This patches does not have a valid patch headers and does not apply on
an external git tree with 'git am'. To fix this add the missing headers.
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
The amber and green wan led color was inverted in dts file, which ends
up leaving the wan led amber when the connection is established, so,
switch gpio led number (7 and 8) in qca9563_tplink_archer-c6-v2-us.dts.
Tip: the /etc/config/system file needs to be regenerated.
Signed-off-by: Rodrigo B. de Sousa Martins <rodrigo.sousa.577@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz> [commit subject]
Linux stable v5.15.51 brought commit 7a3a4683562e
("ARM: dts: bcm2711-rpi-400: Fix GPIO line names") which was already
part of a local patch which then failed to apply. Remove the already
applied and now failing hunk from the patch to fix the build.
Fixes: 552d76f2be ("kernel: bump 5.15 to 5.15.51")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
TechNexion PICO-PI-IMX7D is a NXP i.MX 7Dual based development board in
the well-known "Raspberry Pi" form factor, comprising of PICO-IMX7 SoM
and the PICO-PI-IMX7D carrier board.
Usually bundled with a 5" 800x480 LVDS display with I2C touchscreen and
an Omnivision OV5645 camera on a MIPI CSI bus, on a daughterboard. The
board was previously used primarily with "Android Things" ecosystem, but
the project was killed by Google.
This would not be possible, if not for the great tutorial of setting up
Debian on this board, by Robert C. Nelson [1].
Hardware highlights:
CPU: NXP i.MX 7Dual SoC, dual-core Cortex-A7 at 1000 MHz
RAM: 512 MiB DDR3 SDRAM
Storage: 4 GB eMMC
Networking:
- built-in Gigabit Ethernet with Atheros AR8035 PHY,
- Broadcom BCM4339 1x1 802.11ac Wi-Fi (over SDIO) + Bluetooth 4.1
(over SDIO + UART + IS2) combo, with Hirose u.FL connector on the
board,
- dual CAN interfaces on the 40-pin connector,
Interfaces:
- USB-C power input plus USB 2.0 OTG host/device port,
- single USB-A host port,
- serial console over built-in FT232BL USB-UART converter with
micro-USB connector (configuration: 115200-8-N-1),
- analog audio interface with TRRS connector in CTIA standard,
- SPI, I2C and UART interfaces available on the 40-pin,
- mikroBUS connector,
- I2C connector for the optional touch panel,
- parallel LCD output for the optional display,
- MIPI CSI connector for the optional camera
Installation:
1. Connect the serial console to debug USB connector and the terminal of
choice in another window, at 115200-8-N-1. Ensure you can switch to
it quickly after next step.
2. Power-on the board from your PC. Ensure your PC can supply required
current, the board can take more than 1 A in the peak load during
booting and brownout will result in power-on reset loop. Preferably,
use charging-capable USB port or connect through self-powered USB
hub. If U-Boot is present already on the eMMC, interrupt the booting
sequence by pressing any key and skip to point 7.
3. Ensure the boot mode jumpers J1 and J2 are in correct position for
USB recovery:
2 6 2 6
--------------
|o o-o||o-o o|
|o o-o||o-o o|
J1 -------------- J2
1 5 1 5
The jumpers are located just underneath the 40-pin expansion header
and are of the smaller 2 mm pitch.
4. Download and build 'imx_usb_loader' from:
https://github.com/boundarydevices/imx_usb_loader.
5. Power-on the board again from your PC through USB OTG connector.
6. Use 'imx_usb_loader' to load 'SPL' and 'u-boot-dtb.img' to the board:
$ sudo imx_usb u-boot-pico-pi-imx7d/SPL
$ sudo imx_usb u-boot-pico-pi-imx7d/u-boot-dtb.img
7. Switch to the terminal from step 2 and interrupt boot sequence by
pressing any key within 2 seconds.
8. Configure mmc 0 to boot from the data partition and disable access to
boot partitions:
=> mmc partconf 0 0 7 0
This only needs to be set once. If you were running Debian previously,
this is probably already set.
9. Enable USB mass storage passthrough for eMMC from U-boot
=> ums 0 mmc 0
10. Optionally, backup previous eMMC contents by reading out its image.
11. Copy over the factory image to the USB device, for example:
$ sudo dd if=openwrt-imx-cortexa7-pico-pi-imx7d-squashfs.combined.bin \
of=/dev/disk/by-id/usb-Linux_UMS_disk_0-0:0 \
bs=8M status=progress oflag=direct
12. Detach USB MSC interface from your PC and U-Boot by pressing Ctrl+C.
13. Ensure that boot mode jumpers are at the default settings for eMMC
boot:
2 6 2 6
--------------
|o-o o||o o-o|
|o-o o||o-o o|
J1 -------------- J2
1 5 1 5
If they are not, power-off the board, restore them and power-on the
board again. Otherwise, if jumpers are set, just reset the board from
U-Boot CLI:
=> reset
14. The installation is now complete and board should boot successfully.
Upgrading: just use sysupgrade image, as usual in OpenWrt.
