```
Specifications:
* CPU: Qualcomm IPQ8074A, SoC Version: 2.0, Quad core 1651 MHz
* RAM: 1 GiB of DDR3 466 MHz
* Flash: NAND 512 MiB (Winbond W29N04GZ)
* 6 RGB LEDs: Power, LAN1, LAN2, 2.4GHz, 5GHz H and 5GHz L
* UART: One 4-pin populated header next to the heatsink and a chip.
GND RXD TXD, beginning from the external antennas. 115200n8.
Lan:
* One 100/1000/2.5GBASE-T Gigabit Ethernet 802.3bt/at
* One 100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet
Wlan:
* 4x4 in 2.4GHz : 802.11b/g/n/ax
* 4x4 in 5.0GHz L: 802.11a/n/ac/ax
* 4x4 in 5.0GHz H: 802.11a/n/ac/ax
* OFDM and OFDMA
* Bidir and MU-MIMO
* Internal antenna 2.86/4.41/4.98 dBi (2.4GHz/5GHz L/5GHz H)
Power:
* 802.3bt/at 30.1W
* DC 12V/3.5A
Mounting: Wall and ceiling
```
```
1. Download the OpenWrt initramfs image. Copy the image to a TFTP server
2. Connect to the console on the AP, and connect the LAN port to your LAN
3. Stop auto boot to get to U-boot shell, interrupt the autoboot process by pressing '0' when prompted
4. Set active_fw in env
4. Set active_fw in env
# setenv active_fw 1
5. Transfer the initramfs image with TFTP
# setenv serverip 192.168.1.10 (IP of TFTP server host)
# setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.1 (IP used by the router for getting the image, must be in the same subnet as the TFTP host)
# tftpboot openwrt-qualcommax-ipq807x-netgear_wax630-initramfs-uImage.itb
6. Reboot and load the image
# bootm
7. SCP factory image to the AP
# scp openwrt-qualcommax-ipq807x-netgear_wax630-squashfs-factory.ubi root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/
8. Connect to device using SSH (use the LAN port)
9. Flash squashfs-factory.ubi from within the initramfs instance of OpenWRT
Before you flash, please check your mtd partitions where mtdX is the right mtd rootfs partition.
# cat /proc/mtd (To check MTD partitions)
# ubiformat /dev/mtd18 -y -f /tmp/openwrt-qualcommax-ipq807x-netgear_wax630-squashfs-factory.ubi
10. Set active_fw to 0
# /usr/sbin/fw_setenv active_fw 0
11. Reboot the AP and your done
# reboot
```
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kristian Skramstad <kristian+github@83.no>
As requested by the maintainers, the order for the WAX family
should be alphabetically. WAX620 is now after WAX218.
Files changed:
+ipq807x.mk
+01_leds
No changes to the content.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Skramstad <kristian+github@83.no>
Hardware specification:
SoC: MediaTek MT7981B 2x A53
Flash: 64GB eMMC or 128 MB SPI-NAND
RAM: 512MB
Ethernet: 4x 10/100/1000 Mbps
Switch: MediaTek MT7531AE
WiFi: MediaTek MT7976C
Button: Reset, Mesh
Power: DC 12V 1A
- UART: 3.3v, 115200n8
--------------------------
| Layout |
| ----------------- |
| 4 | GND TX VCC RX | <= |
| ----------------- |
--------------------------
Gain SSH access:
1. Login into web interface, and download the configuration.
2. Enter fakeroot, decompress the configuration:
tar -zxf cfg_export_config_file.conf
3. Edit 'etc/config/dropbear', set 'enable' to '1'.
4. Edit 'etc/shadow', update (remove) root password:
'root::19523:0:99999:7:::'
5. Repack 'etc' directory:
tar -zcf cfg_export_config_file.conf etc/
* If you find an error about 'etc/wireless/mediatek/DBDC_card0.dat',
just ignore it.
6. Upload new configuration via web interface, now you can SSH to RAX3000M.
Check stroage type:
Check the label on the back of the device:
"CH EC CMIIT ID: xxxx" is eMMC version
"CH CMIIT ID: xxxx" is NAND version
eMMC Flash instructions:
1. SSH to RAX3000M, and backup everything, especially 'factory' part.
('data' partition can be ignored, it's useless.)
2. Write new GPT table:
dd if=openwrt-mediatek-filogic-cmcc_rax3000m-emmc-gpt.bin of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=512 seek=0 count=34 conv=fsync
3. Erase and write new BL2:
echo 0 > /sys/block/mmcblk0boot0/force_ro
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mmcblk0boot0 bs=512 count=8192 conv=fsync
dd if=openwrt-mediatek-filogic-cmcc_rax3000m-emmc-preloader.bin of=/dev/mmcblk0boot0 bs=512 conv=fsync
4. Erase and write new FIP:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=512 seek=13312 count=8192 conv=fsync
dd if=openwrt-mediatek-filogic-cmcc_rax3000m-emmc-bl31-uboot.fip of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=512 seek=13312 conv=fsync
5. Set static IP on your PC:
IP 192.168.1.254, GW 192.168.1.1
6. Serve OpenWrt initramfs image using TFTP server.
7. Cut off the power and re-engage, wait for TFTP recovery to complete.
8. After OpenWrt has booted, perform sysupgrade.
9. Additionally, if you want to have eMMC recovery boot feature:
(Don't worry! You will always have TFTP recovery boot feature.)
dd if=openwrt-mediatek-filogic-cmcc_rax3000m-initramfs-recovery.itb of=/dev/mmcblk0p4 bs=512 conv=fsync
NAND Flash instructions:
1. SSH to RAX3000M, and backup everything, especially 'Factory' part.
2. Erase and write new BL2:
mtd erase BL2
mtd write openwrt-mediatek-filogic-cmcc_rax3000m-nand-preloader.bin BL2
3. Erase and write new FIP:
mtd erase FIP
mtd write openwrt-mediatek-filogic-cmcc_rax3000m-nand-bl31-uboot.fip FIP
4. Set static IP on your PC:
IP 192.168.1.254, GW 192.168.1.1
5. Serve OpenWrt initramfs image using TFTP server.
6. Cut off the power and re-engage, wait for TFTP recovery to complete.
7. After OpenWrt has booted, erase UBI volumes:
ubidetach -p /dev/mtd0
ubiformat -y /dev/mtd0
ubiattach -p /dev/mtd0
8. Create new ubootenv volumes:
ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -n 0 -N ubootenv -s 128KiB
ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -n 1 -N ubootenv2 -s 128KiB
9. Additionally, if you want to have NAND recovery boot feature:
(Don't worry! You will always have TFTP recovery boot feature.)
ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -n 2 -N recovery -s 20MiB
ubiupdatevol /dev/ubi0_2 openwrt-mediatek-filogic-cmcc_rax3000m-initramfs-recovery.itb
10. Perform sysupgrade.
Signed-off-by: Tianling Shen <cnsztl@immortalwrt.org>
Allwinner H6 needs this driver to enable DVFS support.
May also be used with H616/H618 SoC in the future.
Signed-off-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
Kernel 5.15 already supports the NanoPi R1 and NanoPi R1S H5,
and they use new LED bindings that do not match the existing
settings in 01_leds. Update led settings to fixes that.
List the led node on NanoPi R1S H5:
root@OpenWrt:~# ls /sys/class/leds/
green:lan green:wan red:status
Signed-off-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
This will help switching to newer 5.15 kernels. This backport required
rebasing Northstar's USB host patch.
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
The IXP4xx crypto module must be loaded after the rootfs is
up as it depends on loading some NPE microcode from the file
system.
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
This resurrects the support for IXP4xx using device tree
rather than the old (deleted) board files. The final pieces
of IXP4xx board files were deleted in Linux v5.19.
Ext4 root filesystems on CF and USB are supported by the
default config.
We support these three initial targets:
- The Gateworks Avila GW2348 reference design has 64MB of RAM
and 32MB of flash and also supports USB and CompactFlash.
- The Gateworks Cambria GW2358 reference design has 128MB of
RAM and 32MB of flash and also supports USB and CompactFlash.
- The old and stable Linksys NSLU2 works fine as well, albeit
it only has 32MB of RAM so it has been marked as non-default.
The 8MB of flash can only fit the kernel, so it has been
patched to boot from exteral media on USB. I have used
it successfully as a NAS with ksmbd and LUCI web API, see:
https://dflund.se/~triad/krad/ixp4xx/
Signed-off-by: Howard Harte <hharte@magicandroidapps.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tmn505@gmail.com>
This is a backport of the patch to support the Altima AMI101L
PHY which is merged for the v6.7 kernel. This PHY is used in the
IXP4xx-based USRobotics USR8200.
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
This is a backport of the patch for byte addressed IO to the
Epson RTC7301 driver. This is used by the IXP4xx-based
USRobotics USR8200.
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
Among other changes this commit makes Linux use correct switch ports
again.
Fixes: a4792d79e8 ("bcm53xx: backport DT changes from v6.5")
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
This backports patches
leds: turris-omnia: convert to use dev_groups
leds: turris-omnia: Use sysfs_emit() instead of sprintf()
leds: turris-omnia: Drop unnecessary mutex locking
leds: turris-omnia: Do not use SMBUS calls
leds: turris-omnia: Make set_brightness() more efficient
leds: turris-omnia: Support HW controlled mode via private trigger
leds: turris-omnia: Add support for enabling/disabling HW gamma correction
leds: turris-omnia: Fix brightness setting and trigger activating
into backport-5.15.
The above patches replace:
leds: turris-omnia: support HW controlled mode via private trigger
leds: turris-omnia: initialize multi-intensity to full
leds: turris-omnia: change max brightness from 255 to 1
from mvebu/patches-5.15.
Signed-off-by: Marek Behún <kabel@kernel.org>
This reverts commit 0c117e1f6c.
Activate the lantiq/xrx200 target again.
There are still some problems with the GSWIP, but it is not leaking
packets to the wrong bridge in normal operations.
It shows some error messages at configuration like these:
[ 54.308861] gswip 1e108000.switch: port 5 failed to add ce:9d:84:d1:81:f0 vid 1 to fdb: -22
[ 54.325633] gswip 1e108000.switch: port 5 failed to add e8🇩🇪27:95:c1:b4 vid 0 to fdb: -22
[ 54.351242] gswip 1e108000.switch: port 5 failed to add e8🇩🇪27:95:c1:b4 vid 1 to fdb: -22
[ 54.358311] gswip 1e108000.switch: port 5 failed to delete ce:9d:84:d1:81:f0 vid 1 from fdb: -2
The problems are described in this pull request:
https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/13200
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
1) clear nvram partialboots upon successful boot
This behavior is already defined for EA9500; enabled for EA9200 too.
2) fix MAC address in board.d/02_network
Use the correct nvram variable to derive lan/wan MAC address.
Signed-off-by: Rani Hod <rani.hod@gmail.com>
Set correct GPIO (10) for the WPS button. This matches GPIO settings in
vendor GPL sources. Note that GPL sources also mention a USB indicator
LED (GPIO 13) but the device has neither an external USB port nor a USB LED.
In addition, prefixes (button-, led-) are added to relevant DT entries,
as well as color and function specifications for LEDs.
Closes: #13736
Reported-by: Waldemar Czabaj <kaball@wp.pl>
Signed-off-by: Rani Hod <rani.hod@gmail.com>
(added led mitigations for wifi leds)
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This backports patches
leds: turris-omnia: Use sysfs_emit() instead of sprintf()
leds: turris-omnia: Drop unnecessary mutex locking
leds: turris-omnia: Do not use SMBUS calls
leds: turris-omnia: Make set_brightness() more efficient
leds: turris-omnia: Support HW controlled mode via private trigger
leds: turris-omnia: Add support for enabling/disabling HW gamma correction
leds: turris-omnia: Fix brightness setting and trigger activating
into backport-6.1.
The above patches replace:
leds: turris-omnia: support HW controlled mode via private trigger
leds: turris-omnia: initialize multi-intensity to full
leds: turris-omnia: change max brightness from 255 to 1
from mvebu/patches-6.1.
Signed-off-by: Marek Mojík <marek.mojik@nic.cz>
This is an RTL8382-based switch with 24 copper ports + 4 SFP ports
Specifications:
---------------
* SoC: Realtek RTL8382M
* Flash: 32 MiB SPI flash
* RAM: 256 MiB
* Ethernet: 24x 10/100/1000 Mbps
* Buttons: 1x "Reset" button
* UART: 1x serial header, unpopulated
* SFP: 4 SFP ports
Works:
------
- (24) RJ-45 ethernet ports
- Switch functions
- Buttons
- Sys LED on front panel (no port LEDs)
Not yet enabled:
----------------
- Port LEDs (no driver for RTL8231 in this mode)
- SFP cages (no driver for PHY)
Install via web interface:
-------------------------
Not supported at this time.
Install via serial console/tftp:
--------------------------------
The U-Boot firmware drops to a TP-Link specific "BOOTUTIL" shell at
38400 baud. There is no known way to exit out of this shell, and no
way to do anything useful.
Ideally, one would trick the bootloader into flashing the sysupgrade
image first. However, if the image exceeds 6MiB in size, it will not
work. To install OpenWRT:
Prepare a tftp server with:
1. server address: 192.168.0.146
2. the image as: "uImage.img"
Power on device, and stop boot by pressing any key.
