This drops the shebang from all target files for /lib and
/etc/uci-defaults folders, as these are sourced and the shebang
is useless.
While at it, fix the executable flag on a few of these files.
This does not touch ar71xx, as this target is just used for
backporting now and applying cosmetic changes would just complicate
things.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
The ZyXEL NBG6617 has a separate kernel partition which is 4MiB large.
Add the kernel size to validate the kernel won't be bigger than this
fixed limit.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
The NETGEAR EX61500v2 and EX6150v2 U-Boot does not support booting LZMA
compressed images. Currently, they are using GZIP compressed kernels,
which results in ledd flash being available to the root and overlay
filesystems.
Using a zImage results in a smaller kernel and therefore increases
available space for rootfs and overlayfs.
Size reduced: ~1.1 MiB
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
ipq40xx is still using swconfig based switch management. This might
change in he future, however disable the DSA and Switchdev support for
now.
Signed-off-by: DENG Qingfang <dengqf6@mail2.sysu.edu.cn>
[rephrased commit message]
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota
CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7
DRAM: 256 MiB
NOR: 32 MiB
ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8072 (2 ports)
USB: 1 x 2.0 (Host 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
LEDS: White, Blue, Red, Orange
Flash instruction:
From EnGenius firmware to OpenWrt firmware:
In Firmware Upgrade page, upgrade your openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-engenius_emr3500-squashfs-factory.bin directly.
From OpenWrt firmware to EnGenius firmware:
1. Setup a TFTP server on your computer and configure static IP to 192.168.99.8
Put the EnGenius firmware in the TFTP server directory on your computer.
2. Power up EMR3500. Press 4 and then press any key to enter u-boot.
3. Download EnGenius firmware
(IPQ40xx) # tftpboot 0x84000000 openwrt-ipq40xx-emr3500-nor-fw-s.img
4. Flash the firmware
(IPQ40xx) # imgaddr=0x84000000 && source 0x84000000:script
5. Reboot
(IPQ40xx) # reset
Signed-off-by: Yen-Ting-Shen <frank.shen@senao.com>
[squashed update patch, updated to 5.4, dropped BOARD_NAME,
migrated to SOC]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
It was noticed that the the whole MAC can hang when transferring data from
one ar40xx port (WAN ports) to the CPU and from the CPU back to another
ar40xx port (LAN ports). The CPU was doing only NATing in that process.
Usually, the problem first starts with a simple data corruption:
$ wget https://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/current/amd64/iso-cd/debian-10.4.0-amd64-netinst.iso -O /dev/null
...
Connecting to saimei.ftp.acc.umu.se (saimei.ftp.acc.umu.se)|2001:6b0:19::138|:443... connected.
...
Read error at byte 48807936/352321536 (Decryption has failed.). Retrying.
But after a short while, the whole MAC will stop to react. No traffic can
be transported anymore from the CPU port from/to the AR40xx PHY/switch and
the MAC has to be resetted.
Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven@narfation.org>
Acked-by: John Crispin <john@phrozen.org>
While "ok" is recognized in DT parsing, only "okay" is actually
mentioned as valid value. Replace it accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
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>
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>
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>
This symbol had been enabled in the initial device support submission
for kernel 4.14, but apparently got lost during the v4.19 port.
The ASUS Lyra MAP-AC2200 has a single (very bright) rgb LED, which is
controlled by the TI/National LP5523/55231 LED driver chip. It is left
enabled in a pulsating infinite rainbow loop by the bootloader,
expecting it to be reconfigured (disabled by default) after the boot
process has finished and is also required to indicate failsafe/
firstboot conditions.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Lippers-Hollmann <s.l-h@gmx.de>
Albert has reported, that his DAP-2610 wont boot with the latest
snapshot and Fredrik has found out, that the device gets stuck at
"Waiting for root device ..." due to missing 5.4 kernel config symbol
CONFIG_MTD_SPLIT_WRGG_FW which was probably lost during the kernel
version bump.
Ref: https://forum.openwrt.org/t/dap-2610-bricked-help-needed
Fixes: 272e0a702a ("ipq40xx: add v5.4 support")
Suggested-by: Fredrik Olofsson <fredrik.olofsson@anyfinetworks.com>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
The bootloader does not always initialize the MDIO pins before booting
Linux. E.g. on version "U-Boot 2012.07 [Chaos Calmer 15.05.1,r35193] (Jul
25 2017 - 11:36:26)" this is the case when booting automatically without
activating the U-Boot console.
Without this change, the kernel boot will complain about missing PHYs:
libphy: ipq40xx_mdio: probed
ar40xx c000000.ess-switch: Probe failed - Missing PHYs!
libphy: Fixed MDIO Bus: probed
With this change it will work as expected:
libphy: ipq40xx_mdio: probed
ESS reset ok!
ESS reset ok!
libphy: Fixed MDIO Bus: probed
Ref: GH-2835
Tested-by: Fredrik Olofsson <fredrik.olofsson@anyfinetworks.com>
Signed-off-by: Leon M. George <leon@georgemail.eu>
[commit description from Fredrik, subject facelift]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Now that check-size uses IMAGE_SIZE by default, we can skip the argument from
image recipes to reduce redundancy.
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
[do not touch ar71xx]
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Place DEVICE_VARS assignments at the top of the file or above Device/Default
to make them easier to find.
For ramips, remove redundant values already present in parent file.
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
[do not touch ar71xx, extend commit message]
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This new symbol popped up in few places. Disable it in generic config.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tomek_n@o2.pl>
[fixed merge conflict in generic/config-5.4]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
There is no such role as target maintainer anymore, one should always
send corresponding changes for the review and anyone from the commiters
is allowed to merge them or eventually use the hand break and NACK them.
Lets make it clear, that it is solely a community doing the maintenance
tasks.
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Acked-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Acked-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
In 5.4 kernel old u32 array way of setting network features was dropped and linkmode is now the only way.
So lets migrate the EDMA driver to support linkmode.
Also, old get/set settings API for ethtool is also dropped so lets convert to new ksettings API while at it as it demands linkmode.
Now, gigabit works properly as well as ethtool.