Known issues/current limitations:
- OV5645 camera - not described in upstream device tree as of kernel
5.15. There are staging drivers present in upstream Linux tree for
i.MX 7 CSI, MIPI-CSI and video mux, and the configuration is there in
imx7s.dtsi - so this is expected to get supported eventually,
- on-chip ADCs are disabled in upstream device tree, so the kernel
driver remains disabled as well.
[1] https://forum.digikey.com/t/debian-getting-started-with-the-pico-pi-imx7/12429
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
[pepe2k@gmail.com: commit description reworded]
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
Add OpenWrt specific aliases for system LED and label MAC device,
also set default serial console.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
Ensure, that kernel update is performed atomically on filesystem, to
reduce likelihood of failure if power-cut occurs during sysupgrade. If
kernel update fails for whatever reason, skip updating rootfs as well.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
Sysupgrade procedure for i.MX 6 Apalis boards is suitable for most other
i.MX boards booting from eMMC or SD card. Extract the common parts and
decouple the procedure from "apalis" board name in sysupgrade TAR
contents, so the procedure is reusable for i.MX 7 boards.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
Most i.MX boards booting off eMMC or SD cards use raw U-Boot located at
69 kB offset from beginning of the device - create a recipe for such
image.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
The same combined image format can be used to boot both i.MX 6 and
i.MX 7 platforms - extract the common part.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
The PICO-PI-IMX7D board is equipped with external LCD display with
touchscreen. To allow displaying console on it, enable framebuffer,
fbcon and DRM support at early boot.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
[pepe2k@gmail.com: refreshed subtarget kernel config]
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
Import sdma-imx7d.bin from linux-firmware repository at commit:
55edf5202154: ("imx: sdma: update firmware to v3.5/v4.5")
Cortex-A7 boards (i.MX 7 based) use different SDMA firmware than i.MX 6
boards - bundle the correct files in per-subtarget kernel options.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
Add initial symbols required for i.MX 7 boards, based on devices
available on TechNexion PICO-PI-IMX7D board.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
[pepe2k@gmail.com: refreshed subtarget kernel config]
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
Manual rebase by Marty Jones:
bcm27xx/patches-5.15/950-0078-BCM2708-Add-core-Device-Tree-support.patch
All other patches automatically rebased.
Signed-off-by: John Audia <therealgraysky@proton.me>
Signed-off-by: Marty Jones <mj8263788@gmail.com>
[Apply same changes to new dts entry in modified file]
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
setup.c unconditionally sets the sys-led mode (blinking rate) to a
permanent high output. This may cause issues when a board expects this
pin to toggle periodically, e.g. when hooked up to an external watchdog.
If the sys-led peripheral is used to control an LED, the mux should be
configured to use the pin as GPIO0, allowing for better control as a
GPIO LED.
Signed-off-by: Sander Vanheule <sander@svanheule.net>
The devicetree for the ZyXEL XGS1250-12 was missing the description of
the front panel LED labeled "PWR SYS". Let's add it so it can be
controlled by the user.
Signed-off-by: Sander Vanheule <sander@svanheule.net>
Like for RTL838x devices, add a pinctrl-single node to manage the
sys-led/gpio0 mux, and allow using the pin as GPIO.
Co-developed-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sander Vanheule <sander@svanheule.net>
Not all devices using the gpio0/sys-led pin as a GPIO, configure the
pinmux. Add the necessary pinctrl properties to these devices to ensure
the pin is set up for use as GPIO.
Co-developed-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sander Vanheule <sander@svanheule.net>
Tested-by: Bjørn Mork <bjorn@mork.no>
During upload of firmware images the WebUI and CLI patch process
extracts a version information from the uploaded file and stores it
onto the jffs2 partition. To be precise it is written into the
flash.txt or flash2.txt files depending on the selected target image.
This data is not used anywhere else. The current OpenWrt factory
image misses this label. Therefore version information shows only
garbage. Fix this.
Before:
DGS-1210-20> show firmware information
IMAGE ONE:
Version : xfo/QE~WQD"A\Scxq...