Once the shell is active:
1. Ground out the CLK (pin 16) of the ROM (U6)
2. Select option "3. Start"
3. Bootloader notes that "The kernel has been damaged!"
4. Release CLK as soon as bootloader thinks image is corrupted.
5. Bootloader enters automatic recovery -- details printed on console
6. Watch as the bootloader flashes and boots OpenWRT.
Blind install via tftp:
-----------------------
This method works when it's not feasible to install a serial header.
Prepare a tftp server with:
1. server address: 192.168.0.146
2. the image as: "uImage.img"
3. Watch network traffic (tcpdump or wireshark works)
4. Power on the device.
5. Wait 1-2 seconds then ground out the CLK (pin 16) of the ROM (U6)
6. When 192.168.0.30 makes tftp requests, release pin 16
7. Wait 2-3 minutes for device to auto-flash and boot OpenWRT
Signed-off-by: Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
Like with some other ipq40xx devices, the kernel image size for the WPJ428
is limited in stock u-boot. For that reason, the current release doesn't
include an image for the board.
By switching to the zImage format, the kernel image size is reduced which
re-enables the build process. The image boots and behaved normally through
a few days of testing.
Before the switch to kernel version 6.1, it was possible to reduce the
image size by enough when disabling UBIFS and its otherwise unneeded
dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Leon M. Busch-George <leon@georgemail.eu>
prepend-dtb got extended to handle the Meraki devices too,
the problem here was that the Netgear WNDR4700 expects an
u-boot header in front of the DTB, whereas Meraki devices
don't.
Since the header was dropped, the WNDR4700's uboot started
to complain:
Bad Magic Number,it is forbidden to be written to flash!!
when flashing the factory.img since it expects an u-boot
header there.
Fixes: 5dece2d9355a ("apm821xx: switch over from DTB_SIZE to DEVICE_DTC_FLAGS")
Reported-by: @kisgezenguz
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Doing a simple ping to my device shows this:
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=2.00 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=2.02 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=1.68 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=4 ttl=64 time=1.91 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=5 ttl=64 time=1.92 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=6 ttl=64 time=2.04 ms
Some users even report higher values on older kernels:
64 bytes from 192.168.1.10: seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.612 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.1.10: seq=1 ttl=64 time=2.852 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.1.10: seq=2 ttl=64 time=2.719 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.1.10: seq=3 ttl=64 time=2.741 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.1.10: seq=4 ttl=64 time=2.808 ms
The problem is that the governor is set to Ondemand, which causes
the CPU to clock all the way down to 48MHz in some cases.
Switching to performance governor:
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.528 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.561 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.633 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.253.101: icmp_seq=4 ttl=64 time=0.526 ms
In theory, using the Performance governor should increase power draw,
but it looks like it really does not matter for this soc.
Using a calibrated precision DC power supply (cpu idle):
Ondemand
24.00V * 0.134A = 3.216 Watts
48.00V * 0.096A = 4.608 Watts
Performance
24.00V * 0.135A = 3.240 Watts
48.00V * 0.096A = 4.608 Watts
Let's simply switch to the Performance governor by default
to fix the general jittery behaviour on devices using this soc.
Tested on: MikroTik wAP ac
Fixes: #13649
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Thibaut VARÈNE <hacks@slashdirt.org>
Signed-off-by: Koen Vandeputte <koen.vandeputte@citymesh.com>
Copy configuration to boot partition (partition 1) instead of root
partition (partition 2) because the root partition is not writable if
it's a suqashfs image.
Move configuration back to root during preinit.
Fixes: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/issues/13695
Signed-off-by: Christian Buschau <cbuschau@d00t.de>
At this moment, 702-phy-Add-2.5G-SGMII-interface-mode.patch cause error
durring kernel compilation:
CC drivers/net/phy/phylink.o
drivers/net/phy/phylink.c: In function 'phylink_get_capabilities':
drivers/net/phy/phylink.c:443:9: error: enumeration value 'PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_2500SGMII' not handled in switch [-Werror=switch]
443 | switch (interface) {
| ^~~~~~
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
NXP take care of it. Let's port their patch.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
Patches recreated from NXP 6.1 tree:
400-LF-20-3-mtd-spi-nor-Use-1-bit-mode-of-spansion-s25fs.patch
701-staging-add-fsl_ppfe-driver.patch
702-phy-Add-2.5G-SGMII-interface-mode.patch
Patch 703 includes changes made by Christian Marangi, extracted from commit
0d4a547905.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
Some MT7915 devices need to load the second part of the eeprom to
work properly. The mt76 driver is not yet ready to read the pre-cal
data via the NVMEM cell. Therefore, partially revert commit to fix
the device probe issue on some devices.
P.S.
Except for D-Link and Ubnt devices, It is still uncertain whether
pre-cal data is required for other devices in the patch.
This partially reverts commit 9ac891f8c4.
Fixes: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/issues/13700
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
Telco Electronics X1 has MT7603E and MT7612E PCIe NICs. They are
driven by kmod-mt7603 and kmod-mt76x2.
Ref: 73e0f52b6e ("ramips: add support for Telco Electronics X1")
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
The starting address of 'factory' partition is 0x40000, and the
starting address of the next partition is 0x50000. It's obvious
that the correct size for the 'factory' is 0x10000, just like
other MT7620 devices.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
These three devices uses MT7612E PCIe NIC and supported by the
'mt76' driver. So the right frequency limit property should be
`ieee80211-freq-limit`.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
On the ramips target, all 'wmac' nodes in SoC dtsi are enabled by
default except mt7628. There is no need to mark them as 'okay'
again. So these useless properties can be removed.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
This patch converts MT761{0,2,3} PCIe WiFi calibration data to NVMEM
format for legacy Ralink SoCs (MT7620 and Mt7628). The EEPROM size of
the MT7610 and MT7612 is 0x200. there are only three devices uses
MT7613 NIC, ASUS RT-AC1200 V2, COMFAST CF-WR758AC V2 and Keenetic
KN-1613. The EEPROM size of them is 0x4da8.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
This patch converts legacy Ralink SoCs and MT7620 WiFi calibration
data to NVMEM format. The EEPROM size is 0x200.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
The mtd partition node name should be "partition@${offset}".
However, the offsets of the PSG1208 don't match the partition
'reg' properties. This patch correct the wrong offsets.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
The MT7628 integrated wireless is driven by `mt76`, so the right
EEPROM property name is `mediatek,mtd-eeprom`.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
`mtd-mac-address` has been abandoned. Therefore, convert them to
NVMEM format. This patch also removes some useless mtd-mac-address
properties.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
IPQ8074 CPUFreq NVMEM support has finally landed upstream, so lets use the
upstreamed version.
This has a benefit of also supporting IPQ8174 (Oak) family for which SMEM
SoC ID-s were also upstreamed.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Binding for ralink EEPROM swap changed from ralink,mtd-eeprom-swap to
ralink,eeprom-swap.
Update every entry.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
A typo snuck in with the addition of Cudy M1800, changing
"nr7101" to "nt7101". The result is a default network config
for NR7101 without the only ethernet interface on the NR7101,
thereby soft bricking it.
Fixes: f6d394e9f2 ("ramips: add support for Cudy M1800")
Signed-off-by: Bjørn Mork <bjorn@mork.no>
SBL will configure IPQ807x cores to boot at 800MHz as a safe default
frequency that is provided by GPLL0, but GPLL0 is not currently configured
as a possible parent in the APSS clock driver not being passed to it via
DTS which will then cause the kernel to not properly identify the current
CPU frequency during booting and will think that CPU is currently at XO
frequency of 19.2MHz instead of 800MHz cores are actually at and print:
cpufreq: cpufreq_online: CPU0: Running at unlisted initial frequency: 19200 KHz, changing to: 1017600 KHz
So, lets import patches pending upstream to prevent GPLL scaling and feed
the GPLL0 clock to APSS clock driver so we get:
cpufreq: cpufreq_online: CPU0: Running at unlisted initial frequency: 800000 KHz, changing to: 1017600 KHz
This is mostly cosmetic fix, but with all of the possible SBL and FW
versions there could be edge cases resolved by this and not scaling GPLL-s
anymore.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Disable new ksym globally as OpenWrt does not have any targets that
use A520 cores.
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: John Audia <therealgraysky@proton.me>
The compex WPJ563 actually has both usb controllers wired:
usb0 --> pci-e slot
usb1 --> pin header
As the board exposes it for generic use, enable this controller too.
fixes: #13650
Signed-off-by: Koen Vandeputte <koen.vandeputte@citymesh.com>
So far every build of a single bcm53xx Target Profile (it means: when
NOT using CONFIG_TARGET_MULTI_PROFILE) resulted in all target devices
images being built. Now it only builds the one matching selected
profile.
Fixes: #13572
Suggested-by: Jonas Gorski <jonas.gorski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rani Hod <rani.hod@gmail.com>
[rmilecki: update commit subject + body & move PROFILES line]
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
Hardware information:
---------------------
- RTL8380 SoC
- 8 Gigabit RJ45 PoE ports (built-in RTL8218B)
- 2 SFP ports (built-in SerDes)
- RJ45 RS232 port on front panel
- 32 MiB NOR Flash
- 128 MiB DDR3 DRAM
- PT7A7514 watchdog
- PoE chip
- Fanless
Known issues:
---------------------
- PoE LEDs are uncontrolled.
(Manual taken from f2f09bc)
Booting initramfs image:
------------------------
- Prepare a FTP or TFTP server serving the OpenWrt initramfs image and
connect the server to a switch port.
- Connect to the console port of the device and enter the extended
boot menu by typing Ctrl+B when prompted.
- Choose the menu option "<3> Enter Ethernet SubMenu".
- Set network parameters via the option "<5> Modify Ethernet Parameter".
Enter the FTP/TFTP filename as "Load File Name" ("Target File Name"
can be left blank, it is not required for booting from RAM). Note that
the configuration is saved on flash, so it only needs to be done once.
- Select "<1> Download Application Program To SDRAM And Run".
Initial installation:
---------------------
- Boot an initramfs image as described above, then use sysupgrade to
install OpenWrt permanently. After initial installation, the
bootloader needs to be configured to load the correct image file
- Enter the extended boot menu again and choose "<4> File Control",
then select "<2> Set Application File type".
- Enter the number of the file "openwrt-kernel.bin" (should be 1), and
use the option "<1> +Main" to select it as boot image.
- Choose "<0> Exit To Main Menu" and then "<1> Boot System".
NOTE: The bootloader on these devices can only boot from the VFS
filesystem which normally spans most of the flash. With OpenWrt, only
the first part of the firmware partition contains a valid filesystem,
the rest is used for rootfs. As the bootloader does not know about this,
you must not do any file operations in the bootloader, as this may
corrupt the OpenWrt installation (selecting the boot image is an
exception, as it only stores a flag in the bootloader data, but doesn't
write to the filesystem).
Example PoE config file (/etc/config/poe):
---------------------
config global
option budget '65'
config port
option enable '1'
option id '1'
option name 'lan8'
option poe_plus '1'
option priority '2'
config port
option enable '1'
option id '2'
option name 'lan7'
option poe_plus '1'
option priority '2'
config port
option enable '1'
option id '3'
option name 'lan6'
option poe_plus '1'
option priority '2'
config port
option enable '1'
option id '4'
option name 'lan5'
option poe_plus '1'
option priority '2'
config port
option enable '1'
option id '5'
option name 'lan4'
option poe_plus '1'
option priority '2'
config port
option enable '1'
option id '6'
option name 'lan3'
option poe_plus '1'
option priority '2'
config port
option enable '1'
option id '7'
option name 'lan2'
option poe_plus '1'
option priority '2'
config port
option enable '1'
option id '8'
option name 'lan1'
option poe_plus '1'
option priority '2'
Signed-off-by: Kevin Jilissen <info@kevinjilissen.nl>
There are two hardware models of the HPE 1920-8g-poe switch. The version
currently in the repository is the model with a PoE budget of 180W. In
preparation of the addition of the 65W model, the existing model is
renamed to clarify the hardware version it targets.
As suggested by Pawel, the 'SUPPORTED_DEVICES' includes the old target
name to enable an upgrade path of builds with the old name.
Suggested-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kevin Jilissen <info@kevinjilissen.nl>
The driver for the cellular modems serial interface was missing from the
default device packages.
The driver is required to interact with the modem using AT commands.
Other devices with a 4G modem also ship with this package, thus let's
add it to the default packages for the board.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Fix broken onhub dtsi. The gmac node have a redundant phy-handle that
doesn't point to the swconfig phy node as they got dropped in the DSA
conversion. Drop these extra binding to restore correct compilation of
this subtarget.
Fixes: 337e36e0ef ("ipq806x: convert each device to DSA implementation")
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
The node name&label should match the address in the 'reg' property,
so it's better to change the incorrect offset to the 0x28.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
I-O DATA WN-DEAX1800GR uses MT7915 PCIe NIC. The correct EEPROM
size is 0xe00.
Fixes: ac68fbf526 ("ramips: add support for I-O DATA WN-DEAX1800GR")
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
Backport qca8k fixes for big endian system (to make them working again)
and a patch fixing MDIO conflicts if other PHY are connected and mgmt
eth is used to control the switch.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Add patch enabling assisted learning for qca8k to fix roaming issue
between BSS and BSS on the same L2 broadcast domain.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Symbol rtl8366_enable_vlan and rtl8366_reset_vlan are also present in
the DSA driver upstream and conflicts as they are EXPORTED.