Previously you would get this in ethtool:
root@OpenWrt:/# ethtool eth1
Settings for eth1:
Supports Wake-on: d
Wake-on: d
Current message level: 0x00000000 (0)
Link detected: yes
Now, features are properly advertised:
root@OpenWrt:/# ethtool eth1
Settings for eth1:
Supported ports: [ TP MII ]
Supported link modes: 10baseT/Half 10baseT/Full
100baseT/Half 100baseT/Full
1000baseT/Half 1000baseT/Full
Supported pause frame use: Symmetric Receive-only
Supports auto-negotiation: Yes
Supported FEC modes: Not reported
Advertised link modes: 10baseT/Half 10baseT/Full
100baseT/Half 100baseT/Full
1000baseT/Half 1000baseT/Full
Advertised pause frame use: Symmetric Receive-only
Advertised auto-negotiation: Yes
Advertised FEC modes: Not reported
Link partner advertised link modes: 10baseT/Half 10baseT/Full
100baseT/Half 100baseT/Full
1000baseT/Full
Link partner advertised pause frame use: No
Link partner advertised auto-negotiation: No
Link partner advertised FEC modes: Not reported
Speed: 1000Mb/s
Duplex: Full
Port: Twisted Pair
PHYAD: 4
Transceiver: internal
Auto-negotiation: on
MDI-X: Unknown
Supports Wake-on: d
Wake-on: d
Current message level: 0x00000000 (0)
Link detected: yes
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert.marko@sartura.hr>
In 5.4 kernel old u32 array way of setting network features was dropped and linkmode is now the only way.
So lets migrate the PHY driver to support linkmode.
Also, now in order for gigabit to work, PHY driver needs to advertise PHY_GBIT_FEATURES instead of PHY_BASIC_FEATURES
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert.marko@sartura.hr>
of_get_mac_address returns valid pointer or ERR_PTR since 5.2 via commit
d01f449c008a ("of_net: add NVMEM support to of_get_mac_address") so the
patch fixes following OOPs on nbg6617:
Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffed
CPU: 1 PID: 1 Comm: swapper/0 Not tainted 5.4.24 #0
PC is at edma_axi_probe+0x444/0x1114
LR is at bus_find_device+0x88/0x9c
Where the PC can be resolved to:
>>> l *edma_axi_probe+0x444
0xc067be5c is in edma_axi_probe (./include/linux/string.h:378).
>>> l *edma_axi_probe+0x43f
0xc067be57 is in edma_axi_probe (drivers/net/ethernet/qualcomm/essedma/edma_axi.c:936)
Which leads to the following code fragment:
935 mac_addr = of_get_mac_address(pnp);
936 if (mac_addr)
937 memcpy(edma_netdev[idx_mac]->dev_addr, mac_addr, ETH_ALEN);
Where using mac_addr=0xffffffed (-ENODEV) as source address in memcpy()
is causing the OOPs.
Acked-by: John Crispin <john@phrozen.org>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Lets enable RAW NAND and Qcom NANDC drivers again in kernel 5.4.
They were dropped when 5.4 support was introduced due to upstream
changing the symbol names so refreshing was not enough.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert.marko@sartura.hr>
[cut long line in commit message, enabled BCH as well]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This patch backports the upstream patch that adds the 4B_OPCODES flag to w25q256 under 4.19 kernel.
This is needed for ipq40xx and ramips.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
This target was switched to kernel 4.19 more than 6 months ago in commit
f342ffd300 ("treewide: kernel: bump some targets to 4.19") and now
with kernel 5.4 support being added it gets harder to support kernel
4.14 in addition to kernel 4.19 and 5.4.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Generate a cpximg that is compatible with the cpximg loader in Compex' u-boot.
The cpximg loader can be started either by holding the reset button during power
up or by entering the u-boot prompt and entering 'cpximg'.
Once it's running, a TFTP-server under 192.168.1.1 will accept an image
appropriate for the board revision that is etched on the board (e.g. 6A04).
The image can be pushed using tftp:
tftp -v -m binary 192.168.1.1 -c put openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-compex_wpj428-squashfs-cpximg-6a04.bin
cpximg files can also be used with the sysupgrade utility in stock images.
(add SSH key in luci for root access)
In mkmylofw_32m, the calculation of the "partition size" has been preferred
to just padding the partition as this will result in less block transfers
during flashing (while the additional complexity is bearable).
Signed-off-by: Leon M. George <leon@georgemail.eu>
Co-developed-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This patch adds support for the 8devices Habanero development board.
Specs are:
CPU: QCA IPQ4019
RAM: DDR3L 512MB
Storage: 32MB SPI-NOR and optional Parallel SLC NAND(Some boards ship with it and some without)
WLAN1: 2.4 GHz built into IPQ4019 (802.11n) 2x2
WLAN2: 5 GHz built into IPO4019 (802.11ac Wawe-2) 2x2
Ethernet: 5x Gbit LAN (QCA 8075)
USB: 1x USB 2.0 and 1x USB 3.0 (Both built into IPQ4019)
MicroSD slot (Uses SD controller built into IPQ4019)
SDIO3.0/EMMC slot (Uses the same SD controller)
Mini PCI-E Gen 2.0 slot (Built into IPQ4019)
5x LEDs (4 GPIO controllable)
2x Pushbutton (1 is connected to GPIO, other to SoC reset)
LCD ZIF socket (Uses the LCD controller built into IPQ4019 which has no driver support)
1x UART 115200 rate on J18
2x breakout development headers
12V DC Jack for power
DIP switch for bootstrap configuration
Installation instructions:
Since boards ship with vendors fork of OpenWrt sysupgrade can be used.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
This commit finally adds support for the built in SD/MMC controller in IPQ4019 SoC.
Controller is supported by the upstream SDHCI-MSM driver with a minor clock setting patch.
Patch is special to the IPQ4019 and cannot be upstreamed.
LDO and SDHCI node are upstreamed, and LDO node is awaiting to be accepted.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
This fixes a typo in the device string for MAC address setup in
02_network and corrects the indent in the device's DTS files.
While at it, move the aliases section before the keys section to
have it closer to the top of the file.
Fixes: a736d912e2 ("ipq40xx: add support for EnGenius EAP2200")
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This patch just refreshes the 5.4 patches. It seems as if
070-v4.20-soc-qcom-spm-add-SCM-probe-dependency.patch is
already applied, so drop it. It also does a quick
make kernel_oldconfig to get rid of unneeded symbols.
