Description heavily based on commit
7e89421a7c by
Sergey Ryazanov <ryazanov.s.a@gmail.com> Details I cannot confirm have
been removed
Completed with great help from \x on IRC. Thanks, \x!
Zbtlink ZBT-WG1602-V04 is a Wi-Fi router intendend for use with WWAN
(UMTS/LTE/3G/4G) modems. The router board offers a couple of miniPCIe
slots with USB and SIM only and another one which is a pure miniPCIe
slot as well as five Gigabit Ethernet ports (4xLAN + WAN).
Specification:
* SoC: MT7621A
* RAM: 256/512 MiB
* Flash: 16/32 MiB
* Eth: 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet x5 ports (4xLAN + WAN)
* WLAN 2GHz: MT7603E (.11bgn, MIMO 2x2)
* WLAN 5GHz: MT7662E (.11nac, MIMO 2x2)
* WLAN Ants: detachable x2, shared by 2GHz & 5GHz radios
* miniPCIe: 2x slots with USB&SIM + 1x slot with regular PCIe bus
* WWAN Ants: detachable x4
* External storage: microSD (SDXC) slot
* USB: 3.0 Type-A port
* LED: 11 (5 per Eth phy, 3 SoC controlled, 2 WLAN 2/5 controlled,
1 power indicator)
* Button: 1 (reset)
* UART: console (115200 baud)
* Power: DC jack (12 V / 2.5 A)
Additional HW information:
* SoC USB port 1 is shared by internal miniPCIe slot and external
Type-A USB port, USB D+/D- lines are toggled between ports using a
GPIO controlled DPDT switch.
Installation:
The kernel image can be installed directly onto the device via a browser
to 192.168.1.1 using the built in firmware recovery Web UI available.
It can be accessed by pushing the reset button in, applying power and
holding the reset button for approximately 10 seconds. When the kernel
image has been flashed, you can access LuCI and upload the sysupgrade
as normal.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Horner <ahorner@programmer.net>
Add UIMAGE_NAME and UIMAGE_MAGIC to allow users to directly install
initramfs-kernel.bin from the stock firmware Web UI. At the same time,
this change makes it possible to boot OpenWrt with the official u-boot.
Notice:
Since the stock firmware is based on OpenWrt and the configuration
will be retained by default during the upgrade process, so we must use
initramfs-kernel.bin to do a initial installation. After the system
restarts, install sysupgrade.bin and do not retain any configuration.
Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
In my commit da5c45f4d8 ("kernel: remove handling of xfrm[4|6]_mode_*
modules") I missed a few default config options and description entries.
Those should be gone as well.
Fixes: da5c45f4d8 ("kernel: remove handling of xfrm[4|6]_mode_* modules")
Signed-off-by: Martin Schiller <ms@dev.tdt.de>
The patch "210-pinctrl-mediatek-add-support-for-MT7986-SoC.patch" and
"212-clk-mediatek-add-mt7986-clock-support.patch" are upstreamed.
Signed-off-by: Nick Hainke <vincent@systemli.org>
The patches "191-arm64-dts-mt7622-specify-the-L2-cache-topology.patch"
and "192-arm64-dts-mt7622-specify-the-number-of-DMA-requests.patch" are
upstreamed to 5.19.
Signed-off-by: Nick Hainke <vincent@systemli.org>
This subtarget supports 3 devices:
* Bananapi BPi-R3 (added in a96382c1bb),
* MediaTek MTK7986 rfba AP (added in cffc77ae55),
* MediaTek MTK7986 rfbb AP (added in cffc77ae55).
This subtarget supports DSA from the beginning. It looks like CONFIG_SWCONFIG
was copied from another config when the subtarget was created.
Signed-off-by: Aleksander Jan Bajkowski <olek2@wp.pl>
Backport patches from net-next which fix possible memory and resource
leaks in the error codepaths of WED initialization.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The packet processing engine (PPE) found in newer ARM-based MediaTek
SoCs provides packet and byte counters for offloaded streams.