Size : 5505185 Bytes
After:
DGS-1210-20> show firmware information
IMAGE ONE:
Version : OpenWrt
Size : 5505200 Bytes
Tested-by: Luiz Angelo Daros de Luca <luizluca@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Markus Stockhausen <markus.stockhausen@gmx.de>
Currently we build factory images only for DGS-1210-28 model. Relax
that constraint and take care about all models. Tested on DGS-1210-20
and should work on other models too because of common flash layout.
Tested-by: Luiz Angelo Daros de Luca <luizluca@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Markus Stockhausen <markus.stockhausen@gmx.de>
Backport upstream solution that permits to declare nvmem cells with
dynamic partition defined by special parser.
This provide an OF node for NVMEM and connect it to the defined dynamic
partition.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
On the NanoPI R4S it takes an average of 3..5 seconds for the network devices
to appear in '/proc/interrupts'.
Wait up to 10 seconds to ensure that the distribution of the interrupts
really happens.
Signed-off-by: Ronny Kotzschmar <ro.ok@me.com>
On boot, kernel log complains no vbus supply is found:
`xhci-mtk 1a0c0000.usb: supply vbus not found, using dummy regulator`
so add the dts node entries to solve the issue
Signed-off-by: Andrew Sim <andrewsimz@gmail.com>
When building the mediatek/mt7629 target in OpenWrt 22.03 the kernel
does not have a configuration option for CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_MEDIATEK. Add
this option to the generic kernel configuration and also add two other
configuration options which are removed when we refresh the mt7629
kernel configuration.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
From now on we will insert CAMEO tags into sysupgrade images for
DGS-1210 devices. This will make the "OS:...FAILED" and "FS:...FAILED"
messages go away.
Signed-off-by: Markus Stockhausen <markus.stockhausen@gmx.de>
The recent differentiation between v1 and v2 of the UniFi 6 LR added
support for the v2 version which has GPIO-controlled LEDs instead of
using an additional microcontroller to drive an RGB led.
The polarity of the white LED, however, was inverted and the default
states didn't make a lot of sense after all. Fix that.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The line trying to generate the standard sdcard.img.gz fails due to
boot.scr not being generated.
Remove the line in order to use the default sdcard.img.gz which is
exactly the same but includes generating the boot.scr file.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
napi_build_skb() reuses NAPI skbuff_head cache in order to save some
cycles on freeing/allocating skbuff_heads on every new Rx or completed
Tx.
Use napi_consume_skb() to feed the cache with skbuff_heads of completed
Tx so it's never empty.
Signed-off-by: Sieng Piaw Liew <liew.s.piaw@gmail.com>
[ fixed commit title ]
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
The international version of Mi Router 4A 100M is physically
identical to the non-international one, but appears to be
using a different partitioning scheme with the "overlay"
partition being 2MiB in size instead of 1MiB. This means
the following "firmware" partition starts at a different
address and the DTS needs to be adjusted for the firmware
to work.
Signed-off-by: Nita Vesa <werecatf@outlook.com>
Specifications:
Chipset:MT7628DA+MT7612E
Antenna : 2.4Ghz:2x5dbi Antenna + 5.8Ghz:2x5dbi Antenna
Wireless Rate:2.4Ghz 300Mbps , 5.8Ghz 867Mbps
Output Power :100mW(20dbm)
Physical port:110/100Mbps RJ45 WAN Port , 310/100Mbps RJ45 LAN Port
Flash: 8Mb
DRam: 64Mb
Flashing: default bootloader attempts to boot from tftp://192.168.1.10/firmware_auto.bin using 192.168.1.1
Known issues:
mac-address-increment for 5GHZ doesnt work, i failed to figure out why. Original firmware using +1 from original value in factory partition.
Signed-off-by: Sergei Iudin <tsipa740@gmail.com>
Beeline SmartBox GIGA is a wireless WiFi 5 router manufactured by
Sercomm company.
Device specification
--------------------
SoC Type: MediaTek MT7621AT
RAM: 256 MiB, Nanya NT5CC128M16JR-EK
Flash: 128 MiB, Macronix MX30LF1G18AC
Wireless 2.4 GHz (MT7603EN): b/g/n, 2x2
Wireless 5 GHz (MT7613BE): a/n/ac, 2x2
Ethernet: 3 ports - 2xGbE (WAN, LAN1), 1xFE (LAN2)
USB ports: 1xUSB3.0
Button: 1 button (Reset/WPS)
PCB ID: DBE00B-1.6MM
LEDs: 1 RGB LED
Power: 12 VDC, 1.5 A
Connector type: barrel
Bootloader: U-Boot
Installation
-----------------
1. Downgrade stock (Beeline) firmware to v.1.0.02;
2. Give factory OpenWrt image a shorter name, e.g. 1001.img;
3. Upload and update the firmware via the original web interface.
Remark: You might need make the 3rd step twice if your running firmware
is booted from the Slot 1 (Sercomm0 bootflag). The stock firmware
reverses the bootflag (Sercomm0 / Sercomm1) on each firmware update.