[Looks like USB and Ethernet need some more work].
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This backports commits from master that fix AES ciphers when using the
qce driver:
- A couple of simple fixes for CTR and XTS modes used with AES:
* 041-crypto-qce-fix-ctr-aes-qce-block-chunk-sizes.patch
* 042-crypto-qce-fix-xts-aes-qce-key-sizes.patch
- A fix for a bug that affected cases when there were more entries in
the input sg list than necessary to actually encrypt, resulting in
failure in gcm, where the authentication tag is present after the
encryption data:
* 043-crypto-qce-save-a-sg-table-slot-for-result-buf.patch
- A fix to update the IV buffer passed to the driver from the kernel:
* 044-crypto-qce-update-the-skcipher-IV.patch
- A patch that reduces memory footprint and driver initialization by
only initializing the fallback mechanism where it is actually used:
* 046-crypto-qce-initialize-fallback-only-for-AES.patch
- Three patches that make gcm and xts modes work with the qce driver,
and improve performance with small blocks:
* 047-crypto-qce-use-cryptlen-when-adding-extra-sgl.patch
* 048-crypto-qce-use-AES-fallback-for-small-requests.patch
* 049-crypto-qce-handle-AES-XTS-cases-that-qce-fails.patch
- A patch that allows the hashes/ciphers to be built individually.
* 051-crypto-qce-allow-building-only-hashes-ciphers.patch
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
[renumbered patches, added patches from dropped commit, refreshed, 5.4]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This adds the neon based implementations of AES & SHA256.
For AES, according to the kernel config help:
Use a faster and more secure NEON based implementation of AES in CBC,
CTR and XTS modes.
Bit sliced AES gives around 45% speedup on Cortex-A15 for CTR mode
and for XTS mode encryption, CBC and XTS mode decryption speedup is
around 25%. (CBC encryption speed is not affected by this driver.)
This implementation does not rely on any lookup tables so it is
believed to be invulnerable to cache timing attacks.
...
The observed speedups on ipq40xx are more modest: speedup is around 20%
for CTR mode and for XTS mode encryption, CBC and XTS mode decryption
speedup is around 10%. Measurements were made using tcrypt, with
1024-bytes blocks for CTR & CBC, and 4096-bytes for XTS.
The aes-neon-bs driver uses a fallback for CBC encryption; that fallback
could be either the generic driver written in C, or the scalar arm-asm
one. Even though aes-arm is 1.9% slower, it is more resilient to timing
attacks (the reason for being slower), so it is being included here.
The neon sha256 module increases performance over the generic module by
33%.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
[Enable only ciphers for now, reorder patch in series to help bisect
as new symbols could lead to build failures, 5.4]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This backports a commit updating the API of the QCE crypto engine to
what is used in current kerenl, easing future upstream backports.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
[renumber patches, refreshed, added 5.4 patches]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
SOC: IPQ4019 / QCA Dakota
CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7
DRAM: 256 MiB
FLASH: NOR 4 MiB + NAND 128 MiB
ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8072
WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2
WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2
WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9888 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2
INPUT: WPS Button
LEDS: Power, LAN1, LAN2, WLAN 2.4GHz, WLAN 5GHz-1, WLAN 5GHz-2, OPMODE
1. Load Ramdisk via U-Boot
To set up the flash memory environment, do the following:
a. As a preliminary step, ensure that the board console port is connected to the PC using these RS232 parameters:
* 115200bps
* 8N1
b. Confirm that the PC is connected to the board using one of the Ethernet ports.
c. Set a static ip 192.168.99.8 for Ethernet that connects to board.
d. The PC must have a TFTP server launched and listening on the interface to which the board is connected.
e. At this stage power up the board and, after a few seconds, press 4 and then any key during the countdown.
U-BOOT> set serverip 192.168.99.9 && tftpboot 0x84000000 192.168.99.8:openwrt.itb && bootm
Signed-off-by: Steven Lin <steven.lin@senao.com>
[copied 4.19 dts to 5.4]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This patch fixes the occurences of the following warning
message from the dtc:
Warning (reg_format): /soc/spi@78b5000/flash0@0/partitions/partition@0:reg:
property has invalid length (8 bytes) (#address-cells == 2, #size-cells == 1)
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
SOC: IPQ4018 / QCA Dakota
CPU: Quad-Core ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) Cortex-A7
DRAM: 256 MiB
NOR: 32 MiB
ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8072 (1 port)
WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2:2x2
WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4018 5GHz 802.11a/n/ac 2:2x2
INPUT: RESET Button
LEDS: White, Blue, Red, Orange
Flash instruction:
From EnGenius firmware to OpenWrt firmware:
In Firmware Upgrade page, upgrade your openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-engenius_emd1-squashfs-factory.bin directly.
From OpenWrt firmware to EnGenius firmware:
1. Setup a TFTP server on your computer and configure static IP to 192.168.99.8
Put the EnGenius firmware in the TFTP server directory on your computer.
2. Power up EMD1. Press 4 and then press any key to enter u-boot.
3. Download EnGenius firmware
(IPQ40xx) # tftpboot 0x84000000 openwrt-ipq40xx-emd1-nor-fw-s.img
4. Flash the firmware
(IPQ40xx) # imgaddr=0x84000000 && source 0x84000000:script
5. Reboot
(IPQ40xx) # reset
Signed-off-by: Yen-Ting-Shen <frank.shen@senao.com>
[removed BOARD_NAME]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
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>
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>
Hardware:
SOC: Qualcomm IPQ4018
RAM: 128 MB Nanya NT5CC64M16GP-DI
FLASH: 16 MB Macronix MX25L12805D
ETH: Qualcomm QCA8075 (4 Gigabit ports, 3xLAN, 1xWAN)
WLAN: Qualcomm IPQ4018 (2.4 & 5 Ghz)
BUTTON: Shared WPS/Reset button
LED: RGB Status/Power LED
SERIAL: Header J8 (UART, Left side of board). Numbered from
top to bottom:
(1) GND, (2) TX, (3) RX, (4) VCC (White triangle
next to it).