Import pending patch reading and using those counters.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The patch enabling hardware flow offloading support on the MT7623 SoC
has been merged upstream as of Linux 5.13. Remove our local patch which
wrongly got forward-ported and now actually enables hardware flow
offloading for the MT2701 SoC family (unsupported in OpenWrt).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
After replacing the R4K event timer and clock source with the new
Realtek Otto timer, performance for RTL839x devices was severely
impacted, as reported by Hiroshi.
Research by Markus showed that after commit 4657a5301e ("realtek:
avoid busy waiting for RTL839x PHY read/write"), the ethernet driver
could only update a phy once per timer interval, which also heavily
impacted boot time. On e.g. a Zyxel GS1900-48, this added around a
minute to the time to fully initialise the switch.
By marking the otto clocksource as continuous, the kernel enables it to
be used for high resolution timers. This allows readx_poll_timeout() to
sleep for less than one system timer interval, reducing system dead
time.
Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/issues/11117
Reported-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Cc: Markus Stockhausen <markus.stockhausen@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Sander Vanheule <sander@svanheule.net>
Tested-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com> # Panasonic Switch-M48eG PN28480K
Tested-by: Jan Hoffmann <jan@3e8.eu> # HPE 1920-8G, HPE 1920-48G
The use of the adc_oe value stored in the efuse has been dropped in
MediaTek's SDK during a recent refactorization of the temperature
calculation formula. Don't ignore this offset value and again include
it in raw-to-deg-celsius calculation.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
It is an in-wall 802.11ax (Wi-Fi 6) router, based on MediaTek MT7621A.
Specifications:
- SoC: MT7621AT (880MHz, 2 Cores)
- RAM: 128 MB
- Flash: 16 MB SPI NOR
- Wi-Fi:
- MT7915DN + MT7905DAN: 2.4/5 GHz
- Ethernet: 1x 1GiE via MT7530
- UART: J4 (115200 baud)
- Pinout: [3V3] (TXD) (RXD) (GND)
- Bootloader: U-Boot
- Buttons:
- SW1 - no label on the box, combined with led
- Led: Status. RGB controlled by
- GPIO 14 - green color
- GPIO 15 - red color
- GPIO 16 - blue color
Installation:
OEM firmware is based on LEDE with custom UI and support standard sysupgrade
variant of firmware. However it requires "*.ubin" extension for sysupgrade file.
Always select "Factory reset" switch on upgrade to OpenWRT, otherwise
it will not boot.
MAC addresses as verified by OEM firmware:
vendor source
LAN factory 0x4 (label)
5g factory 0x4 (label)
2g label with flipped bits bit in 1-st byte and bits 5, 6, 7 in
4-th byte
Example
label: 44:xx:xx:b7:xx:xx
lan: 44:xx:xx:b7:xx:xx
2g 46:xx:xx:c7:xx:xx
5g 44:xx:xx:b7:xx:xx
Signed-off-by: Volodymyr Puiul <volodymyr.puiul@gmail.com>
For kernel versions before 5.2, the required IPsec modes have to be
enabled explicitly (they are built-in for newer kernels).
Commit 1556ed155a ("kernel: mode_beet mode_transport mode_tunnel xfram
modules") tried to handle this, but it does not really work.
Since we don't support these kernel versions anymore and the code is
also broken, let's remove it.
Signed-off-by: Martin Schiller <ms@dev.tdt.de>
[Remove old generic config options too]
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
The CONFIG_PINCTRL_MCP23S08 configuration option is already unset in the
generic kernel configuration.
Fixes: f938512af6 ("target/at91: replace gpio-mcp23s08 with pinctrl-mcp23s08-spi update config")
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This adds support for the MikroTik RouterBOARD RBD53GR-5HacD2HnD
(hAP ac³ LTE6 kit), an indoor dual band, dual-radio 802.11ac
wireless AP with built-in Mini PCI-E LTE modem, one USB port, five
10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet ports.
See https://mikrotik.com/product/hap_ac3_lte6_kit for more info.