Rename them to rtl8366_smi_enable_vlan and rtl8366_smi_reset_vlan to fix
the conflict. While at it also make them static and drop the
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL as they are not actually used by any other driver and
exporting them is useless.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
In userspace, ASLR is enabled, but it's missing to enable KASLR on the
kernel side to improve security as part of SystemReady recommendations.
Signed-off-by: Javier Tia <javier.tia@linaro.org>
The name of the variable holding the pointer to the private struct has
changed between Linux 5.15 and Linux 6.1 and adding the identical patch
fixing PCIe #PERST de-assert broke the build on Linux 6.1.
Also change the name in the patch to fix the build.
Fixes: 6a2e17d5c1 ("mediatek: fix PCIe #PERST being de-asserted too early")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Fix copy-paste error in migrating NEC Aterm WG2600HP3 to new LED
implementation for the QCA8K switch. Correct define the missing
additional LED pin used for each port and fix wrong color for LED 2 for
each port. Also add the required function-enumerator as all 3 LED have
the same color and function.
Fixes: c707cff6c9 ("ipq806x: add LEDs definition for non-standard qca8k LEDs")
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Extreme Networks AP3935i/e -
https://www.extremenetworks.com/support/documentation/access-points-ap3935i-e/
SoC: IPQ8068 QYY AT46279K45060I
RAM: NANYA 1527 NT5CC256M16DP-DI 515073W0EF 7 TW
FLASH: NOR - S25FL256S1 - 32MB
NAND - Macronix MX30UF4G28AB - 512MB
LAN: Atheros AR8035-A J5150WL 1515 CN - RGMII
LAN2: Atheros AR8033-AL1A SKCSR.AJ1 1444 China - SGMII
WLAN2: QCA9990 OVV FNPV209 K451406
WLAN5: QCA9990 OVV FNPV209 K451406
SERIAL: RS232 Port (115200 8n1) Cisco console cable and
4pin Serial Header | 3.3 | GND | RX | TX
MAC address for LAN1/LAN2/WLAN 2G/WLAN 5G in uboot env
* Installation via either RJ45 console or on-board 4 PIN header
Install Method
--------------
1) Setup TFTP server, and place
openwrt-ipq806x-generic-extreme_ap3935-initramfs-uImage image
in /srv/tftp or similar
2) Connect to console on router and connect ethernet port "LAN1" to
your LAN
3) Interupt the boot with any character
4) Login with admin/new2day for default password
(use reset/FactoryDefault if password needs to be reset)
5) Set serverip to TFTP IP: set serverip 192.168.1.2
6) Set ipaddr to another IP: set ipaddr 192.168.1.101
7) Make uboot ping something to activate eth0 on boot:
set bootcmd 'ping 192.168.1.1; run boot_flash'
saveenv
8) TFTP image to RAM:
tftpboot 0x42000000
openwrt-ipq806x-generic-extreme_ap3935i-initramfs-uImage
9) Boot image: bootm 0x42000000
In OpenWRT, "LAN1" is LAN, "LAN2" is WAN
10) SFTP openwrt-ipq806x-generic-extreme_ap3935-squashfs-nand-sysupgrade.bin
image to /tmp
11) sysupgrade /tmp/openwrt-*-nand-sysupgrade.bin
Signed-off-by: Glen Lee <g2lee@yahoo.com>
There is no point in keeping the v5.15 kernel around for Gemini,
we are maintaining the platform with a strong upstream focus and
newer is always better.
Now that OpenWrt can support pure v6.1 kernels, switch up to
v6.1 and drop v5.15 so we don't need to migrate configs and
patches for no reason.
The USB FOTG2 module handling can be simplified as a result.
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
Fix Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) by changing COPY2CPU which currently
makes switch to ignore Bridge Protocol Data Units (BPDUs).
Tested on Zyxel GS1900-8, 24 and 48.
Signed-off-by: Rudolf Vesely <i@rudolfvesely.com>
[ improve commit description and add new line in different sections ]
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
The USXGMII implementation of Realtek switches can not only support
10GbE but also 2.5Gb and 5Gb on top of the usual data rates.
Mark those as supported to allow them to be negotiated.
This change has been tested on a ZyXEL XGS1250-12 with the following link
partners:
- NWA50AX Pro (2.5Gb)
- RTL8152 USB NIC (2.5Gb)
- AQC111 USB NIC (2.5Gb & 5Gb)
Gbit and 10GbE has also been tested to still work fine with a variety of
devices.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Schramm <tobias@t-sys.eu>
This condition was introduced in commit 51c8f76612 ("realtek: Improve
MAC config handling for all SoCs") to correctly report the speed of the
internal serdes ports as 10G, but instead makes all ports read 10G
because the or-operator should have been an and-operator.
Fixes: #9953
Fixes: 51c8f76612 ("realtek: Improve MAC config handling for all SoCs")
Signed-off-by: Peter Körner <git@mazdermind.de>
[ wrap comment to 72 column and improve commit ref ]
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
The driver for MediaTek gen3 PCIe hosts de-asserts all reset
signals at the same time using a single register write operation.
Delay the de-assertion of the #PERST signal by 100ms as some PCIe
devices fail to come up otherwise.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Google WiFi board has what seems as debug version of TZ/QSEE and it is
always enabling SDI (Secure Debug Image) and in order to do a regular
reboot it must be disabled, as otherwise you are stuck in a debug state
where you are supposed to extract debug logs via QCA tooling which is not
helpfull at all for regular users.
So, instead of using our downstream version to disable SDI lets use the
version that was merged upstream and relies on a boolean property in the
SCM node instead of checking the compatible.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com>
Commit mt76: drop default eeprom file for mt7986-firmware
(e3aa645b26) breaks eeprom loading for
Mercusys MR90X v1. As a result WiFi is not working at all.
This commit adds Mercusus MR90x to the caldata script (it works after the
commit mentioned above). And we can safely drop "81_fix_eeprom" script
as it's no longer required.
Fixes: e3aa645b26
Signed-off-by: Mikhail Zhilkin <csharper2005@gmail.com>
Add patch fixing regression from stmmac TX timer.
Refer to the single patch for extensive details on the problem.
This should restore original performance before 4.19 kernel.
Fixes: #11676
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Add patch fixing regression from stmmac TX timer.
Refer to the single patch for extensive details on the problem.
This should restore original performance before 4.19 kernel.
Fixes: #11676
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Add LEDs definition for devices that use a non-standard qca8k LEDs
configuration.
This is to restore original setup of the LED and be on par with swconfig
old configuration.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Enable and setup multi-cpu for qca8k switch for ipq806x based devices.
Rework each DTS to enable the secondary CPU port on QCA8K switch and
apply the required values originally set by the OEM in the old swconfig
node.
In original firmware the first CPU port was always assigned to the WAN
port and the secondary CPU port was assigned to the rest of the LAN
port. Follow this original implementation using an init.d script.
To setup the CPU port ip tools is required. Add additional default
package ip-tiny to correctly setup the CPU port.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Backport pending patch for multi CPU port support on QCA8K. 6.1 already
supports all the requiredt code to change a DSA master port so only this
patch fixing the driver is required.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Backport various QCA8K fixes patch merged upstream. Refresh any changed
patches due to backports.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Drop and move ASRock G10 preinit script to fix mac address to generic
board.d script and rework for consistency with other devices following a
similar implementation.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Convert each ipq806x device to DSA implementation using the qca8k
driver. Rework 02_network to follow the new naming scheme.
Update 01_leds to use netdev trigger with correct DSA port and drop
now unused switch trigger.
Currently secondary CPU is disabled and will be reneabled later.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
The reset button was missing from the Enterasys WS-AP3715i DTS.
Add the node required for making the reset button work.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Add support for COMFAST CF-EW72 V2
Hardware:
- SoC: Mediatek MT7621 (MT7621DAT or MT7621AT)
- Flash: 16 MiB NOR
- RAM: 128 MiB
- Ethernet: Built-in, 2 x 1GbE
- Power: only 802.3af PD on any port, injector supplied in the box
- PoE passthrough: No
- Wifi 2.4GHz: Mediatek MT7603BE 802.11b/g/b
- Wifi 5GHz: Mediatek MT7613BEN 802.11ac/n/a
- LEDs: 8x (only 1 is both visible and controllable, see below)
- Buttons: 1x (RESET)
Installing OpenWrt:
Flashing is done using Mediatek U-Boot System Recovery Mode
- make wired connection with 2 cables like this:
- - PC (LAN) <-> PoE Injector (LAN)
- - PoE Injector (POE) <-> CF-EW72 V2 (LAN). Leave unconnected to CF-EW72 V2 yet.
- configure 192.168.1.(2-254)/24 static ip address on your PC LAN
- press and keep pressed RESET button on device
- power the device by plugging PoE Injector (POE) <-> CF-EW72 V2 (LAN) cable
- wait for about 10 seconds until wifi led stops blinking and release RESET button
- navigate from your PC to http://192.168.1.1 and upload OpenWrt *-factory.bin firmware file
- proceed until router starts blinking with wifi led again (flashing) and stops (rebooting to OpenWrt)
MAC addresses as verified by OEM firmware:
vendor OpenWrt address
LAN lan\eth0 label
WAN wan label + 1
2g phy0 label + 2
5g phy1 label + 3
The label MAC address was found in 0xe000.
LEDs detailed:
The only both visible and controllable indicator is blue:wlan LED.
It is not bound by default to indicate activity of any wireless interfaces.
Place (WAN->ANT) | Num | GPIO | LED name (LuCI) | Note
-----------------|-----|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
power | 1 | | | POWER LED. Not controlled with GPIO.
hidden_led_2 | 2 | 13 | blue:hidden_led_2 | This LED does not have proper hole in shell.
wan | 3 | | | WAN LED. Not controlled with GPIO.
hidden_led_4 | 4 | 16 | blue:hidden_led_4 | This LED does not have proper hole in shell.
lan | 5 | | | LAN LED. Not controlled with GPIO.
noconn_led_6 | 6 | | | Not controlled with GPIO, possibly not connected
wlan | 7 | 15 | blue:wlan | WLAN LED. Wireless indicator.
noconn_led_8 | 8 | | | Not controlled with GPIO, possibly not connected
mt76-phy0 and mt76-phy1 leds also exist in OpenWrt, but do not exist on board.
Signed-off-by: Alexey D. Filimonov <alexey@filimonic.net>
Label MAC detection does not work properly, as MAC address is assigned
on preinit. Thus, remove the label-mac definition.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This in a single image to run many types of hardware in the AP391x
series (AP3912/AP3915/AP3916/AP3917/AP7662).
Hardware
--------
Qualcomm IPQ4029 WiSoC
2T2R 802.11 abgn
2T2R 802.11 nac
Macronix MX25L25635E SPI-NOR (32M)
512M DDR3 RAM
1-4x Gigabit Ethernet
Senao EXT1025 HD Camera (AP3916 only)
USB 2.0 Port (AP3915e only)
1x Cisco RJ-45 Console port
- except for AP3916 and AP3912 where there is no external serial
console and it is TDB how to solder one. Possibly J12 is UART with
pin1 = 3.3V, pin2 = GND, pin3 = TXD, pin4 = RXD.
- Settings: 115200 8N1
Installation With Serial Console
--------------------------------
1. Attach to the Console port. Power up the device and press the s key
to interrupt autoboot.
2. The default username / password to the bootloader is admin / new2day
3. Check uboot variables using printenv, and update if necessary:
$ setenv AP_MODE 0
$ setenv WATCHDOG_COUNT 0
$ setenv WATCHDOG_LIMIT 0
$ setenv AP_PERSONALITY identifi
$ setenv serverip <SERVER_IPADDR>
$ setenv ipaddr <UNIQUE_IPADDR>
$ setenv MOSTRECENTKERNEL 0; ## OpenWRT only uses the primary image
$ saveenv
$ saveenv ## 2nd time to write the secondary copy
4. On the TFTP server located at <SERVER_IPADDR>, download the OpenWrt
initramfs image. Rename and serve it as vmlinux.gz.uImage.3912
5. TFTP boot the OpenWrt initramfs image from the AP serial console:
$ run boot_net
6. Wait for OpenWrt to start. Internet port sw-eth5 is assiged to LAN
bridge and sw-eth4 (if available) is assigned to WAN. The LAN port
will use default IP address 192.168.1.1 and run a DHCP server.
If you already have a working DHCP server or already have 192.168.1.1
on your network you MUST DISCONNECT the LAN cable from your active
network immediately after the power/status LED turns green!
At this point, you need to temporarily reconfigure the AP to have
a way to transfer the OpenWRT sysupgrade image to it.
Reconfigure the newly converted OpenWRT AP using serial console or
plug in a PC to a sw-eth5 as a separate network. Note -- the LAN/WAN
port assignments were designed to make it possible to convert to
OpenWRT without serial console and using a common firmware
image for many AP models -- they may not make the most sense when
fully deployed.
7. Download and transfer the sysupgrade image to the device using e.g.
SCP.
8. Install OpenWrt to the device using "sysupgrade"
$ sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt.bin
9. After it boots up again, as in step 6, connect to AP and reconfigure
for final deployment.
This build supports APs in the AP391x series and similar such as WiNG
AP7662.