3.3v, 115200, 8N1
Tested/Working:
* Ethernet
* WiFi (2.4 and 5GHz)
* Status LED
* Reset Button (See note below)
Implementation notes:
* The shared WPS/Reset button is implemented as a Reset button
* I could not find a original firmware image to reverse engineer, meaning
currently it's not possible to flash OpenWrt through the Web GUI.
Installation (Through Serial console & TFTP):
1. Set your PC to fixed IP 192.168.1.12, Netmask 255.255.255.0, and connect to
one of the LAN ports
2. Rename the initramfs image to 'C0A8010B.img' and enable a TFTP server on
your pc, to serve the image
2. Connect to the router through serial (See connection properties above)
3. Hit a key during startup, to pause startup
4. type `setenv serverip 192.168.1.12`, to set the tftp server address
5. type `tftpboot`, to load the image from the laptop through tftp
6. type `bootm` to run the loaded image from memory
6. (If you want to return to stock firmware later, create an full MTD backup,
e.g. using instructions here https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/installation/generic.backup#create_full_mtd_backup)
7. Transfer the 'sysupgrade' OpenWrt firmware image from PC to router, e.g.:
`scp xxx-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/upgrade.bin`
8. Run sysupgrade to permanently install OpenWrt to flash: `sysupgrade -n /tmp/upgrade.bin`
Revert to stock:
To revert to stock, you need the MTD backup from step 6 above:
1. Unpack the MTD backup archive
2. Transfer the 'firmware' partition image to the router (e.g. mtd8_firmware.backup)
3. On the router, do `mtd write mtd8_firmware.backup firmware`
Signed-off-by: Tom Brouwer <tombrouwer@outlook.com>
[removed BOARD_NAME, OpenWRT->OpenWrt, changed LED device name to board name]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This patch partially reverts
"ipq40xx: remove unnecessary usb nodes in DTS for ASUS RT-AC58U"
as the change removed the usb2 port-trigger, so the LED would no
longer light-up when a USB 2.0 was inserted into the USB port.
Fixes: d0efb1ba95 ("ipq40xx: remove unnecessary usb nodes in DTS for ASUS RT-AC58U")
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This patch uses the SOC variable to calculate DTS names automatically
based on the SOC and the device definition node name.
This reduces redundancy and (by having to choose DTS name
appropriately) will unify the naming of a device in different places
(image/Makefile, DTS name, compatible, image name). This is supposed
to make life easier for developers and reviewers.
Since the kernel uses a "soc-device.dts" scheme for this target, we
use this for the derivation of DEVICE_DTS, too, and rename the files
not having followed it so far.
Note that for some devices the kernel itself is inconsistent, leaving
us with a manual overwrite for ap.dk01.1-c1 and ap.dk04.1-c1.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Deactivate CONFIG_SFP for kernel 4.19 in the generic configuration.
The CONFIG_SFP configuration option was not set to anything in the
ath79 build for me, set it to deactivated by default.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This patch does the following:
- move WiFi LED setup to DTS
- fix LAN/WAN MAC addresses and add label MAC address
- wan5G -> wlan5G, power -> led_power
- increase flash SPI frequency to 30MHz
MAC addresses are stored in Factory partition at:
0x1006: WiFi 2.4GHz, WAN (label_mac)
0x5006: WiFi 5GHz, LAN (label_mac +4)
By improving flash speed,
`time dd if=/dev/mtdblock8 of=/dev/null bs=2k`
is reduced from 7m 10.26s to 5m 9.52s.
Using higher frequencies did not improve speed further.
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
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>
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>
Lets move common code for Jalapeno into DTSI, this way Jalapeno based
boards don't introduce duplicate code.
While at it, lets also fix some style issues and update to current DTS
style.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert@meshpoint.me>
[commit description long line wrap]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Use reset-gpio instead of the custom phy-reset-gpio property to do phy
reset on the U4019. phy-reset-gpio was incorrectly introduced when we
added support for the U4019, and will be deprecated.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
The old GPIO based phy reset (phy-reset-gpio) will be removed form
the ipq40xx mdio driver in the future.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Danzberger <daniel@dd-wrt.com>
Commit 6f6c00cfc9 ("ipq40xx: Add support for Unielec U4019") has
introduced support for `phy-reset-gpio` DT property, which isn't needed
as the MDIO already supports `reset-gpios`[1] which could be used instead.
1. https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v4.19.81/source/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/mdio.txt
Ref: PR#2511
Signed-off-by: DENG Qingfang <dengqf6@mail2.sysu.edu.cn>
[commit title and description facelift]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
This cosmetical patch converts IMAGE_SIZE, KERNEL_SIZE and
BLOCKSIZE definitions to kilobytes, as this is consistent and
easier to read/type.
An exception was made for asus_rt-ac58u, where the IMAGE_SIZE of
20439364 cannot be divided by 1024 (and also does not seem to
match anything in DTS).
Build-tested for all devices.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This device contains 2 flash devices. One NOR (32M) and one NAND (128M).
U-boot and caldata are on the NOR, the firmware on the NAND.
SoC: IPQ4019
CPU: 4x 710MHz ARMv7
RAM: 256MB
FLASH: NOR:32MB NAND:128MB
ETH: 2x GMAC Gigabit
POE: 802.3 af/at POE, IEEE802.3af/IEEE802.3at(48-56V)
WIFI: 1x 2.4Ghz Atheros qca4019 2x2 MU-MIMO
1x 5.0Ghz Atheros qca4019 2x2 MU-MIMO
USB: 1x 3.0
PCI: 1x Mini PCIe
SIM: 1x Slot
SD: 1x MicroSD slot
BTN: Reset
LED: - Power
- Ethernet
UART: 1x Serial Port 4 Pin Connector (UART)
1x Serial Port 6 Pin Connector (High Speed UART)
POWER: 12V 2A
Installation
------------
Initial flashing can only be done via u-boot using the following commands:
tftpboot openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-compex_wpj419-squashfs-nand-factory.ubi
nand erase.chip; nand write ${fileaddr} 0x0 ${filesize}
res
Signed-off-by: Daniel Danzberger <daniel@dd-wrt.com>
This is based on the EX6150v2, which should be identical to
the EX6100v2:
The device bears two MAC addresses ("MAC 1" and "MAC 2") that
correspond to phy0 and phy1.