Specifications:
- SoC: Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4019
- RAM: 256 MB
- Storage: 16 MB NOR
- Wireless:
· Built-in IPQ4019 (SoC) 802.11b/g/n 2x2:2, 3 dBi internal antennae
· Built-in IPQ4019 (SoC) 802.11a/n/ac 2x2:2, 5.5 dBi internal antennae
- Ethernet: Built-in IPQ4019 (SoC, QCA8075) , 5x 1000/100/10 port
- 1x USB Type A port
- 1x Mini PCI-E port (supporting USB)
- 1x Mini PCI-E LTE modem (MikroTik R11e-LTE6, Cat.6)
Installation:
Make sure your unit is runnning RouterOS v6 and RouterBOOT v6 (tested on 6.49.6).
0. Export your MikroTik license key (in case you want to use the device with RouterOS later)
1. Boot the initramfs image via TFTP
2. Upload the "openwrt-ipq40xx-mikrotik-mikrotik_hap-ac3-lte6-kit-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin" via SCP to the /tmp folder
3. Use sysupgrade to flash the image: sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-ipq40xx-mikrotik-mikrotik_hap-ac3-lte6-kit-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
4. Recovery to factory software is possible via Netinstall:
https://help.mikrotik.com/docs/display/ROS/Netinstall
Signed-off-by: Csaba Sipos <metro4@freemail.hu>
The dependency on the kernel module gpio-mcp23s08 is replaced by
pinctrl-mcp23s08-spi and pinctrl-mcp23s08-i2c, as the gpio-mpc23s08 kernel
module no longer exists.
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
The kernel config option 'CONFIG_GPIO_MCP23S08' no longer exists.
Therefore, it is removed from the generic kernel configuration for
linux-5.10 and linux-5.15.
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
Adapt the device package to no longer use the gpio-mcp23s08 but instead
use the pinctrl-mcp23s08-spi. In addition, the kernel configuration was
adapted so that this can be built as a module and does not have to be
integrated directly into the kernel for this target.
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
Add support for the Linksys EA4500 v3 wireless router
Hardware
--------
SoC: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9558
RAM: 128M DDR2 (Winbond W971GG6KB-25)
FLASH: 128M SPI-NAND (Spansion S34ML01G100TFI00)
WLAN: QCA9558 3T3R 802.11 bgn
QCA9580 3T3R 802.11 an
ETH: Qualcomm Atheros QCA8337
UART: 115200 8n1, same as ea4500 v2
USB: 1 single USB 2.0 host port
BUTTON: Reset - WPS
LED: 1x system-LED
LEDs besides the ethernet ports are controlled
by the ethernet switch
MAC Address:
use address(sample 1) source
label 94:10:3e:xx:xx:6f caldata@cal_macaddr
lan 94:10:3e:xx:xx:6f $label
wan 94:10:3e:xx:xx:6f $label
WiFi4_2G 94:10:3e:xx:xx:70 caldata@cal_ath9k_soc
WiFi4_5G 94:10:3e:xx:xx:71 caldata@cal_ath9k_pci
Installation from Serial Console
------------
1. Connect to the serial console. Power up the device and interrupt
autoboot when prompted
2. Connect a TFTP server reachable at 192.168.1.0/24
(e.g. 192.168.1.66) to the ethernet port. Serve the OpenWrt
initramfs image as "openwrt.bin"
3. To test OpenWrt only, go to step 4 and never execute step 5;
To install, auto_recovery should be disabled first, and boot_part
should be set to 1 if its current value is not.
ath> setenv auto_recovery no
ath> setenv boot_part 1
ath> saveenv
4. Boot the initramfs image using U-Boot
ath> setenv serverip 192.168.1.66
ath> tftpboot 0x84000000 openwrt.bin
ath> bootm
5. Copy the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to the device using scp and
install it like a normal upgrade (with no need to keeping config
since no config from "previous OpenWRT installation" could be kept
at all)
# sysupgrade -n /path/to/openwrt/sysupgrade.bin
Note: Like many other routers produced by Linksys, it has a dual
firmware flash layout, but because I do not know how to handle
it, I decide to disable it for more usable space. (That is why
the "auto_recovery" above should be disabled before installing
OpenWRT.) If someone is interested in generating factory
firmware image capable to flash from stock firmware, as well as
restoring the dual firmware layout, commented-out layout for the
original secondary partitions left in the device tree may be a
useful hint.