Ethernet devices within OpenWRT are named "sw-eth1" thru "sw-eth5".
Mapping from OpenWRT internal naming to external naming on the case is
as follows:
```
|sw-eth1|sw-eth2|sw-eth3|sw-eth4|sw-eth5
------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------
AP3917 | | | | GE2 | GE1
------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------
AP7662 | | | | GE2 | GE1
------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------
AP3916 | | | | CAM* | GE1
------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------
AP3915 | | | | | GE1
------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------
AP3912 | | P1 | P2 | P3 | LAN1
------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------
```
By default sw-eth4 is mapped to WAN. All others are assigned to the
LAN.
CAM* - On AP3916, sw-eth4 is the camera's interface. You should
reconfigure this to be on LAN after OpenWRT boots from flash.
Installation Without Serial Console
-----------------------------------
The main premise is to set u-boot environment variables using the
Extreme Networks firmware's rdwr_boot_cfg program.
$ rdwr_boot_cfg
Utility to manipulate the boot ROM config blocks
All errors are written to the sytem log file (/tmp/log/ap.log)
```
Usage: rdwr_boot_cfg <read_all|read_var|read_var_f|write_var|rm_var> ...
read_all read the entire active block
read_var <var> read a single variable from the active block
read_var_f <var> read a single variable from the active block
(formatted)
write_var <var=val> write a single variable/value pair to both
blocks
rm_var <var> delete a single variable from both blocks
```
WARNING: Be very sure you have set the u-boot environment correctly.
If not, it can only be fixed by attaching serial console!
Be aware that the Extreme Networks shell environment will automatically
reboot every 5 minutes if there is no controller present.
Read and understand these steps fully before attempting. It is easy
to make mistakes!
1. Place the OpenWRT initramfs on the TFTP server and name it as
vmlinux.gz.uImage.3912
2. Boot up to Extreme Networks WING-Campus mode OS. Port GE1/LAN1
will be a DHCP **client**. Find out the IP address from your DHCP
server and SSH in. Default user/passwd is admin/new2day or
admin/admin123.
If it is booting to WING-Distributed mode, use this command to
convert to Campus mode.
$ operational-mode centralized
3. Upon bootup you have about 5mins to changed these u-boot variables
if necessary using the rdwr_boot_cfg command in Linux shell:
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var AP_MODE=0
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var MOSTRECENTKERNEL=0
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var WATCHDOG_COUNT=0
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var WATCHDOG_LIMIT=0
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var AP_PERSONALITY=identifi
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var serverip=<SERVER_IPADDR>
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var ipaddr=<UNIQUE_IPADDR>
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var bootcmd="run boot_net"
4. Reboot AP.
5. Connect PC with ethernet to GE1/LAN1 port. You should get a
DHCP address in the 192.168.1.x range and should be able to
SSH to the new OpenWRT TFTP recovery/installation shell.
6. At this point, u-boot is still set to TFTP boot, so you have to
replace the TFTP image with the original Extreme Networks image so
that you can change the u-boot environment.
See the instructions for Extracting Extreme Networks firmware
image.
DON'T REBOOT YET!
7. Next you must follow steps 6 thru 8 from the Installation with serial
console. After which you should have OpenWRT installed to primary
flash firmware.
8. Now Reboot. This time it will boot using TFTP into Extreme Networks
image. You may need to reconnect cables at this point -- GE1/LAN1
will be a DHCP **client** and you can SSH in -- just like step 2.
Get the IP address from you own DHCP server.
9. Set u-boot env as follows:
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var MOSTRECENTKERNEL=0
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var WATCHDOG_COUNT=0
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var bootcmd="run boot_flash"
10. Reboot AP. This time it should be into OpenWRT. GE1/LAN1 will be
a DHCP **server** and have static IP 192.168.1.1 -- just like step 5.
11. SSH into the LAN port and reconfigure to final configuration. Don't
make any changes that prevent you from SSH or Luci access!
Restoring Extreme Networks firmware
-----------------------------------
Assuming you have the original Extreme Networks image:
1. Login to OpenWRT shell
2. scp the Extreme Networks packaged firmware image file AP391x-*.img to
/tmp
3. Extract the firmware uimage file:
$ tar xjf AP391x-*.img vmlinux.gz.uImage
4. Force run sysupgrade:
$ sysupgrade -F /tmp/AP391x-*.img /
5. Restore the u-boot varable(s):
$ rdwr_boot_cfg write_var WATCHDOG_LIMIT=3
USB 2.0 Port on AP3915e
-----------------------
Enable this by setting LED "eth:amber_or_usb_enable" to ALWAYS ON.
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Glen Lee <g2lee@yahoo.com>
While adding support for the MF282 Plus, an entry in platform.sh was
overlooked - this fixes sysupgrade on this devices.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
While refactoring support for the MF287 series, an entry in platform.sh
was overlooked - this fixes sysupgrade on this devices.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
CONFIG_DEVTMPFS_SAFE and CONFIG_DM_AUDIT were not
set and had to be manually selected during build
everytime kernel was updated.
Signed-off-by: Oskari Rauta <oskari.rauta@gmail.com>
Apparently, a few ipq40xx devices have sporadic problems when reading the
flash over SPI. When that happens, the result of the faulty SPI read is
cached and it isn't re-attempted. Depending on when it happens, the router
either panics and reboots or is left in a partially broken state (an
application wont start).
The data on the flash is alright.
This wasn't the case with Openwrt with Linux < 5.x but I wasn't able to
work out which software change was responsible.
Github user karlpip created a patch for testing that disabled the cache
entirely and added logs. Typically, only one or two SPI operations fail at
a time:
[689200.631152] spi-nor spi0.0: SPI transfer failed: -110
[689200.631280] spi_master spi0: failed to transfer one message from queue
[689200.635369] jffs2: Write of 68 bytes at 0x00ffccf4 failed. returned -110, retlen 0
[689200.642014] jffs2: Not marking the space at 0x00ffccf4 as dirty because the flash driver returned retlen zero
Because reads aren't re-attempted, squashfs can't recover:
[3171844.279235] SQUASHFS error: Failed to read block 0x2bb912: -5
[3171844.279284] SQUASHFS error: Unable to read fragment cache entry [2bb912]
[3171844.283980] SQUASHFS error: Unable to read page, block 2bb912, size 14e6c
[3171844.291650] SQUASHFS error: Unable to read fragment cache entry [2bb912]
[3171844.297831] SQUASHFS error: Unable to read page, block 2bb912, size 14e6c
I assume there to be some kind of underlying electrical problem because,
in my experience, this happens a lot more when PoE is used.
NoTengoBattery has made an in-depth investigation:
https://forum.openwrt.org/t/patch-squashfs-data-probably-corrupt/70480
.. and created a patch that evicts the page cache and retries reading:
https://github.com/NoTengoBattery/openwrt/blob/linksys-ea6350v3-mastertrack/target/linux/ipq40xx/patches-5.4/9996-fs_squashfs_improve_squashfs_error_resistance.patch
The patch also works well with the WPJ428 but NoTengoBattery didn't try to
upstream it ("This is not the solution that should be used").
In 2020, I tried and failed to create a working patch that prevents faulty pages to
be cached in the first place. Because I needed a solution, I backported
"squashfs: add option to panic on errors " (10dde05b89980ef)
which has since become available in Openwrt.
The 'error=panic' option has been tested on a fleet of multiple hundred
WPJ428s over multiple years. Without this patch, devices regularly went
into 'limbo' on reboot or update and required a manual reboot.
Devices with this patch don't. I was initially concerned that the kernel
panic would leave devices with a real corrupted data but I haven't seen a
case of actual corruption since (outside of people turning off the power
during upgrades).
The WPJ428 is the only device I tested this patch on - others might also
benefit.
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Leon M. Busch-George <leon@georgemail.eu>
Buffalo WSR-3200AX4S is a 2.4/5 GHz band 11ax (Wi-Fi 6) router, based on
MT7622B.
Specification:
- SoC : MediaTek MT7622B
- RAM : DDR3 512 MiB
- Flash : SPI-NAND 128 MiB (Winbond W25N01GVZEIG)
- WLAN : 2.4/5 GHz 4T4R
- 2.4 GHz : MediaTek MT7622B (SoC)
- 5 GHz : MediaTek MT7915
- Ethernet : 5x 10/100/1000 Mbps
- Switch : MediaTek MT7531
- LEDs/Keys : 6x/5x (2x: buttons, 3x: slide-switches)
- UART : through-hole on PCB (J4)
- assignment: 3.3V, GND, TX, RX from tri-angle marking
- settings : 115200n8
- Power : 12 VDC, 1.5 A
Flash instruction using factory.bin image:
1. Boot WSR-3200AX4S with "Router" mode
2. Access to "http://192.168.11.1/" and open firmware update page
("ファームウェア更新")
3. Select the OpenWrt factory.bin image and click update ("更新実行")
button
4. Wait ~120 seconds to complete flashing
Note:
- This device has 2x OS images on flash. The first one will always be
used for booting and the secondary is for backup.
- This support generates multiple factory*.bin image:
- factory.bin : for flashing from OEM WebUI
- factory-uboot.bin: for flashing from U-Boot or clean installation
via sysupgrade (don't use for normal sysupgrade)
Known issues:
- Wi-Fi MAC addresses won't be applied to each adapter.
MAC Addresses:
LAN : C4:3C:EA:xx:xx:60 (board_data, mac (text))
WAN : C4:3C:EA:xx:xx:60 (board_data, mac (text))
2.4 GHz: C4:3C:EA:xx:xx:61
5 GHz : C4:3C:EA:xx:xx:68
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Separate dts/dtsi from the dts of Buffalo WSR-2533DHP2 to prepare adding
suppport for WSR-3200AX4S.
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Expand kernel partition size on WSR-2533DHP2 for the kernel larger than
4 MiB.
To prevent upgrading from old firmware before this commit, bump the
compat version to 1.1 and add a message for forced sysupgrade using
factory-uboot.bin image.
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Update LED and key nodes with newer DeviceTree bindings for WSR-2533DHP2.
- LED
- use led-[0-9] for node name of LEDs
- add "color" and "function" properties
- drop default-state = "on" from green:power LED
- this LED will be turned on by led-running alias
- key
- drop unnecessary poll-interval property
- use key-[0-9] for node name of keys
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
A bug report in the forum found that the MR70X lists four LAN ports in LuCI
while it has only three. This adds the device to the network setup file
to fix the issue.
Identified-by: Forum User "Lexeyko"
Signed-off-by: Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
```
Specifications:
* CPU: Qualcomm IPQ8072A, SoC Version: 2.0, Quad core Cortex-A53 1.6896 GHz
* RAM: 1 GiB of DDR4 600 MHz
* Flash: NAND 2x256 MiB (Macronix MX30UF2G18AC)
* 4 RGB LEDs: Power, LAN, 2.4GHz and 5GHz
* UART: Two 4-pin unpopulated headers under the LEDs.
Use the header closest to LED 4 and 5.
They are marked with a white stroke.
TX RX GND, beginning from "4". 115200n8.
Lan:
* One 100/1000/2.5GBASE-T Gigabit Ethernet (QCA8081)
Wlan:
* 4x4 in 2.4GHz: 802.11b/g/n/ax
* 4x4 in 5.0GHz: 802.11a/n/ac/ax
* OFDM and OFDMA
* Bidir and MU-MIMO
* Internal antenna 3.1/4.3 dBi (2.4GHz/5GHz)
Power:
* PoE+ 802.3at/af 25.5W
* DC 12V 2.5A
```
```
Note: The OpenWrt image is setup with DHCP and not a static IP.
1. Download the OpenWrt initramfs image. Copy the image to a TFTP server
2. Connect to console on the AP, and connect the LAN port to your LAN
3. Stop auto boot to get to U-boot shell, interrupt the autoboot process by pressing '0' when prompted
4. Set active_fw in env
# setenv active_fw 1
5. Transfer the initramfs image with TFTP
# setenv serverip 192.168.1.10 (IP of TFTP server host)
# setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.1 (IP used by the router for getting the image, must be in the same subnet as the TFTP host)
# tftpboot openwrt-qualcommax-ipq807x-netgear_wax620-initramfs-uImage.itb
6. Reboot and load the image
# bootm
7. SCP factory image to the AP
# scp openwrt-qualcommax-ipq807x-netgear_wax620-squashfs-factory.ubi root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/
8. Connect to device using SSH (use the LAN port)
9. Flash squashfs-factory.ubi from within the initramfs instance of OpenWRT
Before you flash, please check your mtd partitions where mtdX is the right mtd rootfs partition.
# cat /proc/mtd (To check MTD partitions)
# ubiformat /dev/mtd19 -y -f /tmp/openwrt-qualcommax-ipq807x-netgear_wax620-squashfs-factory.ubi
10. Set active_fw to 0
# /usr/sbin/fw_setenv active_fw 0
11. Reboot the AP and your done
# reboot
```
Signed-off-by: Kristian Skramstad <kristian+github@83.no>
vfat support is needed to mount the EFI System Partition (ESP)
during sysupgrade. If it is not available, the sysupgrade process
will not complete
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
Add build for the MTK3943 reference board for MT7981B+MT7976C.