The ethernet MAC address (gmac0) is the same as phy0.
As this one is accessible via local-mac-address in gmac0, the
latter is used for label-mac-device.
(Although this is a one-port, gmac1 also has a local-mac-address
assigned. This has the same vendor part as the other addresses,
but completely different data for the device part.)
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
If flash size is used as part of a device's title, it should be
specified as DEVICE_VARIANT like for the other devices so far.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
generic: Add/rename patches for upstream consistency
ipq40xx: generic-level patch replaces same-source patches-4.19/
082-v4.20-mtd-spinand-winbond-Add-support-for-W25N01GV.patch
The SPI-NAND framework from Linux uses common driver code that is then
"tuned" by a tiny struct of chip-specific data that describes
available commands, timing, and layout (data and OOB data). Several
manufacturers and chips have been added since 4.19, several of which
are used in devices already supported by OpenWrt (typically with no or
"legacy" access to their NAND memory). This commit catches up the
supported-chip definitions through Linux 5.2-rc6 and linux/next.
The driver is only compiled for platforms with CONFIG_MTD_SPI_NAND=y.
This presently includes ipq40xx and pistachio, with the addition of
ath79-nand in these commits (and not ath79-generic or ath79-tiny).
Upstream patches refreshed against 4.19.75
Build-tested-on: ipq40xx
Run-tested-on: ath79-nand
Signed-off-by: Jeff Kletsky <git-commits@allycomm.com>
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>
This adds a missing backslash in the caldata-extraction script. Without
this fix, caldata extraction fails for every device.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This commit completely fixes the abortion of the ipq40xx ethernet driver
probe in case no phy-reset is defined.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
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>
edma_read_append_stats() gets called from two places in the driver.
The first place is the kernel timer that periodically updates
the statistics, so nothing gets lost due to overflows.
The second one it's part of the userspace ethtool ioctl handler
to provide up-to-date values.
For this configuration, the use of spin_lock() is not sufficient
and as per:
<https://mirrors.edge.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/rusty/kernel-locking/c214.html>
the locking has to be upgraded to spin_lock_bh().
Signed-off-by: Masafumi UTSUGI <mutsugi@allied-telesis.co.jp>
[folded patch into 710-, rewrote message]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
While all ath10k eeproms have a checksum field, so far two
functions for patching ath10k MAC address have been present (and
been used).
This merges code to provide a single function ath10k_patch_mac
in caldata.sh, having its name in accordance with ath9k functions.
By doing so, correct MAC patching for current and future ath10k
devices should be ensured.
This patch adds checksum adjustments for several targets on
ath79 and lantiq.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
The CWMP-Account on the device's label contains the eth0 MAC
address.
This only changes 4.19 files as label-mac-device is introduced
after 19.07 branch, so there won't be a 4.14 release anymore.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This unifies MAC address patch functions and moves them to a
common script. While those were implemented differently for
different targets, they all seem to do the same. The number of
different variants is significantly reduced by this patch.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This moves the almost identical calibration data extraction
functions present multiple times in several targets to a single
library file /lib/functions/caldata.sh.
Functions are renamed with more generic names to merge different
variants that only differ in their names.
Most of the targets used find_mtd_chardev, while some used
find_mtd_part inside the extraction code. To merge them, the more
abundant version with find_mtd_chardev is used in the common code.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
[rebase on latest master; add mpc85xx]
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
The xor() function is defined in each of the caldata extraction
scripts for several targets. Move it to functions.sh to reduce
duplicate code.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
The ar40xx driver currently panics in case no QCA807x PHY has been
successfully probed. This happens when the external PHY is still
in reset when probing the ar40xx switch driver.
Note that this patch does not fix the root cause, ar40xx_probe now
simply fails instead of causing a kernel panic due to a nullpointer
dereference.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This adds the CRYPTO_ALG_KERN_DRIVER_ONLY flag to Qualcomm crypto engine
driver algorithms, so that openssl devcrypto can recognize them as
hardware-accelerated.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
[refresh, move to ipq40xx as its the only target right now]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Now that $UPGRADE_BACKUP is set conditionally there is no need to check
the $UPGRADE_OPT_SAVE_CONFIG anymore. All conditions can be simplified.
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
It's a variable set by procd that should replace hardcoded
/tmp/sysupgrade.tgz.
This change requires the most recent procd with the commit 0f3c136
("sysupgrade: set UPGRADE_BACKUP env variable").
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
This var has been replaced by the $UPGRADE_OPT_UPGRADE_OPT_SAVE_CONFIG
Fixes: b534ba9611 ("base-files: pass "save_config" option to the "sysupgrade" method")
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
Harri Hursti reported that ALFA Network AP120C-AC does not
work anymore due to: "Unknown package 'ipq-wifi-alfa-network_ap120c-ac'."
This patch fixes the issue by removing the stale package from
the device's dependencies as the calibration data is now
provided by the upstream board-2.bin.
Reported-by: Harri Hursti <harri@nordicinnovationlabs.com>
Fixes: 8f757d427c ("ipq-wifi: drop upstreamed custom board-2.bin")
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Both targets miss a subtarget causing an image naming style which is
different from other all othe targets, even tho it already uses
`x/generic/` as subfolder as if the subtarget would exist.
This commit adds the Generic subtarget resulting in consistent naming.
~/src/openwrt/openwrt/bin/targets/ipq806x/generic$ ls
openwrt-ipq806x-generic-netgear_d7800-initramfs-uImage
openwrt-ipq806x-generic-netgear-d7800.manifest
openwrt-ipq806x-generic-netgear_d7800-squashfs-factory.img
openwrt-ipq806x-generic-netgear_d7800-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
CC: John Crispin <john@phrozen.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
The BDFs for the:
ALFA Network AP120C-AC
ASUS Lyra
AVM FRITZ!Box 7530
AVM FRITZ!Repeater 3000
EnGenius EAP1300
EnGenius ENS620EXT
Netgear Orbi Pro SRK60
boards were upstreamed to the ath10k-firmware repository
and linux-firmware.git.
