 1e140000.pcie: PCIE0 enabled
[2.782579] mt7621-pci 1e140000.pcie: PCIE2 enabled
...
[3.009151] pci 0000:01:00.0: [14c3:7662] type 00 class 0x028000
[3.125715] pci 0000:02:00.0: [14c3:7603] type 00 class 0x028000
Tested-by: Maximilian Baumgartner <aufhaxer@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
[felix.bau@gmx.de: adjust commit message for Netgear devices]
Signed-off-by: Felix Baumann <felix.bau@gmx.de>
Wiflyer WF3526-P and Zbtlink ZBT-WE1326 have the same circuit design.
Installing the misunderstading firmware of ZBT-WE3526 will cause Wi-Fi
not work due to allocate the wrong pcie port. Add alternative name to
help users easily build or download the correct firmware.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
MT7621 gets a new PCIe driver in the 5.15+ kernel. Allocating wrong PCIe
port will cause the PCIe NIC to not work properly. This commit fixes
the wrong port numbers on Zbtlink ZBT-WE1326.
According to the bootlog, MT7612E (5 GHz) is connected to pcie1, and
MT7603E (2 GHz) is connected to pcie2:
[4.197658] mt7621-pci 1e140000.pcie: pcie0 no card, disable it (RST & CLK)
[4.204609] mt7621-pci 1e140000.pcie: PCIE1 enabled
[4.209476] mt7621-pci 1e140000.pcie: PCIE2 enabled
...
[4.307988] pci 0000:01:00.0: [14c3:7662] type 00 class 0x028000
[4.367206] pci 0000:02:00.0: [14c3:7603] type 00 class 0x028000
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
FCC ID: A8J-EPG600
Engenius EPG600 is an indoor wireless router with
1 Gb ethernet switch, dual-band wireless,
internal antenna plates, USB, and phone lines (not supported)
this board is a Senao device:
the hardware is equivalent to EnGenius ESR600 (except for phone lines)
the software is Senao SDK which is based on openwrt and uboot
which uses the legacy Senao header with Vendor / Product IDs
to verify the firmware upgrade image.
**Specification:**
- MT7620 SOC MIPS 24kec, 2.4 GHz WMAC, 2x2
- RT5592N WLAN PCI chip, 5 GHz, 2x2
- QCA8337N Gb SW RGMII GbE, SW P0 -- SOC P5, 5 LEDs
- 40 MHz clock
- 16 MB FLASH MX25L12845EMI-10G
- 64 MB RAM NT5TU32M16
- UART console J2, populated
- USB 2.0 port direct to SOC
- 6 GPIO LEDs power, 2G, 5G, wps2g, wps5g, line
- 3 buttons reset, wps, "reg" (registeration)
- 4 antennas internal omni-directional plates
NOT YET SUPPORTED: VoIP
- Si3050-FT + Si3019-FT Voice DAA, SPI control, PCM data
- Phone Ports "TEL", "LINE" RJ11, 4P2C (2 pins)
**MAC addresses:**
MAC address labeled as MAC ADDRESS
MACs present in both wifi cal data and uboot environment
eth0.1/phy1 ---- *:82 rf 0x4
phy0 ---- *:83 factory 0x4
eth0.2 MAC *:b8 "wanaddr"
**Installation:**
Method 1: Firmware upgrade page:
(if you cannot access the APs webpage)
factory reset with the reset button
connect ethernet to a computer
OEM webpage at 192.168.0.1
username and password 'admin'
Navigate to gear icon, "Device Management", "Tools"
select the factory.dlf image
Upload and verify checksum
Method 2: Serial to upload initramfs:
Follow directions for TFTP recovery
upload and boot initramfs and do a sysupgrade
**TFTP recovery:**
Requires UART serial console, reset button does nothing
rename initramfs-kernel.bin to 'uImageEPG600'
make available on TFTP server at 192.168.99.8
power board, interrupt boot with "4"
execute `tftpboot` and `bootm` (with the load address)
**Return to OEM:**
Images from OEM are provided, but not compatible
with openwrt sysupgrade. So it must be modified.
Alternatively, back up all mtd partitions before flashing
**Note on switch registers:**
The necessary registers needed for the QCA8337 switch
can be read from interrupted boot (tftpboot, bootm)
by using the following lines in the switch driver ar8327.c
in the function 'ar8327_hw_config_of'
where 'qca,ar8327-initvals' is parsed from DTS
before the new register values are written:
pr_info("0x04 %08x\n", ar8xxx_read(priv, AR8327_REG_PAD0_MODE));
pr_info("0x08 %08x\n", ar8xxx_read(priv, AR8327_REG_PAD5_MODE));
pr_info("0x0c %08x\n", ar8xxx_read(priv, AR8327_REG_PAD6_MODE));
pr_info("0x10 %08x\n", ar8xxx_read(priv, AR8327_REG_POWER_ON_STRAP));
Signed-off-by: Michael Pratt <mcpratt@pm.me>
in order for the option ephy-disable to work
without also needing ephy-base option,
we have to skip all the lines that write to mdio addresses that
assume those addresses do not have an external switch.
Otherwise, ephy ports will be disabled in hardware,
but register writes still happen as if they are enabled.
Split the functions so that other things are done first,
and ephy port setup can be skipped with a simple "return".
Tested on Engenius EPG600 (MT7620A ver:2 eco:3)
with QCA8337 external switch
Ref: cc6fd6fbb5 ("ramips: mt7620: add ephy-disable option to switch driver")
Signed-off-by: Michael Pratt <mcpratt@pm.me>
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Some devices like ZBT WE1326 and ZBT WF3526-P and some Netgear models need
to delay phy port initialization after calling the mt7621_pcie_init_port()
driver function to get into reliable boots for both warm and hard resets.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>