**Hardware specification:**
- SoC: MediaTek MT7981B 2x A53
- Flash: various options
- RAM: 256MB DDR3
- Ethernet: 4 x 10/100/1000 Mbps via MT7531AE switch
EITHER 1 x 10/100/1000 Mbps built-in PHY
OR 1 x 10/100/1000/2500 Mbps MaxLinear GPY211C
- Switch: MediaTek MT7531AE
- WiFi: MediaTek MT7976C
- Button: RST, WPS
**Flash instructions for SPIM-NAND:**
- write *mt7981-rfb-spim-nand-preloader.bin to 'BL2' partition
- write *mt7981-rfb-spim-nand-bl31-uboot.fip to 'FIP' partition
- erase 'ubi' partition
- reset board
- create ubootenv and ubootenv2 UBI volumes in U-Boot
- edit environment and set bootcmd, e.g.
setenv bootconf 'config-1#mt7981-rfb-spim-nand#mt7981-rfb-mxl-2p5g-phy-eth1'
setenv bootcmd 'ubi read $loadaddr fit; bootm $loadaddr#$bootconf'
- load initramfs image via TFTP:
setenv serverip 192.168.1.254
setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.1
setenv bootfile openwrt-mediatek-filogic-mediatek_mt7981-rfb-initramfs.itb
saveenv ; saveenv
tftpboot
bootm $loadaddr#$bootconf
- Now use sysupgrade to write OpenWrt firmware to flash.
SNFI-NAND, SPIM-NOR and eMMC all work very similar, a bootable SD card image
is also being generated. However, as the board I've been provided only comes
with SPIM-NAND all other boot media are untested.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
UARTs not used as boot console are currently broken on some MediaTek
targets due to register access depending on the bus clock being enabled.
Add patch to make sure this dependency is always met.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Ethernet LED assignments were incorrectly swapped. Fix the assignment
logic so the correct LED is illuminated for the LAN LEDs.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
The ZTE MF282 Plus is a LTE router used (exclusively?) by the network
operator "3". It is very similar to the MF286/MF287 but in the form factor
of the MF282.
Specifications
==============
SoC: IPQ4019
RAM: 256MiB
Flash: 8MiB SPI-NOR + 128MiB SPI-NAND
LAN: 1x GBit LAN
LTE: ZTE Cat6
WiFi: 802.11a/b/g/n/ac SoC-integrated
MAC addresses
=============
LAN: from config
WiFi 1: from config + 1
WiFi 2: from config + 2
Installation
============
Option 1 - TFTP
---------------
TFTP installation using UART is preferred. Disassemble the device and
connect serial. Put the initramfs image as openwrt.bin to your TFTP server
and configure a static IP of 192.168.1.100. Load the initramfs image by
typing:
setenv serverip 192.168.1.100
setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.1
tftpboot 0x84000000 openwrt.bin
bootm 0x84000000
From this intiramfs boot you can take a backup of the currently installed
partitions as no vendor firmware is available for download:
ubiattach -m9
cat /dev/ubi0_0 > /tmp/ubi0_0
cat /dev/ubi0_1 > /tmp/ubi0_1
Copy the files /tmp/ubi0_0 and /tmp/ubi0_1 somewhere save.
Once booted, transfer the sysupgrade image and run sysupgrade. You might
have to delete the stock volumes first:
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N ubi_rootfs
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N kernel
Option 2 - From stock firmware
------------------------------
The installation from stock requires an exploit first. The exploit consists
of a backup file that forces the firmware to download telnetd via TFTP from
192.168.0.22 and run it. Once exploited, you can connect via telnet and
login as admin:admin.
The exploit will be available at the device wiki page.
Once inside the stock firmware, you can transfer the -factory.bin file to
/tmp by using "scp" from the stock frmware or "tftp".
ZTE has blocked writing to the NAND. Fortunately, it's easy to allow write
access - you need to read from one file in /proc. Once done, you need to
erase the UBI partition and flash OpenWrt. Before performing the operation,
make sure that mtd9 is the partition labelled "rootfs" by calling
"cat /proc/mtd".
Complete commands:
cd /tmp
tftp -g -r factory.bin 192.168.0.22
cat /proc/driver/sensor_id
flash_erase /dev/mtd9 0 0
dd if=/tmp/factory.bin of=/dev/mtdblock9 bs=131072
Afterwards, reboot your device and you should have a working OpenWrt
installation.
Restore Stock
=============
Option 1 - via UART
-------------------
Boot an OpenWrt initramfs image via TFTP as for the initial installation.
Transfer the two backed-up files to your box to /tmp.
Then, run the following commands - replace $kernel_length and $rootfs_size
by the size of ubi0_0 and ubi0_1 in bytes.
ubiattach -m 9
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N kernel
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N rootfs
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N rootfs_data
ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -N kernel -s $kernel_length
ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -N ubi_rootfs -s $rootfs_size
ubiupdatevol /dev/ubi0_0 /tmp/ubi0_0
ubiupdatevol /dev/ubi0_1 /tmp/ubi0_1
Option 2 - from within OpenWrt
------------------------------
This option requires to flash an initramfs version first so that access
to the flash is possible. This can be achieved by sysupgrading to the
recovery.bin version and rebooting. Once rebooted, you are again in a
default OpenWrt installation, but no partition is mounted.
Follow the commands from Option 1 to flash back to stock.
LTE Modem
=========
The LTE modem is similar to the MF286R, it provides an RNDIS interface
and an AT interface.
Other Notes
===========
There is one GPIO Switch "Power button blocker" which, if enabled, does not
trigger a reset of the SoC if the modem reboots. If disabled, the SoC is
rebooted along with the modem. The modem can be rebooted via the exported
GPIO "modem-reset" in /sys/class/gpio.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
New revision of eDPU uses an Marvell MV88E6361 switch to connect the SFP
cage and G.hn IC instead of connecting them directly to the ethernet
controllers.
The same image can be used on both versions as U-Boot will enable the
switch node and disable the unused ethernet controller.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert.marko@sartura.hr>
New revision of Methode eDPU boards uses Marvell 88E6361 switch, so lets
backport it from kernel 6.5.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert.marko@sartura.hr>
New revision of Methode eDPU boards uses Marvell 88E6361 switch, so lets
backport it from kernel 6.5.
Since 5.15 doesnt have phylink_get_caps I had to modify the backport to
use the old mv88e6393x_phylink_validate instead.
I had to fixup one more instance of port_max_speed_mode as well that is not
present in 6.5.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert.marko@sartura.hr>
Turn the "gpio-restart" node into a "gpio-export" node for all MF287
variants, similar to the MF287 Pro. Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be
a "power button blocker" GPIO for the MF287 and MF287 Plus, so a modem
reset always triggers a system reset.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
The ZTE MF287 requires a different board calibration file for ath10k than
the ZTE MF287+. The two devices receive their own DTS, thus the device tree
is slightly refactored.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
For the ZTE MF287 series, a special recovery image is built. The Makefile
worked fine on snapshot, but created corrupt images on the 23.05 images.
By using the appropriate variable, this should be fixed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
This commit removes the padded zeros in the date formatting.
The padded zeros from the date command causes the numbers
to be interpreted as an octal number by printf. Months, days,
and years with the number 08 or 09 raise an error in printf as an
"invalid octal number" and get interpreted as a zero.
Signed-off-by: Max Qian <public@maxqia.com>
Kernel config for 6.1 on ipq40xx is missing the config for
CONFIG_NVMEM_QCOM_SEC_QFPROM which them makes the build stop with a prompt.
Symbol is there in 5.15 config but 6.1 config was based of a version that
does not yet have it set as it was introduced after the 6.1 PR.
So, disable CONFIG_NVMEM_QCOM_SEC_QFPROM to fix building on 6.1.
Fixes: 825cfa4e36 ("ipq40xx: 6.1: refresh kernel config")
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
This pulls-in the latest version of qca8k based IPQ4019 driver as well as
the latest version of IPQESS that was sent upstream.
Both qca8k and IPQESS have been improved and cleaned up compared to current
version of patches.
PSGMII PHY mode and missing reset have been upstreamed and will be in
the kernel 6.6.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Adapt and refresh patches to apply.
DSA and ethernet driver patches are dropped as they will be replaced with
the latest version that was sent upstream.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Kernel 6.1 has changed format of sfp_parse_support(), so lets adapt to
those changes so it works on newer kernels as well.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
As a preparation to move to 6.1, we need to move the DSA and ethernet
drivers to a 5.15 specific directory as 6.1 will use the latest patchset
that was sent upstream which is too hard to backport to 5.15.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
On some WLR-7100 routers, significant packet loss was observed. This is
fixed by configuring a delay on the GMAC0 RXD and RXDV lines.
The values used in this commit are copied from the values used by the
stock firmare (based on register dumping).
Out of four test routers, the problem was consistently observed on two.
It is unclear what the relevant difference is exactly (the two working
routers were v1 001 with AR1022 and v1 002 with AR9342, the two broken
routers were both v1 002 with AR1022). All PCB routing also seems
identical, so maybe there is some stray capacitance on some of these
that adds just enough delay or so...
With this change, the packet loss disappears on the broken routers,
without introducing new packet loss on the previously working routers.
Note that the PHY *also* has delays enabled (through
`qca,ar8327-initvals`) on both RX and TX lines, but apparently that is
not enough, or it is not effective (registers have been verified to be
written).
For detailed discussion of this issue and debug history, see
https://forum.openwrt.org/t/sitecom-wlr-7100-development-progress/79641
Signed-off-by: Matthijs Kooijman <matthijs@stdin.nl>
This patch adds support for the MikroTik RouterBOARD 750 r2, marketed as
hEX lite, a small indoor router with 5x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet ports, one
with PoE in. The device was already supported by the ar71xx target.
Specifications:
- SoC: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9533
- Flash: 16 MB SPI NOR
- RAM: 64 MB
- Ethernet: 4x 10/100 Mbps LAN, 1x 10/100 Mbps WAN (PoE in)
- LEDs: 5x Ethernet port activity (green), 1x user (green)
- Buttons: 1x reset
See https://mikrotik.com/product/RB750r2 for more details.
Not working:
- Serial port (already not working in ar71xx)
Flashing:
TFTP boot initramfs image and then perform sysupgrade. Only the
"Internet" port will ask for an initramfs image. Follow common
MikroTik procedure as in https://openwrt.org/toh/mikrotik/common.
Signed-off-by: Roger Pueyo Centelles <roger.pueyo@guifi.net>
This adds support for the RBR40 and RBS40 (sold together as RBK40),
two netgear routers identical to SRR60/SRS60 in all but antennae (and
hardware id). See 2cb24b3f3c for details.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Makin <halorocker89@gmail.com>
There's a typo in here: board_name is a function, not a variable. This
issue was pointed out on the OpenWrt forum.
Closes: #13409
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com>
Mediatek EIP93 Crypto engine is a crypto accelerator which
is available in the Mediatek MT7621 SoC.
Signed-off-by: Aviana Cruz <gwencroft@proton.me>
Co-authored-by: Richard van Schagen <vschagen@icloud.com>
Co-authored-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
When the membase and pci_dev pointer were moved to a new struct in priv,
the actual membase users were left untouched, and they started reading
out arbitrary memory behind the struct instead of registers. This
unfortunately turned the RNG into a constant number generator, depending
on the content of what was at that offset.
To fix this, update geode_rng_data_{read,present}() to also get the
membase via amd_geode_priv, and properly read from the right addresses
again.
Closes#13417.
Reported-by: Timur I. Davletshin <timur.davletshin@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Timur I. Davletshin <timur.davletshin@gmail.com>
Suggested-by: Jo-Philipp Wich <jo@mein.io>
Signed-off-by: Jonas Gorski <jonas.gorski@gmail.com>
Fix PSE port assignment for 3rd GMAC on MT7988 and make sure dma_addr
is always initialized to prevent potentially accessing uninitialized
stack memory in the error path.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
ALFA Network AX1800RM (FCC ID: 2AB877621) is a dual-band Wi-Fi 6
(AX1800) router, based on MediaTek MT7621A + MT79x5D platform.
Specifications:
- SOC: MT7621A (880 MHz)
- DRAM: DDR3 256 MiB (Nanya NT5CC128M16JR-EK)
- Flash: 16 MiB SPI NOR (EN25QH128A-104HIP)
- Ethernet: 4x 10/100/1000 Mbps (SOC's built-in switch)
- Wi-Fi: 2x2:2 2.4/5 GHz (MT7905DAN + MT7975DN)
(MT7905DAN doesn't support background DFS scan/BT)
- LED: 6x green, 1x green/red
- Buttons: 2x (reset, WPS)
- Antenna: 4x external, non-detachable omnidirectional
- UART: 1x 4-pin (2.54 mm pitch, J4, not populated)
- Power: 12 V DC/1 A (DC jack)
MAC addresses:
LAN: 00:c0:ca:xx:xx:4e (factory 0x4, +2)
WAN: 00:c0:ca:xx:xx:4f (factory 0x4, +3)
2.4 GHz: 00:c0:ca:xx:xx:4c (factory 0x4, device's label)
5 GHz: 00:c0:ca:xx:xx:4c (factory 0xa)
Flash instructions for web-based U-Boot recovery:
1. Power the device with WPS button pressed and wait around 10 seconds.
2. Setup static IP 192.168.1.2/24 on your PC.
3. Go to 192.168.1.1 in browser and upload 'recovery' image.
The device runs LEDE 17.01 (kernel 4.4.x) based firmware with 'failsafe'
mode available which allows alternative upgrade method:
1. Run device in 'failsafe' mode and change password for default user.
2. SSH to the device, transfer 'sysupgrade' image and perform upgrade
in forced mode, without preserving settings: 'sysupgrade -n -F ...'.