Furthermore the BDFs for the:
OpenMesh A42 specific BDFs
OpenMesh A62 specific BDFs
Linksys EA6350v3
have been updated.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This commit made the following changes to sync all bootcount scripts:
1. use boot() instead of start()
This script only needs to be executed once when boot is complete.
use boot() to make this explicit.
2. drop sourcing of /lib/functions.sh
This is aready done in /etc/rc.common.
3. ramips: replace board name checking with a case
Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
The AVM Fritz!Box 7530 (and probably other AVM IPQ4019 NAND devices)
has it's caldata not stored consistently, but instead at currently
3 known possible offsets.
As we get a non-zero exit code from fritz_cal_extract, simply try all
three possible offsets on both bootloader partitions, until a matching
caldata for each radio is found.
Reported-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This changes size and offset set for WiFi caldata extraction and
MAC address adjustment to hexadecimal notation.
This will be much clearer for the reader when numbers are big, and
will also match the style used for mtd-cal-data in DTS files.
Since dd cannot deal with hexadecimal notation, one has to convert
back to decimal by simple $(($hexnum)).
Acked-by: Alexander Couzens <lynxis@fe80.eu>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This changes the offsets for the MAC address location in
mtd_get_mac_binary* and mtd_get_mac_text to hexadecimal notation.
This will be much clearer for the reader when numbers are big, and
will also match the style used for mtd-mac-address in DTS files.
(e.g. 0x1006 and 0x5006 are much more useful than 4102 and 20486)
Acked-by: Alexander Couzens <lynxis@fe80.eu>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
The [devm_]mdiobus_alloc[_size()] functions are creating
the array of interrupt numbers as well as initializing
them to POLLING.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
The MDIO node will become more important in the future.
Hence, this patch adds DT labels to make the properties
inside the various subnodes more accessible.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
1) nand_do_upgrade() is always called by a target code
2) nand_do_upgrade() starts with calling platform_nand_pre_upgrade()
It means there is no need for the platform_nand_pre_upgrade() callback
at all. All code that was present there could bo moved & simplly called
by a target right before the nand_do_upgrade().
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
When OEM volumes are present in the [alt_]firmware partition,
sysupgrade will write a new kernel, but will fail to write
the root file system. The next boot will hang indefinitely
Waiting for root device /dev/ubiblock0_0...
Modified ipq40xx/base-files/lib/upgrade/linksys.sh
to remove both `squashfs` and `ubifs` if found
on the target firmware partition's UBI device.
Run-tested-on: Linksys EA8300
Signed-off-by: Jeff Kletsky <git-commits@allycomm.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[applied some shellcheck suggestions as well]
Lets bump kernel to 4.19 on targets which were run tested or got ACKed
so we've enough time to make it ready for next release:
armvirt/32 (runtested in qemu)
armvirt/64 (runtested in qemu)
ath79/generic (runtested on Carambola2)
gemini/generic (runtested on DIR-685, DNS-313, SQ201, SL93512R)
imx6/generic (runtested on Apalis)
ipq40xx/generic (runtested on nbg6617)
malta/be64 (runtested in qemu)
malta/be (runtested in qemu)
malta/le (runtested in qemu)
malta/le64 (runtested in qemu)
mpc85xx/generic (runtested on TL-WDR4900)
mpc85xx/p2020 (runtested on P2020RDB)
mvebu/cortexa53
mvebu/cortexa72
mvebu/cortexa10
octeon/generic (runtested on EdgeRouter Lite)
sunxi/cortexa53 (build tested only)
sunxi/cortexa7 (runtested on Lime2-K)
sunxi/cortexa8 (build tested only)
tegra/generic
x86/64 (runtested in qemu)
Acked-by: Zoltan HERPAI <wigyori@uid0.hu> [sunxi]
Tested-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org> [gemini]
Tested-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tomek_n@o2.pl> [mvebu, tegra]
Tested-by: Daniel Engberg <daniel.engberg.lists@pyret.net> [octeon]
Tested-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com> [mpc85xx/generic mpc85xx/p2020]
Signed-off-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Cherry-picked from CAF QSDK repo.
see 090-ipq40xx-fix-high-resolution-timer.patch
Original commit message:
The kernel is failing in switching the timer for high resolution
mode and clock source operates in 10ms resolution. The always-on
property needs to be given for timer device tree node to make
clock source working in 1ns resolution.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Kubelun <be.dissent@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[changed authorship of main patch to pavel and cherry-picked
patch to Abhishek Sahu]
This should align opp table with what it was before converting to OPP v2.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Kubelun <be.dissent@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
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>
Consistently handle boot-count reset and upgrade across
ipq40xx, ipq806x, kirkwood, mvebu
Dual-firmware devices often utilize a specific MTD partition
to record the number of times the boot loader has initiated boot.
Most of these devices are NAND, typically with a 2k erase size.
When this code was ported to the ipq40xx platform, the device in hand
used NOR for this partition, with a 16-byte "record" size. As the
implementation of `mtd resetbc` is by-platform, the hard-coded nature
of this change prevented proper operation of a NAND-based device.
* Unified the "NOR" variant with the rest of the Linksys variants
* Added logging to indicate success and failure
* Provided a meaningful return value for scripting
* "Protected" the use of `mtd resetbc` in start-up scripts so that
failure does not end the boot sequence
* Moved Linksys-specific actions into common `/etc/init.d/bootcount`
For upgrade, these devices need to determine which partition to flash,
as well as set certain U-Boot envirnment variables to change the next
boot to the newly flashed version.
* Moved upgrade-related environment changes out of bootcount
* Combined multiple flashes of environment into single one
* Current-partition detection now handles absence of `boot_part`
Runtime-tested: Linksys EA8300
Signed-off-by: Jeff Kletsky <git-commits@allycomm.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[checkpatch.pl fixes, traded split strings for 80+ chars per line]
This moves some new configuration options to the generic kernel
configuration instead of configuring them for each target on our own.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Extended mksenaofw to support new "capwap" header structure.
This supports flashing from factory 3.0.0, 3.0.1, 3.1.0 and 3.5.5
firmware.
Note that the factory image format changes for 3.1 and later firmware,
and that the 3.1.0 and 3.5.5 Engenius firmware will refuse the
factory_30.bin file. Similarly, the 3.0.0 and 3.0.1 Engenius firmware
will refuse the factory_35.bin file.