Revert to stock
---------------
1. Change the bootflag to Sercomm1 in OpenWrt CLI and then reboot:
printf 1 | dd bs=1 seek=7 count=1 of=/dev/mtdblock3
2. Optional: Update with any stock (Beeline) firmware if you want to
overwrite OpenWrt in Slot 0 completely.
MAC Addresses
-------------
+-----+-----------+---------+
| use | address | example |
+-----+-----------+---------+
| LAN | label | *:16 |
| WAN | label + 1 | *:17 |
| 2g | label + 4 | *:1a |
| 5g | label + 5 | *:1b |
+-----+-----------+---------+
The label MAC address was found in Factory 0x21000
Notes
-----
1. The following scripts are required for the build:
sercomm-crypto.py - already exists in OpenWrt
sercomm-partition-tag.py - already exists in OpenWrt
sercomm-payload.py - already exists in OpenWrt
sercomm-pid.py - new, the part of this pull request
sercomm-kernel-header.py - new, the part of this pull request
2. This device (same as other Sercomm S2,S3-based devices) requires
special LZMA and LOADADDR settings for successful boot:
LZMA_TEXT_START=0x82800000
KERNEL_LOADADDR=0x81001000
LOADADDR=0x80001000
3. This device (same as several other Sercomm-based devices - Beeline,
Netgear, Etisalat, Rostelecom) has partition map (mtd1) containing
real partition offsets, which may differ from device to device
depending on the number and location of bad blocks on NAND.
"fixed-partitions" is used if the partition map is not found or
corrupted. This behavour (it's the same as on stock firmware) is
provided by MTD_SERCOMM_PARTS module.
Signed-off-by: Mikhail Zhilkin <csharper2005@gmail.com>
GPIO 1 on the RTL8231 is used to force the PoE MCU to disable power
outputs. It is not used by any driver, but if accidentally set low,
PoE outputs are disabled. This situation is hard to debug, and
requires knowledge of the Broadcom PoE protocol used by the MCU.
To prevent this situation, hog it as an output high. This is
consistent with the ZyXel GS1900 series handles it.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
Fix the wps button to prevent wrongly detected recovery procedures.
In the official banana pi r64 git the wps button is set to
GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW and not GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH.
Import patch to fix on boot unwanted recovery entering:
Press the [f] key and hit [enter] to enter failsafe mode
Press the [1], [2], [3] or [4] key and hit [enter] to select the debug level
- failsafe button wps was pressed -
- failsafe -
Signed-off-by: Nick Hainke <vincent@systemli.org>
rtl8366s is used only by dlink_dir-825-b1 and the netgear_wndr family
(wndr3700, wndr3700-v2, wndr3800ch, wndr3800.dts, wndrmac-v1,
wndrmac-v2).
Not tested in real hardware.
With rtl8366rb, rtl8366s, rtl8367 as modules, rtl8366_smi can also be a
loadable module. This change was tested with tl-wr2543-v1.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Angelo Daros de Luca <luizluca@gmail.com>
It looks like rtl8366rb is used only by tplink_tl-wr1043nd-v1 and
buffalo_wzr-hp-g300nh-rb. There is no need to have it built-in as it
works as a loadable module.
Tested both failsafe and normal boot on tl-wr1043nd-v1.
buffalo_wzr-hp-g300nh-rb was not tested.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Angelo Daros de Luca <luizluca@gmail.com>
At least two AX820 hardware variants are known to exist, but they cannot
be distinguished (same hardware revision, no specific markings).
They appear to have the same LED hardware, but wired differently:
- One has a red system LED at GPIO 15, a green wlan2g LED at GPIO 14 and
a blue wlan5g LED at GPIO 16;
- The other only offers a green system LED at GPIO 15, with GPIO 14 and
16 being apparently not connected
Finally, a Yuncore datasheet says the canonical wiring should be:
- Blue wlan2g GPIO 14, green system GPIO 15, red wlan5g GPIO 16
All GPIOs are tied to a single RGB LED which is exposed via lightpipe on
the device front casing.