Other notes:
If you own early version of this device, the vendor firmware might
refuse OpenWrt image because of missing custom header. In that case,
ask vendor's customer support for stock firmware without custom header
support/requirement.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
Since kernel 5.13 this is needed to enable USB ports on all devices in
subtarget. Previously TF-A and COMPHY driver might have set up this PHY,
but not anymore.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tmn505@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
This should be a part of kernel major bump. Fortunately it didn't stall
compilation, so no fixes tag.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tmn505@gmail.com>
**Hardware specification:**
- SoC: MediaTek MT7981B 2x A53
- Flash: ESMT F50L1G41LB 128MB
- RAM: Nanya NT5CC128M16JR-EK 256MB
- Ethernet: 4 x 10/100/1000 Mbps
- Switch: MediaTek MT7531AE
- WiFi: MediaTek MT7976C
- Button: Reset, Mesh
- Power: DC 12V 1A
- UART: 3.3v, 115200n8
| Layout: |
| :-------- |
| <Antenna> |
| VCC |
| GND |
| Tx |
| Rx |
**Flash instructions:**
1. Rename `openwrt-mediatek-filogic-cetron_ct3003-squashfs-factory.bin` to `factory.bin`.
2. Upload the `factory.bin` using the device's Web interface.
3. Click the upgrade button and wait for the process to finish.
4. Access the OpenWrt interface using the same password.
5. Use the 'Restore' function to reset the firmware to its initial state.
**Notes:**
If you plan to recovery the stock firmware in the future, it's advisable
to connect the device via the serial port and enter failsafe mode to
back up all the MTD partitions before proceeding the steps above.
Signed-off-by: Patricia Lee <patricialee320@gmail.com>
Make use of minor sector size (4k) erasure on supported flash chips
to improve spi read/write performance.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
ath79 PCIe interrupt controller has stopped working correctly. This
is because the DT exposing a non-sensical interrupt-map property,
and their drivers relying on the kernel ignoring this property[1].
This patch fixes the PCIe init error:
ath9k 0000:00:00.0: of_irq_parse_pci: failed with rc=-14
Notice:
This is just a workaround, not a fix. PCIe driver and related dts
node need to be rewritten.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20211201114102.13446-1-maz@kernel.org/
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
All kernel configs are refreshed by
'make kernel_oldconfig CONFIG_TARGET=target' and
'make kernel_oldconfig CONFIG_TARGET=subtarget'.
upstreamed patches:
010-v5.17-spi-ar934x-fix-transfer-and-word-delays.patch
011-v5.17-spi-ar934x-fix-transfer-size.patch
020-v5.18-spi-ath79-Implement-the-spi_mem-interface.patch
030-v5.18-ath79-add-support-for-booting-QCN550x.patch
build and run tested on:
ath79/generic/ar7241
ath79/generic/qca9563
ath79/nand/ar9344
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
Some symbols are outdated or missing due to daily kernel bumps. It's
better to re-add them. All configs are automatically refreshed by
'make kernel_oldconfig CONFIG_TARGET=taget' and
'make kernel_oldconfig CONFIG_TARGET=subtarget'
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
This reverts commit 5356462ce5.
Kernel switching to fw_devlink=on as default broke probing some devices.
Revert it until we get a proper fix.
It seemed that mtd OF_POPULATED hack resolved probing issues but
apparently not all of them. We got reports about reading MAC using NVMEM
not working and USB controllers not working.
Ref: #10232Fixes: #13412
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
Fix the issue of dts buswidth cannot be applied properly with spi driver.
Fix the name of buswidth to bus-width in dts in order to fit the format
in linux spi kernel[1] so that spi-tx-bus-width & spi-rx-bus-width can be
parsed properly.
[1] Documentation/devicetree/bindings/spi/spi-controller.yaml
Signed-off-by: Chen Minqiang <ptpt52@gmail.com>
This adds support for Radxa ROCK Pi E, rockchip rk3328 board.
Specification:
- CPU: Rockchip RK3328 64-bit Quad-core
- RAM: DDR3 256MB ~ 2GB
- Network:
1 x 10/100/1000M Ethernet
1 x 10/100M Ethernet
- Storage:
1 x MicroSD Slot
1 x eMMC Module Slot
- USB Host/OTG:
1 x USB3.0 Type A HOST
1 x USB2.0 HOST (40-pin pin-header)
- Wireless
RTL8723DU/RTL8821CU
- Debug Serial:
1500000 baud at UART2 ( 40-pin pin-header)
- Power Supply:
Type-C 5V
Optionally PoE
Installation:
- Write image to SD Card or EMMC with dd
- Boot ROCK Pi E from the SD Card
Signed-off-by: Jayantajit Gogoi <jayanta.gogoi525@gmail.com>
The bootcmd limits the kernel to 4 MiB which is
exceeded when using Device/FitImage. Device/FitzImage
reduces the size to around 3 MiB.
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Bong <thomas.bong@devolo.de>
Renamed the interfaces to match the other devices.
Name the interface connected to the builtin G.hn chip 'ghn'.
This might toggle at runtime while the G.hn chip is in the
bootloader.
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Bong <thomas.bong@devolo.de>
The NMBM-Enabled layout did not use fit image,
it just need default process. So it was been removed in platform.sh.
It will fix sysupgrade error for xiaomi,mi-router-wr30u-112m-nmbm.
Signed-off-by: Hank Moretti <mchank9999@gmail.com>
Relocating the device tree is required for being apply to apply
device tree overylay at boot.
Fixes: 34bb33094a ("mediatek: use updated device tree overlay mechanism for BPi-R64")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This symbol was added by commit 2e6f34faa7e0 ("Input: Add IBM Operation
Panel driver") to v6.1. It depends on I2C so it's available to limited
amount of targets. It needs to be specified thought to allow kernel
configuration.
For bcm53xx this fixes:
IBM Operation Panel driver (INPUT_IBM_PANEL) [N/m/?] (NEW)
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
Reviewed-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
These suboptions (PLATFORM, FSL_MC and MLX5_VFIO_PCI)
may be prompted for when VFIO is enabled, regardless of
architecture.
These are not related to the main vfio use case
(passthrough of PCIe devices)
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
When adapting the network configuration for MT7988 RFB a stray quote
was left in a script. Remove it to fix generating the default network
configuration.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Import commits from upstream Linux replacing some downstream patches.
Move accepted patches from pending-{5.15,6.1} to backport-{5.15,6.1}.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Some recent models of the Ubiquiti Networks UniFi 6 LR access point
come with a RealTek RTL8211FS 1000M/100M/10M PHY instead of the
Aquantia AQR112 2500M/1000M/100M/10M PHY used in both v1 and v2. Add
build for this variant so we can support Ethernet with the PHY.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Switch to OpenWrt uImage.FIT bootmethod and include various bootloader
artifacts with the generated binaries.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Set correct pull-type data and add additional uart groups for MT7981.
Assign functions to configure pin bias for MT7986.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Using the I2C host controller on the MT7981 SoC requires 4 clocks to
be enabled. One of them, the pmic clk, is only enabled in case
'mediatek,have-pmic' is also set which has other consequences which
are not desired in this case.
Allow defining a pmic clk even in case the 'mediatek,have-pmic' propterty
is not present and the bus is not used to connect to a pmic, but may
still require to enable the pmic clock.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The patch was wrongly tagged as being part of Linux 6.0 even though it
was only committed with Linux 6.2 and hence needs to be backported for
Linux 6.1.
Fixes: fa79baf4a6 ("generic: copy backport, hack, pending patch and config from 5.15 to 6.1")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Unfortunately some device tree properties have slipped under the table
when switching from our downstream device tree.
Bring back 3W power for SFP cages and restore thermal trip points to
make sense again.
Fixes: 7a0ec001ff ("mediatek: sync MT7986 device trees with upstream")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The DIR-890L is very similar to DIR-885L, but has both USB2
and USB3. The signature for the wrgac36 board was copied from
DD-Wrt.
The DIR-890L bootstrap will only load the first 2 MB after
the SEAMA header in the NAND flash, uncompress it with LZMA
and execute it. Since the compressed kernel will not fit in
2 MB we have a problem. Solve this by putting a LZMA
compressed U-Boot into the first 128 KB of the flash
followed by the kernel. The bootstrap will then uncompress
and execute U-Boot and then we let U-Boot read the kernel
from flash and execute it.
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
One of our SPI devices references this node, but we never enabled it.
This clutters up probe deferral logs.
(NB: this SPI device still doesn't have a real driver, so it's just here
for documentation and/or tinkering.)
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com>
The qcom spm driver is currently broken for IPQ8064 OnHub devices on
kernel 6.1, such that it hangs the system when booting, much to the
consternation of users. This is especially bad as these devices don't
yet have a fully-supported release branch, and are still sometimes
landing on snapshot builds.
OnHub devices have their own kernel config, so it's not that wide of an
impact to disable this.
I haven't fully gotten to the bottom of this, but:
(a) The vendor kernel didn't have any SPM driver at all, and didn't
utilize cpuidle.
(b) The device tree has never included any (non-disabled) cpuidle
states, so even when this driver was present on 5.15 (last
known-working kernel), it didn't actually do anything -- it bailed
early, before ever doing any SPM initialization.
(c) Refactoring in Linux 5.16 [1] caused the SPM driver to be activated
unconditionally, including setting us into standby mode
(PM_SLEEP_MODE_STBY) by default.
Removing the one PM_SLEEP_MODE_STBY line from drivers/soc/qcom/spm.c
seems to fix the problem, but that isn't much different than simply
disabling the driver, so I go with that for now.
I also disable CONFIG_ARM_QCOM_SPM_CPUIDLE, becuase it 'select's
QCOM_SPM.
NB: it's possible there's some other deeper root cause involved in here.
For one, I notice that CPU hotplug (e.g., echo 0 >
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu1/online, echo 1 > ...) doesn't work right
either. Perhaps there's some mismatch on upstream Linux qcom-scm
behavior and the old boot firmware used for these systems? It wouldn't
be the first time, as we've had some similar incompatibilities on the
next generation of these devices, Google WiFi [2].
[1] Commit 60f3692b5f0b ("cpuidle: qcom_spm: Detach state machine from
main SPM handling")
[2] [RFC] qcom_scm: IPQ4019 firmware does not support atomic API?
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-kernel/20200913201608.GA3162100@bDebian/
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com>
This add support for PINE64 ROCK64, rockchip rk3328 board.
Specifications:
4 x ARM Cortex A53 cores @ 1.5 GHz
ARM Mali 450 MP2 GPU
LPDDR3 RAM (up to 4GB)
Gigabit Ethernet
Micro SD Slot
eMMC module slot
SPI Flash 128Mbit
4K digital video out
2x USB 2.0 Host
1x USB 3.0 Host
PI-2 bus
PI-P5+ bus
IR R/X port
Real Time Clock (RTC) port
Power Over Ethernet (POE) (when using optional HAT module)
A/V jack
Power, Reset and Recovery buttons
3.5mm barrel power (5V 3A) port
To install write image to the sd using dd (dd if=*.img of=/*)
Signed-off-by: Antonio Flores <antflores627@gmail.com>
The DRA-1360 rev A is a wall-plug AC1300 repeater.
Hardware is identical (same FCC ID, black case instead of white)
to D-Link DAP-1620 rev B, which is already supported, but a
different model name, revision, and hardware ID are needed.
Thus, the bulk of the DAP-1620 device tree is extracted to a
common dtsi included by the two models' device trees.
Repeating specs and installation instructions from e4c7703:
(note that the RAM size mentioned there was incorrect, oops)
Specs:
- SoC: MT7621AT (880MHz dual-core MIPS1004Kc)
- Memory: 128 MiB RAM, 16 MiB NOR SPI
- WiFi: MT7615DN 2x2 802.11n + 2x2 802.11ac (DBDC)
- Ethernet: 1 RJ45 port 10/100/1000
- Power/status LED: red+green
- LED RSSI bargraph: 2x green, 1x red+green
Installation:
- Keep reset button pressed during plug-in
- Web Recovery Updater is at 192.168.0.50
(pings are ignored, it listens only for http)
- Upload factory.bin, confirm flashing
(seems to work best with Chromium-based browsers)
Revert to OEM firmware:
- tail -c+117 DRA1360A1_FW112B03.bin | \
openssl aes-256-cbc -d -md md5 -out decrypted.bin \
-k c471706398cb147c6619f8a04a18d53e9c17ede8
- flash decrypted.bin via D-Link Web Recovery
Signed-off-by: Rani Hod <rani.hod@gmail.com>
The MAC address of the GMAC is contained inside the CWMP-Account
number on the label.
The label MAC address alias was defined previously, but it has been
removed with the switch to IPQESS / DSA.
Restore the label MAC address alias.
Fixes: 27b441cbaf ("ipq40xx: drop ESSEDMA + AR40xx DTS nodes")
Signed-off-by: Fabian Bläse <fabian@blaese.de>
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Don't skip remapping of the UBI area for the ZyXEL NWA50AX Pro. This is
due to the kernel being loaded from the UBI partition by U-Boot.
Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/13335
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
From the Netgear u-boot GPL code[1]. Bootloader always unconditionally
marks block 768, 1020 - 1023 as bad blocks on each boot. This may lead
to conflicts with the OpenWrt nand driver since these blocks may be good
blocks. In this case, U-boot will override the oob of these blocks so
that break the ubi volume. The system will be damaged after first reboot.
To avoid this issue, manually skip these blocks by using "mtd-concat".
[1] https://www.downloads.netgear.com/files/GPL/EX7300v2series-V1.0.0.146_gpl_src.tar.bz2.zip
Fixes: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/issues/8878
Tested-by: Yousaf <yousaf465@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
In Netgear u-boot GPL code, nand devices uses this formula to locate the
rootfs offset.
offset = (((128 + KERNEL_SIZE) / BLOCK_SIZE) + 1) * BLOCK_SIZE;
Howerver, WNDR4500 source code incorrectly define the nand block size to
64k. In some cases, it causes u-boot can't get the correct rootfs offset,
which result in boot failure. This patch workaround it by padding kernel
size to (128k * n - 128 - 1). The additional char '\0' is used to ensure
the (128 + KERNEL_SIZE) can't be divided by the BLOCK_SIZE.
Fixes: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/issues/13050
Fixes: 3c1512a25d ("ath79: optimize the firmware recipe for Netgear NAND devices")
Tested-by: Yousaf <yousaf465@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
Enable the ethernet LED's on the ZyXEL NWA50AX Pro to show link-state as
well as activity.
Both LED's are configured pulsing.
AMBER | 10/100
GREEN | 1000
A+G | 2500
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Fix compatible string to match what is supported upstream, fix alignment
and order MTD partitions according to offset.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Agner <stefan@agner.ch>
Enable building a factory image which can be flashed through the OEM
firmware's web interface. It seems that the web interface requires a
minimum file size of 10MiB, otherwise it will not accept the image.
The update image is a regular sysupgrade tarball packed in a Netgear
encrypted image. The Netgear encrypted image is the same as used in
WAX202 or WAX206, including the encryption keys and IV.
This adds a script which creates the rootfs_data volume on first
startup. This is required since the OEM firmware's sysupgrade scripts
do not create such a paritition. Note that any script ordered after
70_initramfs_test will not get executed on initramfs. Hence this new
script 75_rootfs_prepare won't create the rootfs_data volume when
using the recovery initramfs.
Also, this deletes the kernel_backup and rootfs_backup volumes in case
we have to create the rootfs_data volumes. This makes sure that
OpenWrt is the actual backup firmware instead of the stock firmware.
References in WAX220 GPL source:
https://www.downloads.netgear.com/files/GPL/WAX220-V1.0.2.8-gpl-src.tar.gz
* package/base-files/files/lib/upgrade/nand.sh:186
Creation of rootfs_data is disabled
* Uboot-upstream/board/mediatek/common/ubi_helper.c
Automatic creation of UBI backup volumes
Signed-off-by: Stefan Agner <stefan@agner.ch>
I-O DATA WN-DEAX1800GR is a 2.4/5 GHz band 11ax (Wi-Fi 6) router, based
on MT7621A.
Specification:
- SoC : MediaTek MT7621A
- RAM : DDR3 256 MiB (Nanya NT5CC128M16JR-EK)
- Flash : RAW NAND 128 MiB (Winbond W29N01HVSINF)
- WLAN : 2.4/5 GHz (MediaTek MT7915)
- Ethernet : 5x 10/100/1000 Mbps
- Switch : MT7530 (SoC)
- LEDs/Keys : 6x/3x
- UART : through-hole on PCB (J2)
- assignment: 3.3V, GND, TX, RX from "1" marking
- settings : 115200n8
- Power : 12 VDC, 1 A
Flash instruction using initramfs-factory image:
1. Boot WN-DEAX1800GR normally
2. Access to "http://192.168.0.1/" and open firmware update page
("ファームウェア")
3. Select the OpenWrt initramfs-factory.bin image and click update
("更新") button to perform firmware update
4. On the initramfs image, perform sysupgrade with the
squashfs-sysupgrade.bin image
5. Wait ~120 seconds to complete flashing
Note:
- This device has 2x OS images on the flash storage. In this support,
the first one will be used.
Warning:
- Do not use "saveenv" command on U-Boot CLI.
This device has wrong u-boot-env data. The actual length of individual
env data installed to the device is 0x1000 (4 KiB), but installed
U-Boot requires 0x20000 (128 KiB). So U-Boot determines the data is
invalid. Then, if you perform saving environment data with saveenv on
U-Boot CLI, installed env data will be overwritten with too few
default values without individual values (SSID, password, MAC
addresses, etc...).
MAC addresses:
LAN : 50:41:B9:xx:xx:F4 (Config, ethaddr (text))
WAN : 50:41:B9:xx:xx:F6 (Config, wanaddr (text))
2.4 GHz: 50:41:B9:xx:xx:F4 (Config, rmac (text) / Factory, 0x4 (hex))
5 GHz : 50:41:B9:xx:xx:F5 (none)
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
I-O DATA devices manufactured by MSTC (MitraStar Technology Corp.)
have some important flags for booting, "bootnum" and "debugflag".
The almost devices have both flags but some devices have only
"bootnum" flag.
So optimize helper functions in iodata.sh to set each flags.
- both:
- WN-AX1167GR2
- WN-AX2033GR
- WN-DX1167R
- WN-DX1200GR
- WN-DX2033GR
- "bootnum" only
- WN-DEAX1800GR
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Telenor quirks
--------------
The operator specific firmware running on the Telenor branded
ZyXEL EX5700 includes U-Boot modifications affecting the OpenWrt
installation.
Notable changes to U-Boot include
- environment is stored in RAM and reset to defaults when power
cycled
- dual partition scheme with "nomimal" or "rescue" systems, falling
back to "rescue" unless the OS signals success in 3 attempts
- several runtime additions to the device-tree
Some of these modifications have side effects requiring workarounds
- U-Boot modifies /chosen/bootargs in an unsafe manner, and will crash
unless this node exists
- U-Boot verifies that the selected rootfs UBI volume exists, and
refuses to boot if it doesn't. The chosen "rootfs" volume must contain
a squashfs signature even for tftp or initramfs booting.
- U-Boot parses the "factoryparams" UBI volume, setting the "ethaddr"
variable to the label mac. But "factoryparams" does not always
exist. Instead there is a "RIP" volume containing all the factory
data. Copying the "RIP" volume to "factoryparams" will fix this
Hardware
--------
SOC: MediaTek MT7986
RAM: 1GB DDR4
FLASH: 512MB SPI-NAND (Mikron xxx)
WIFI: Mediatek MT7986 802.11ax 5 GHz
Mediatek MT7916 DBDC 802.11ax 2.4 + 6 GHz
ETH: MediaTek MT7531 Switch + SoC
3 x builtin 1G phy (lan1, lan2, lan3)
2 x MaxLinear GPY211C 2.5 N-Base-T phy (lan4, wan)
USB: 1 x USB 3.2 Enhanced SuperSpeed port
UART: 3V3 115200 8N1 (Pinout: GND KEY RX TX VCC)
Installation
------------
1. Download the OpenWrt initramfs image. Copy the image to a TFTP server
reachable at 192.168.1.2/24. Rename the image to C0A80101.img.
2. Connect the TFTP server to lan1, lan2 or lan3. Connect to the serial
console, Interrupt the autoboot process by pressing ESC when prompted.
3. Download and boot the OpenWrt initramfs image.
$ env set uboot_bootcount 0
$ env set firmware nominal
$ tftpboot
$ bootm
4. Wait for OpenWrt to boot. Transfer the sysupgrade image to the device
using scp and install using sysupgrade.
$ sysupgrade -n <path-to-sysupgrade.bin>
Missing features
----------------
- The "lan1", "lan2" and "lan3" port LEDs are driven by the switch but
OpenWrt does not correctly configure the output.
- The "lan4" and "wan" port LEDs are driven by the GPH211C phys and
not configured by OpenWrt.
Signed-off-by: Bjørn Mork <bjorn@mork.no>
Implement the functionality of
target/linux/ramips/patches-5.15/700-net-ethernet-mediatek-support-net-labels.patch
in userspace, since the driver patch has been rejected as a generic solution:
https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/11435
Signed-off-by: Bjørn Mork <bjorn@mork.no>
Netgear Nighthawk RAX120v2 AX WIFI router with 5 1G and 1 5G ports.
The majority of the code is based on @jewwest's PR #11830.
Specifications:
* CPU: Qualcomm IPQ8074 Quad core Cortex-A53 2.2GHz
* RAM: 1024MB of DDR3 (Nanya NT5CC256M16EP-EK × 2)
* Flash: SPI-NAND 512 MiB (Winbond W29N04GZBIBA)
* Ethernet: 4x 10/100/1000 Mbps LAN,
1x 10/100/1000 Mbps WAN (Qualcomm QCA8075),
1x 10/100/1000/2500/5000 Mbps LAN/WAN (Aquantia AQR111B0 PHY)
* Wi-Fi:
* 2.4 GHz: Qualcomm QCN5024 4x4
* 2x 5 GHz: Qualcomm QCN5054 4x4
* USB: 2x USB 3.0
* LEDs: Power, 2.4GHz & 5GHz Radio, WPS, WAN, USB1 & USB2, 5G LAN
* Keys: LEDs On/Off, Power, Reset, RFKILL, WPS
* UART: Marked J9003 VCC TX RX GND, beginning from "1". 3.3v, 115200n8
* Power: 19 VDC, 3.1 A
Installation:
* Flashing OpenWrt is done in two steps:
a) Flash *-squashfs-web-ui-factory.img from stock UI (thanks to @wangyu-).
This writes an initramfs based OpenWrt image onto the RAX120v2
b) From OpenWrt flash the *-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin using LuCI or the commandline
* U-Boot allows booting an initramfs image via TFTP:
- Set ip of your PC to 192.168.1.100
- At the serial console interrupt boot at "Hit any key to stop autoboot:"
- In u-boot run `tftpsrv`
- On your PC send the OpenWrt initramfs image:
tftp 192.168.1.1 -m binary -c put openwrt-ipq807x-generic-netgear_rax120v2-initramfs-uImage.itb
Make 5G Aquantia phy work:
For the 5G port labeled 'lan5' to work a firmware is needed. This can be loaded in
u-boot by writing the firmware to the correct mtd partition.
The firmware file found in the Netgear stock firmware under /lib/firmware/ named
'AQR-G3_v4.3.C-AQR_DNI_DR-EQ35AX8-R-prov1_ID23888_VER1311.cld' is needed and has to
be converted to a MBN file.
The `mkheader.py` script used here can be found in the Netgear V1.2.8.40 GPL source,
under 'git_home/u-boot.git/tools/mkheader.py'
Convert the CLD file to MBN using:
$ python2 mkheader.py 0x44000000 0x13 <*.cld file> aqr_4.3.C.mbn
This MBN file can then be flashed to the MTD partition to be used by u-boot.
The necessary files can also be found in
https://github.com/boretom/openwrt-fork/tree/rax120v2/aquantia-firmware
* Write MBN file to MTD partition to be loaded automatically by u-boot:
U-boot automatically tries to load the firmware from nand at address 0x7e00000 which
corresponds to `/dev/mtd25` in OpenWrt.
- find ETHPHYFW partition while running OpenWrt (expected: /dev/mtd25)
$ fgrep -i 'ethphyfw' /proc/mtd
mtd25: 00080000 00020000 "ethphyfw
- copy mbn file to /tmp/ folder of the router
$ scp aqr-v4.3.C.mbn 192.168.1.1:/tmp/
- write mbn file to ethphyfw partition
$ mtd write /tmp/aqr_v4.3.C.mbn /dev/mtd25
Revert to stock firmware:
* Flash the stock firmware to the bootloader using TFTP/NMRP.
References to RAX120v2 GPL source:
https://www.downloads.netgear.com/files/GPL/RAX120-V1.2.8.40_gpl_src.zip
Reviewed-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Kupper <thomas.kupper@gmail.com>
qca8k driver we are currently based of is rather out of date and is lacking
support for setting the ageing time or fast ageing so until we update the
driver lets just backport support for those from qca8k.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
The ZTE MF287 Pro is a LTE router used (exclusively?) by the network
operator "3". It is very similar to the MF287+, but the hardware layout
and partition layout have changed quite a bit.
Specifications
==============
SoC: IPQ4018
RAM: 256MiB
Flash: 8MiB SPI-NOR + 128MiB SPI-NAND
LAN: 4x GBit LAN
LTE: ZTE Cat12
WiFi: 802.11a/b/g/n/ac SoC-integrated
USB: 1x 2.0
MAC addresses
=============
LAN: from config + 2
WiFi 1: from config
WiFi 2: from config + 1
Installation
============
Option 1 - TFTP
---------------
TFTP installation using UART is preferred. Disassemble the device and
connect serial. Put the initramfs image as openwrt.bin to your TFTP server
and configure a static IP of 192.168.1.100. Load the initramfs image by
typing:
setenv serverip 192.168.1.100
setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.1
tftpboot 0x82000000 openwrt.bin
bootm 0x82000000
From this intiramfs boot you can take a backup of the currently installed
partitions as no vendor firmware is available for download:
ubiattach -m17
cat /dev/ubi0_0 > /tmp/ubi0_0
cat /dev/ubi0_1 > /tmp/ubi0_1
Copy the files /tmp/ubi0_0 and /tmp/ubi0_1 somewhere save.