Flashing from the Engenius 3.1.0 firmware with the factory_35.bin
firmware has not been tested, as 3.1.0 firmware (Engenius "middleFW")
is only intended as part of the upgrade path to 3.5.5 firmware.
Modified ipq40xx image Makefile to appropriately invoke mksenaofw
with new parameters to configure the capwap header.
Note that there is currently no method to return to factory firmware,
so this is a one-way street.
Path from factory 3.0.0 and 3.0.1 (EnGenius) software to OpenWrt is
to navigate to 192.168.1.1 on the stock firmware and navigate to the
firmware menu. Then copy the URL you have for that page, something like
http://192.168.1.1/cgi-bin/luci/;stok=12345abcdef/admin/system/flashops
and replace the trailing /admin/system/flashops with just /easyflashops
You should then be presented with a simple "Firmware Upgrade" page.
On that page, BE SURE TO CLEAR the "Keep Settings:" checkbox.
Choose the openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-factory_30.bin,
click "Upgrade" and on the following page select "Proceed".
Path from factory 3.5.5 (EnGenius) software to OpenWrt is simply to
use the stock firmware update menu. Choose the
openwrt-ipq40xx-engenius_ens620ext-squashfs-factory_35.bin and click
"Upload" and "Proceed".
The device should then flash the OpenWrt firmware and reboot. Note
that this resets the device to a default configuration with Wi-Fi
disabled, LAN1/PoE acting as a WAN port (running DHCP client) and LAN2
acting as a LAN port with a DHCP server on 192.168.1.x (AP is at
192.168.1.1)
Signed-off-by: Steve Glennon <s.glennon@cablelabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[sorry, for unfixing the 80-lines eyesores.]
This patch works around an issue where reboot would cause the AP
to power down and not reboot.
The ipq4019 restart controller reboot causes the system
to power down and not recover. Fix is to disable the restart
controller in the device tree and the device reverts to
using the watchdog to perform the reset.
The real problem is due to the buggy bootloader that ships
with the device. Steve Glennon reported in the PR for this
patch: <https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/2009> that:
"the problem was due to a bad u-boot that ships with the device.
Using the u-boot that comes with 3.5.5.3 EnGenius factory
software now allows the old code (using the do_msm_reboot)
to reboot successfully.
On to the bad news:
Well 3.5.5.3 is a bad path. Finally managed to recover. You
CANNOT use prior EnGenius firmware to downgrade.
Findings:
* They now password protect the serial console with a new, unkown
password.
* They changed the protection on their walled-garden. I have to
use the ssh admin@ip /bin/sh --login to get out of their
walled-garden.
* Attempts to flash the original 3.0.0 or 3.0.1 EnGenius firmware
fail through the UI and sysupgrade. Their firmware update GUI now
seem to detect regular openwrt images, but they fail to flash
Attempts to flash a normal OpenWrt image with sysupgrade fail.
[..]
Attempts to sysupgrade with EnGenius firmware fail with the same
"mandatory section(s) missing" error, so you cannot downgrade to
3.0.0 or 3.0.1."
Signed-off-by: Steve Glennon <s.glennon@cablelabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com> [added valuable
findings from github discussion]
If the target supports a newer kernel version that is not used by default
yet, it can be enabled with this option
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
This patch adds a ChromiumOS 3.18 patch [0] that fixes memory
allocation issues under memory pressure by keeping track
of missed allocs and rectify the omission at a later date.
It also adds ethtool counters for memory allocation
failures accounting so this can be verified.
[0] <d4e1e4ce68>
Reported-by: Chen Minqiang <ptpt52@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
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>
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>
AVM devices based on Qualcomm IPQ40xx do not store sector health
information in the OOB area. Make this check optional to support this
platform.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This removes the 'cs-gpios' property from the AVM FRITZ!Box 7530 NAND
controller node. As pointed out by Christian Lamparter, the property is
not needed by the Qualcomm NAND controller driver.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This patch fixes a problem that was discovered during DSA
development. On the MR33, the link change events from the
external AR8035-PHY would never make it to the qca8k driver.
The issue turned out to be a misplaced memcpy that was copying
over the zero-initialized irq table, when it should have been
set to PHY_POLL. Hence this patch moves the memcpy after the
array has been initialized.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Backport below changes for I2C QUP driver from v4.17:
0668bc44a426 i2c: qup: fix copyrights and update to SPDX identifier
7239872fb340 i2c: qup: fixed releasing dma without flush operation completion
eb422b539c1f i2c: qup: minor code reorganization for use_dma
6d5f37f166bb i2c: qup: remove redundant variables for BAM SG count
c5adc0fa63a9 i2c: qup: schedule EOT and FLUSH tags at the end of transfer
7e6c35fe602d i2c: qup: fix the transfer length for BAM RX EOT FLUSH tags
3f450d3eea14 i2c: qup: proper error handling for i2c error in BAM mode
08f15963bc75 i2c: qup: use the complete transfer length to choose DMA mode
ecb6e1e5f435 i2c: qup: change completion timeout according to transfer length
6f2f0f6465ac i2c: qup: fix buffer overflow for multiple msg of maximum xfer len
f7714b4e451b i2c: qup: send NACK for last read sub transfers
fbfab1ab0658 i2c: qup: reorganization of driver code to remove polling for qup v1
7545c7dba169 i2c: qup: reorganization of driver code to remove polling for qup v2
This fixes various I2C issues observed on AP120C-AC board equipped with
Atmel/Microchip AT97SC3205T TPM module.