Considering the above, this patch exposes all three LEDs, preserves the
common system LED (GPIO 15) as the openwrt status LED, and removes the
color information from the LEDs names since it is not consistent across
hardware. The LED naming is made consistent with other YunCore devices.
A note is added in DTS to ensure this information is always available
and prevent unwanted changes in the future.
Fixes: #10131 "YunCore AX820: GPIO LED not correct"
Reviewed-by: Sander Vanheule <sander@svanheule.net>
Signed-off-by: Thibaut VARÈNE <hacks@slashdirt.org>
Enable PowerPC Book-E Watchdog Timer support. Having this enabled
in-kernel will result in procd starting it during boot.
This effectively solves the problem of the WDT in the Winbond W83793 chip
potentially resetting the system during sysupgrade, which could result
in an unbootable device. While the driver is modular, resulting in procd
not starting the WDT during boot (because that happens before kmod
load), the WDT handover during sysupgrade results in the WDT being
started. This normally shouldn't be a problem, but the W83793 WDT does
not like procd's defaults, nor the handover happening during sysupgrade.
Signed-off-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
Due to licensing uncertainty, we do not include the firmwares for the
wireless chips used in the Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W. To have working
wireless, follow the instructions below.
For people building their own images:
mkdir -p files/lib/firmware/brcm
wget -P files/lib/firmware/brcm/ https://github.com/RPi-Distro/firmware-nonfree/raw/bullseye/debian/config/brcm80211/brcm/brcmfmac43436-sdio.bin
wget -P files/lib/firmware/brcm/ https://github.com/RPi-Distro/firmware-nonfree/raw/bullseye/debian/config/brcm80211/brcm/brcmfmac43436-sdio.txt
wget -P files/lib/firmware/brcm/ https://github.com/RPi-Distro/firmware-nonfree/raw/bullseye/debian/config/brcm80211/brcm/brcmfmac43436s-sdio.bin
wget -P files/lib/firmware/brcm/ https://github.com/RPi-Distro/firmware-nonfree/raw/bullseye/debian/config/brcm80211/brcm/brcmfmac43436s-sdio.txt
Now build the OpenWrt image as usual, and it will include the firmware
files in the correct location.
For people using ext4 images:
Write the ext4 image to the sdcard, then mount the 2nd partition and put
the firmware files from the links above in /lib/firmware/brcm relative
from the mount point where the partition is mounted.
For people using squashfs images:
Write the squashfs image to the sdcard, place it in the Raspberry Pi
Zero 2 W, boot it and wait for the overlay filesystem to be created.
Find the offset of the overlay filesystem in sysfs:
# cat /sys/devices/virtual/block/loop0/loop/offset
25755648
Shut down the device, unplug the power and move the SD card to a Linux
computer. Mount the 2nd partition of the sdcard as a loop device with
the offset found earlier.
sudo mount /dev/sdh2 -o loop,offset=25755648 /mnt/temp
Put the firmware files from the links above in /upper/lib/firmware/brcm
relative to the mount point where the loop device is mounted.
Signed-off-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
Tested-by: Peter van Dijk <peter@7bits.nl>
Asus RP-AC51 Repeater
Category:
AC750 300+433 (OEM w. unstable driver)
AC1200 300+866 (OpenWrt w. stable driver)
Hardware specifications:
Board: AP147
SoC: QCA9531 2.4G b/g/n
WiFi: QCA9886 5G n/ac
DRAM: 128MB DDR2
Flash: gd25q128 16MB SPI-NOR
LAN/WAN: AR8229 1x100M
Clocks: CPU:650MHz, DDR:600MHz, AHB:200MHz
MAC addresses as verified by OEM firmware:
use address source
Lan/W2G *:C8 art 0x1002 (label)
5G *:CC art 0x5006
Installation:
Asus windows recovery tool:
install the Asus firmware restoration utility
unplug the router, hold the reset button while powering it on
release when the power LED flashes slowly
specify a static IP on your computer:
IP address: 192.168.1.75
Subnet mask 255.255.255.0
Start the Asus firmware restoration utility, specify the factory image
and press upload
Do not power off the device after OpenWrt has booted until the LED flashing.
TFTP Recovery method:
set computer to a static ip, 192.168.1.10
connect computer to the LAN 1 port of the router
hold the reset button while powering on the router for a few seconds
send firmware image using a tftp client; i.e from linux:
$ tftp
tftp> binary
tftp> connect 192.168.1.1
tftp> put factory.bin
tftp> quit
Signed-off-by: Tamas Balogh <tamasbalogh@hotmail.com>