Once booted, transfer the sysupgrade image and run sysupgrade. You might
have to delete the stock volumes first:
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N ubi_rootfs
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N kernel
Option 2 - From stock firmware
------------------------------
The installation from stock requires an exploit first. The exploit consists
of a backup file that forces the firmware to download telnetd via TFTP from
192.168.0.22 and run it. Once exploited, you can connect via telnet and
login as admin:admin.
The exploit will be available at the device wiki page.
Once inside the stock firmware, you can transfer the -factory.bin file to
/tmp by using "scp" from the stock frmware or "tftp".
ZTE has blocked writing to the NAND. Fortunately, it's easy to allow write
access - you need to read from one file in /proc. Once done, you need to
erase the UBI partition and flash OpenWrt. Before performing the operation,
make sure that mtd13 is the partition labelled "rootfs" by calling
"cat /proc/mtd".
Complete commands:
cd /tmp
tftp -g -r factory.bin 192.168.0.22
cat /proc/driver/sensor_id
flash_erase /dev/mtd17 0 0
dd if=/tmp/factory.bin of=/dev/mtdblock17 bs=131072
Afterwards, reboot your device and you should have a working OpenWrt
installation.
Restore Stock
=============
Option 1 - via UART
-------------------
Boot an OpenWrt initramfs image via TFTP as for the initial installation.
Transfer the two backed-up files to your box to /tmp.
Then, run the following commands - replace $kernel_length and $rootfs_size
by the size of ubi0_0 and ubi0_1 in bytes.
ubiattach -m 17
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N kernel
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N rootfs
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N rootfs_data
ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -N kernel -s $kernel_length
ubimkvol /dev/ubi0 -N ubi_rootfs -s $rootfs_size
ubiupdatevol /dev/ubi0_0 /tmp/ubi0_0
ubiupdatevol /dev/ubi0_1 /tmp/ubi0_1
Option 2 - from within OpenWrt
------------------------------
This option requires to flash an initramfs version first so that access
to the flash is possible. This can be achieved by sysupgrading to the
recovery.bin version and rebooting. Once rebooted, you are again in a
default OpenWrt installation, but no partition is mounted.
Follow the commands from Option 1 to flash back to stock.
LTE Modem
=========
The LTE modem is similar to other ZTE devices and controls some more LEDs
and battery management.
Configuring the connection using uqmi works properly, the modem
provides three serial ports and a QMI CDC ethernet interface.
Other Notes
===========
Contrary to the stock firmware, the USB port on the back can be used.
There is one GPIO Switch "Power button blocker" which, if enabled, does not
trigger a reset of the SoC if the modem reboots. If disabled, the SoC is
rebooted along with the modem. The modem can be rebooted via the exported
GPIO "modem-reset" in /sys/class/gpio.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
Backport patch adding support for LED PHY directly in PHY ops struct.
Add new PHYLIB_LEDS config and refresh patches.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
ASUS RT-AC3100 is ASUS RT-AC88U without the external switch.
OpenWrt forum users effortless and ktmakwana have confirmed that there are
revisions with either 4366b1 or 4366c0 wireless chips.
Therefore, include firmware for 4366b1 along with 4366c0. This way, all
hardware revisions of the router will be supported by having brcmfmac use
the firmware file for the wireless chip it detects.
Signed-off-by: Arınç ÜNAL <arinc.unal@arinc9.com>
This reverts commit 79af0593a3.
A hack adjusting fw_devlink value was added to workaround issue with
probing device drivers caused by of_platform_populate(). With upstream
mtd commit (the one adding OF_POPULATED) backported there is no need for
that hack anymore.
Ref: 3eebb91317 ("kernel: backport proper fix for mtd preventing devices probing")
Ref: #10232
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
DK01 and DK04 board support has been in a form of 2 patches that we have
been carrying for a long time.
Both of the patches contain weird changes, dont follow any DT syntax and I
honestly doubt they are even valid.
DK01 and DK04 also have not been converted to DSA even after a long time
and I doubt that anybody in the community even has these boards as they are
QCA reference boards that are not even obtainable anymore.
Since patches for these 2 boards have been just causing us pain when trying
to update the kernel to a new major release or even point releases lets
remove the support for these boards, and if there are users they can easily
be reinstated.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Teltonika RUTX currently is the only device pulling in DK01 DTSI and thus
preventing removal of DK01 and DK04 support.
So, lets add the missing nodes from DK01 DTSI and use the SoC DTSI instead.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Lets add a proper commit title and description to the SCM cold boot
patch so it applies with a git apply or git-am.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
SCM SDI disable support is pending upstream, so lets use that instead.
Since the board check needs to be split out, export it with a header so
it applies with git-am.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
This change makes it possible to use the GPIO_OPEN_DRAIN /
GPIO_OPEN_SOURCE Flags when exporting GPIOs via dts.
We need to emulate the open-source or open-drain functionalities for the
initial value, because the used functions (gpiod_direction_output_raw)
do not take this into account.
Signed-off-by: Martin Schiller <ms@dev.tdt.de>
The kernel FSL_ENETC_QOS option is only a compile time
option, it does not result in a separate module being built.
Set it to 'y' to resolve a warning from the kernel compile:
.config:2654:warning: symbol value 'm' invalid for FSL_ENETC_QOS
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
Fixes: c3151b6f04 ("armvirt: 64: add support for other SystemReady-compatible vendors")
When comparing the generated OpenWrt .config to the Linux arm64
defconfig, I noticed these SATA controllers were not included.
As they may be used as a boot drive, they should be built into
the kernel.
CONFIG_SATA_MVEBU is for Marvell platforms.
CONFIG_SATA_QORIQ is for NXP Layerscape.
CONFIG_SATA_SIL24 is for Arm's Juno development board, see Linux
kernel commit d7c38ff1cd86 ("arm64: defconfig: Add Juno SATA
controller").
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
This MDIO driver was already being built, but not installed due
to being selected by the ThunderX Ethernet driver.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
The initial armv8 module incorrectly labelled the Thunder(v1) as
supporting the ThunderX2, when they have different drivers.
Add kmod-octeon-tx2 to support the newer devices.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
This turns on various PCI related options which are enabled
in the Linux kernel arch/arm64/configs/defconfig but not
yet in the OpenWrt config.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
These are used by common Broadcom SoC's like
the BCM2711 (RPi4) and iProc network processor.
Tested on the RPi4B using the Raspberry Pi
UEFI+ACPI firmware[1].
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
[1] - https://github.com/pftf/RPi4
This is part of an effort to reduce differences between
the OpenWrt armsr/armv8 config and Linux arm64 defconfig.
This enables CONFIG_ARCH_BCM and downstream
CONFIG_ARCH_BCM2835 (= BCM2711 like Raspberry Pi 4)
and CONFIG_ARCH_BCM_IPROC (Broadcom iProc packet processors).
The broadband specific SoC's (ARCH_BCMBCA) are left out
as it is assumed these will not be doing EFI boot.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
Renesas markets several embedded Arm64 SoCs in the
RZ series (RZ/G, RZ/V), so should be enabled in
a general purpose target.
Automotive (R-Car) SoC's are not enabled by this change.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
Due to an error on my part, Anton Antonov's
i.MX changes[1] did not fully make it into my
armvirt kernel 6.1 EFI pull request. I have updated
them using the options he supplied[1] as well
as comparing to the Linux arm64 defconfig.
The notable exception is:
CONFIG_USB_DWC3_OF_SIMPLE currently disabled
due to an issue with i.MX8P and i.MX8Q.
Fixes: 3efb3b8 ("armvirt: 64: Add NXP i.MX 8M Mini/Nano/Quad/Plus EVK support")
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
[1] - ccf826c344
A review of the generated OpenWrt kernel .config
vs the Linux arm64 defconfig showed that this
option was not being enabled, as it is disabled
in OpenWrt's generic config.
ACPI_BUTTON is needed to report and respond to
power button events, so it should be enabled.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
To bring the armsr/armv8 kernel configuration closer to the Linux
arm64 defconfig, synchronize options related to CPU features
(especially more recent Armv8.X variants), scheduler, EFI vars,
CMA and scheduler options.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
x86/64 enables support for KVM so I can't see a reason why
not on armsr/armv8 as well.
Arm CPU errata workaround items related to virtualization
are also enabled by this change.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
To reduce differences with the Linux arm64 defconfig,
sync the enabled erratum items with defconfig.
There are still some options not selected due to
CONFIG_KVM or other options not enabled in OpenWrt
by default.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
This compiles the CONFIG_PTP_1588_CLOCK support into the kernel binary
and activates the drivers for KVM and VMware which allow syncing the
host time with the VM when OpenWrt is running in a VM. With this change
the CONFIG_HYPERV_UTILS driver is now build into the kernel, because it
depends on the PTP framework being compiled in. CONFIG_HYPERV_UTILS was
build as a module, but not packages before.
Fixes: #13277
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This activates PCI Express ASPM control in Linux. Without this option it
is completely controlled by the BIOS, now Linux will take over and apply
some workarounds if needed.
Fixes: #13248
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
It seems that the Meraki bootloader does not respect the kernel ARM booting
specification[1] that requires that address where DTB is located needs to
be 64-bit aligned and often places the DTB on a non 64-bit aligned address
and then kernel fails to find the DTB magic and fails to boot.
Even worse, there is no prints until early printk is enabled and then its
visible that kernel is trying to find the ATAG-s as DTB was not found or
is invalid.
Unifi 6 devices had the same issue and it can be solved by passing the
load adress as part of the FIT image.
It seems that the vendor was aware of the issue and is always relocating
the DTB to 0x89000000, so lets just do the same.
Now that booting is reliable, reenable default images for the Meraki MR33
and MR74 devices.
Reviewed-by: Lech Perczak lech.perczak@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
ipq40xx was converted to DSA and swconfig is not being included at all in
the default packages so there is no need to drop it from device packages.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
MR33 and MR74 share pretty much everything in the image recipe, so lets
extract a common recipe to avoid duplication.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Rename two patches which were only accepted in Linux 6.2, but were
marked as if they were accepted in Linux 6.1.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
the Marvell 10G PHY driver is no way specific to ARM SystemReady
systems, it frequently occurs on SFP+ copper modules and is useful on
many targets.
Hence it been added to package/kernel/linux/modules/netdevices and we
can remove the now redundant target-specific module.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
A dependency of the MT7988 MMC host controller on the SoC's RTC clock
being running has been discovered. Mark RTC clock as critical to fix
MMC host on MT7988.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The Bananapro board has an Ampak 6181 onboard (BCM43362/1), enable
the firmware files in the device profile, and add wpad-basic-mbedtls.
Signed-off-by: Zoltan HERPAI <wigyori@uid0.hu>
The X-Powers AC100 is a multi-function IC used to provide RTC
and audio codec via RSB (reduced serial bus, an Allwinner-
speciality). On some boards using the A80/A83T SoCs, aside
from the RTC functionality, the RTC is used as a clocksource
for the Ampak WiFi/BT modules.
Add modules for the core MFD support and the RTC.
Signed-off-by: Zoltan HERPAI <wigyori@uid0.hu>
This has been a part of modified upstream patch but got lost on major
kernel bump to 5.15, so bring it back.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tmn505@gmail.com>
[Add patch for kernel 6.1 too]
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
The v6.1 kernel has moved around the options for the RTL8366RB
DSA switch used in the DIR-685 so it was missing when building
the kernel. Fix it up by adding the right Kconfig options.
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
Hardware
--------
SOC: MediaTek MT7986A
RAM: 1GB DDR4
FLASH: 4GB eMMC
WiFi: 2x2 2.4 GHz 802.11 b/g/n/ax MT7916 DBDC
4x4 5 GHz 802.11 a/n/ac/ax MT7986
2x2 6 GHz 802.11ax MT7916 DBDC
ETH: 4x LAN 1Gbit/s (MT7531)
1x WAN 2.5Gbit/s (GPY211)
BTN: RESET, WPS
LED: Antenna LEDs (GPIO)
Mood-LED (Kinetic KTD2601) - unsupported
UART: Header nest to USB port - 3V3 115200 8N1
[BUTTON] GND - RX - TX [USB]
Installation
------------
1. Connect to the device using serial console.
2. Interrupt the Autoboot process when promted by sending '0' twice.
3. Serve the OpenWrt initramfs image using TFTP at 192.168.1.66. Name
the image "predator.bin" and conenct the TFTP server to the routers
LAN port.
4. Configure U-Boot to allow loading unsigned images from MMC
$ setenv bootcmd 'mmc read 0x40000000 0x00004400 0x0010000;
fdt addr $(fdtcontroladdr); fdt rm /signature; bootm 0x40000000';
saveenv
5. Transfer the image from U-Boot
$ setenv serverip 192.168.1.66; setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.1;
tftpboot 0x46000000 predator.bin; fdt addr $(fdtcontroladdr);
fdt rm /signature; bootm
6. Wait for OpenWrt to boot
7. Transfer the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the router using scp.
8. Install OpenWrt using sysupgrade.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
When building with Linux 5.15 the 'const' type results in warnings.
Restore the original non-const type in those cases.
Fixes: 36d0aa9c2d ("mediatek: filogic: sync pinctrl-mt7988 with MediaTek SDK")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>