Tested-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
Use 'ath10k-calibration-variant' (with the value sent upstream) for the
second (5 GHz) radio in AP120C-AC board DTS. First radio uses the same
BDF as in one of Qualcomm reference designs.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
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>
From: Niklas Cassel <niklas.cassel@linaro.org>
|The databook clearly states that the MSI IRQ (msi_ctrl_int) is a level
|triggered interrupt.
|
|The msi_ctrl_int will be high for as long as any MSI status bit is set,
|thus the IRQ type should be set to IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH, causing the
|IRQ handler to keep getting called, as long as any MSI status bit is set.
|[...]
|Not having the correct IRQ type defined will cause us to lose interrupts,
|which in turn causes timeouts in the PCIe endpoint drivers.
|
|Signed-off-by: Niklas Cassel <niklas.cassel@linaro.org>
|Reviewed-by: Bjorn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
David Bauer reported that the VDSL modem (attached via PCIe)
on his AVM Fritz!Box 7530 was complaining about not having
enough space in the BAR. A closer inspection of the old
qcom-ipq40xx.dtsi pulled from the GL-iNet repository listed:
| qcom,pcie@80000 {
| compatible = "qcom,msm_pcie";
| reg = <0x80000 0x2000>,
| <0x99000 0x800>,
| <0x40000000 0xf1d>,
| <0x40000f20 0xa8>,
| <0x40100000 0x1000>,
| <0x40200000 0x100000>,
| <0x40300000 0xd00000>;
| reg-names = "parf", "phy", "dm_core", "elbi",
| "conf", "io", "bars";
Matching the reg-names with the listed reg leads to
<0xd00000> as the size for the "bars".
BugLink: https://www.mail-archive.com/openwrt-devel@lists.openwrt.org/msg45212.html
Reported-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
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>
ALFA Network AP120C-AC is a dual-band ceiling AP, based on Qualcomm
IPQ4018 + QCA8075 platform.
Specification:
- Qualcomm IPQ4018 (717 MHz)
- 256 MB of RAM (DDR3)
- 16 MB (SPI NOR) + 128 MB (SPI NAND) of flash
- 2x Gbps Ethernet, with 802.3af PoE support in one port
- 2T2R 2.4/5 GHz (IPQ4018), with ext. FEMs (QFE1952, QFE1922)
- 3x U.FL connectors
- 1x 1.8 dBi (Bluetooth) and 2x 3/5 dBi dual-band (Wi-Fi) antennas
- Atmel/Microchip AT97SC3205T TPM module (I2C bus)
- TI CC2540 Bluetooth LE module (USB 2.0 bus)
- 4x LED (all driven by GPIO)
- 1x button (reset)
- 1x USB 2.0 (optional, not installed in indoor version)
- DC jack for main power input (12 V)
- UART header available on PCB (2.0 mm pitch)
Flash instruction:
1. This board uses dual-image feature (128 MB NAND is divided into two
64 MB partitions: 'rootfs1' and 'rootfs2').
2. Before update, make sure your device is running firmware no older
than v1.1 (previous versions have incompatible U-Boot).
3. Use 'factory' image in vendor GUI or for sysupgrade tool, without
preserving settings.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
Without a proper SPI NAND support (SPI NAND framework is available in
kernel >= 4.19) the only way to make such flash working is to include
it in raw/parallel NAND subsystem support and combine with mt29f staging
driver. Obviously, this approach isn't going to be accepted by upstream
(similar support for Winbond W25N01GV was rejected).
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
Reading and writing to and from flash storage is slow and currently,
the ath10kcal_extract() scripts are even more at an disadvantage
because they use a block size of 1 to be able skip.
This patch reworks the extraction scripts to be much faster and
efficient by reading and writing the calibration data in possibly
one big block.
before: (Tested on a RT-AC58U, which has SPI-NAND).
# time dd if=/dev/ubi0_1 of=/lib/firmware/... bs=1 skip=4096 count=12064
12064+0 records in
12064+0 records out
real 0m 0.28s
user 0m 0.02s
sys 0m 0.24s
after:
# time dd if=/dev/ubi0_1 of=/lib/firmware/... bs=12064 skip=4096 count=1 iflag=skip_bytes
1+0 records in
1+0 records out
real 0m 0.01s
user 0m 0.00s
sys 0m 0.00s
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This commit fixes the script that sets the MAC address of the LAN
switch. The LAN MAC address should be the WAN MAC address plus one.
Without this patch the WAN and the LAN interface will use the same
MAC address and an error will be generated.
With this patch all interfaces will have a different MAC address,
consecutive in the following order: WAN, LAN, radio0 and radio1.
Signed-off-by: Oever González <notengobattery@gmail.com>
SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 (Dakota) 717 MHz, 4 cores
RAM: 256 MiB (Nanya NT5CC128M16IP-DI)
FLASH: 128 MiB (Macronix NAND)
WiFi0: Qualcomm IPQ4019 b/g/n 2x2
WiFi1: Qualcomm IPQ4019 a/n/ac 2x2
WiFi2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9886 a/n/ac
BT: Atheros AR3012
IN: WPS Button, Reset Button
OUT: RGB-LED via TI LP5523 9-channel Controller
UART: Front of Device - 115200 N-8
Pinout 3.3v - RX - TX - GND (Square is VCC)
Installation:
1. Transfer OpenWRT-initramfs image to the device via SSH to /tmp.
Login credentials are identical to the Web UI.
2. Login to the device via SSH.
3. Flash the initramfs image using
> mtd-write -d linux -i openwrt-image-file
4. Power-cycle the device and wait for OpenWRT to boot.
5. From there flash the OpenWRT-sysupgrade image.
Ethernet-Ports: Although labeled identically, the port next to
the power socket is the LAN port and the other one is WAN. This
is the same behavior as in the stock firmware.
Signed-off-by: Marius Genheimer <mail@f0wl.cc>
[Dropped setup_mac 02_network in favour of 05_set_iface_mac_ipq40xx.sh,
reorderd 02_network entries, added board.bin WA for the QCA9886 from ath79,
minor dts touchup, added rng to 4.19 dts]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Robert Marko made a big effort to enable the rng on all
ipq40xx for 4.19, so let's continue the quest.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This patch fixes the ASUS' RT-AC58U port order by
unifying the configuration with the NBG6617.
Reported-by: Roberto Socrates (rtac58u-user on the forum)
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This patch splits the big board case switch in 02_network in
two functions ipq40xx_setup_interfaces() and ipq40xx_setup_macs()
just like ath79 and ramips do.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
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>
The unit address should be wifi@1,0 since the device is located
at 0000:01:00.0.
Reported-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven@narfation.org>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This removes the misplaced UCI-network configuration for the MR33. The
LAN port is set in 01_leds while it is already correctly defined in
02_network.
This was most likely an oversight as no network configuration belongs
into 01_leds.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>