Installation from Web Interface
------------
1. Login to the router via its web interface (default password: admin)
2. Find the firmware update interface under "Connectivity/Basic"
3. Choose the OpenWrt factory image and click "Start"
4. If the router still boots into the stock firmware, it means that
the OpenWrt factory image has been installed to the secondary
partitions and failed to boot (since OpenWrt on EA4500 v3 does not
support dual boot yet), and the router switched back to the stock
firmware on the primary partitions. You have to install a stock
firmware (e.g. 3.1.6.172023, downloadable from
https://www.linksys.com/support-article?articleNum=148385 ) first
(to the secondary partitions) , and after that, install OpenWrt
factory image (to the primary partitions). After successful
installation of OpenWrt, auto_recovery will be automatically
disabled and router will only boot from the primary partitions.
Signed-off-by: Edward Chow <equu@openmail.cc>
Manually rebased:
bcm53xx/patches-5.10/180-usb-xhci-add-support-for-performing-fake-doorbell.patch
All patches automatically rebased.
Signed-off-by: John Audia <therealgraysky@proton.me>
[Move gro_skip in 680-NET-skip-GRO-for-foreign-MAC-addresses.patch to old position]
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Hardware specification:
SoC: MediaTek MT7986A 4x A53
Flash: ESMT F50L1G41LB 128 MB
RAM: K4A4G165WF-BCWE 512 MB
Ethernet: 4x 10/100/1000 Mbps
WiFi1: MT7976GN 2.4GHz ax 4x4
WiFi2: MT7976AN 5GHz ax 4x4
Button: Mesh, Reset
Flash instructions:
1. Gain ssh and serial port access, see the link below:
https://openwrt.org/toh/xiaomi/redmi_ax6000#installation
2. Use ssh or serial port to log in to the router, and
execute the following command:
nvram set boot_wait=on
nvram set flag_boot_rootfs=0
nvram set flag_boot_success=1
nvram set flag_last_success=1
nvram set flag_try_sys1_failed=8
nvram set flag_try_sys2_failed=8
nvram commit
3. Set a static ip on the ethernet interface of your computer
(e.g. default: ip 192.168.31.100, gateway 192.168.31.1)
4. Download the initramfs image, rename it to initramfs.bin,
and host it with the tftp server.
5. Interrupt U-Boot and run these commands:
setenv mtdparts nmbm0:1024k(bl2),256k(Nvram),256k(Bdata),2048k(factory),2048k(fip),256k(crash),256k(crash_log),112640k(ubi)
saveenv
tftpboot initramfs.bin
bootm
6. After openwrt boots up, use scp or luci web
to upload sysupgrade.bin to upgrade.
Revert to stock firmware:
Restore mtdparts back to default, then use the
vendor's recovery tool (Windows only).
Signed-off-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
In rtl83xx_set_features we set bit 3 to enable, and bit 4 to disable
checksuming. Looking at rtl93xx_set_features we however see that for
both enable and disable the same bit is used (bit 4). This can't be
right, especially as bit 4 for rtl83xx seems to be Collision threshold
occupying 2 bits. Change this to make this more logical.
Fixes: 9e8d62e421 ("realtek: enable CRC offloading")
Signed-off-by: Olliver Schinagl <oliver@schinagl.nl>
Linksys EA8500 is currently broken after the kernel 5.15 bump. Disable
compiling it by default from buildbot to prevent brick from the user.
Don't mark it as BROKEN to permit user to compile images and permit devs
to bisect the problem with the users.
The current problem with the device is that the switch is not detected
and we can't comunicate with it via MDIO.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Linksys EA8500 is currently broken after the kernel 5.15 bump. Disable
compiling it by default from buildbot to prevent brick from the user.
Don't mark it as BROKEN to permit user to compile images and permit devs
to bisect the problem with the users.
The current problem with the device is that the switch is not detected
and we can't comunicate with it via MDIO.
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>