Hardware:
- SoC: Lantiq VRX288
- RAM: Winbond W971GG6JB 1 Gb (128 MiB)
- Flash:
- SPI: 8 Mb (1 MiB) for bootloader and tffs
- NAND: 1 Gb (128 MiB) for OS
- xDSL: Lantiq VRX208
- WLAN: Atheros AR9381
- DECT: Dialog Semiconductors SC14441
Everything except FXS/DECT works
(no drivers for AVM's FXS implementation with SC14441).
Installation via FTP:
1. Use scripts/flashing/eva_ramboot.py to send initramfs-kernel.bin
to the device when powering on.
Standard AVM procedures with finding the correct IP address and
the right moment to open FTP apply here (approx. 4 seconds on 7362SL).
IMPORTANT: set lzma compression in ramdisk options, bootloader stalls
when receiving uncompressed images.
2. Transfer sysupgrade.bin image with scp to /tmp directory
and run sysupgrade
3. First boot might take a bit longer if linux_fs_start was set to 1,
in that case the device will reboot twice, first time it will fail to load
second kernel (overwritten by ubifs), set linux_fs_start to 0 and reboot.
OpenWrt uses the entire NAND flash. Kernel uses 4 MiB and rootfs uses
the rest of 124 MiB, overwriting everything related to FRITZ!OS - both
OS images, config and answering machine/media server data.
To return to FRITZ!OS, use AVM's recovery image.
Signed-off-by: Danijel Tudek <danijel.tudek@gmail.com>
Hardware:
SoC: Lantiq VRX 220
CPU Cores: 2x MIPS 34Kc at 500 MHz
RAM: 128 MiB 250 MHz
Storage: 128 MiB NAND flash
Ethernet: built-in Fast Ethernet switch, only port 2 is used
Wireless: Atheros AR9287-BL1A b/g/n with 2 pcb antennas
Modem: built-in A/VDSL2 modem
DECT: Dialog SC14441
LEDs: 1 two-color, 4 one-color
Buttons: 2
FXS: 1 port via TAE or RJ12 connector
Everything except FXS/DECT works
(no drivers for AVM's FXS implementation with SC14441).
Installation:
Use the eva_ramboot.py script to load an initramfs image on the
device. Run it a few seconds after turning the device on.
$ scripts/flashing eva_ramboot 192.168.178.1 bin/targets/lantiq/xrx200/openwrt-lantiq-xrx200-avm_fritz7412-initramfs-kernel.bin
If it fails to find the device try the ip address 169.254.120.1.
(Firmware updates or the recovery tool apparently change it.)
IMPORTANT: set lzma compression in ramdisk options, bootloader stalls
when receiving uncompressed images.
The device will load it in ram and boot it. You can reach it under
the openwrt default ip address 192.168.1.1.
Check if the key linux_fs_start is not set to 1 in tffs:
$ fritz_tffs_nand -d /dev/mtd1 -n linux_fs_start
If it is set to 1, the bootloader will select the wrong set of
partitions. Restart the box and install an FritzOS upgrade or do a
recovery. Afterwards start again at step 1.
Run sysupgrade to persistently install OpenWRT.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Spreckels <Valentin.Spreckels@Informatik.Uni-Oldenburg.de>
Signed-off-by: Andy Binder <AndyBinder@gmx.de>
Rename the image and use a compatible string which indicates that only
hardware revision 2 and higher is supported.
It allows to use the wireless LED, as HWRev 1 uses GPIO#39 for the
wireless LED and starting with HWRev 2 GPIO#35 is used for the wireless
LED and GPIO#39 for IFX_GPIO_MODULE_EXTPHY_MDIO.
The HWREV can be checked by connecting to the fritzbox right after power
on via ftp:
ftp> quote GETENV HWSubRevision
Within the same HW revision 5 of the Fritz!Box 3370 different NAND flash
chips are used. Usually it isn't a big deal but depending on the used
NAND flash chip, the ECC calculation is done different (and incompatible
of course).
Boards with a Micron MT29F1G08ABADA NAND flash chip are using the NAND
chip to calculate the ECC (on-die). Boards with a Hynix HY27UF081G2M NAND
flash chip are doing the ECC calculation in software.
Supporting both with a single DTS isn't possible. It might be possible
to add a patch selecting the ECC mode dynamicaly based on the found NAND
flash chip. But such a patch has no chance to get accepted upstream and
most likely need to be touched with every kernel update.
Instead two images are created. One for Micron NAND flash chip and one
for Hynix NAND flash chip. So far no pattern is known to identify the
used flash chip without opening the box.
Add the power off GPIO. At least EVA version 2186 sets/keeps the GPIO as
input, which will cause a reboot 30sec after power on. For boards with
EVA version 2186 the installation is tricky as it has to be finished
within the 30sec time frame.
The EVA version can be checked by connecting to the fritzbox right after
power on via ftp:
ftp> quote GETENV urlader-version
The ath9k eeprom/caldata is at a different and offset and stored in
reverse order (from the last byte to the beginning) on the flash.
Reverse the bits to bring the data into the format expected by the
ath9k driver.
Since the ath9k eeprom is stored in reverse order on flash, we can not
use the mac address from the on flash eeprom. Get the MAC address from
the tffs instead.
Within the same HW revision 5 of the Fritz!Box 3370 both version of the
vr9 SoC are used. During preparation of kernel 4.14 support, all
devicetree source files were changed to load the vr9 v1.1 and vr9 v1.2
gphy firmware, which fixed the embedded phys for boards using the
version 1.2 of the vr9 SoC.
While at it, add a trigger to make use of the LAN LED. Setup the
build-in switch and add a hint for LuCI two show the ports in order
matching the labels on the case
Add support for the second USB port and provide the volatage GPIOs. Use
GPIO#21 as PCIe reset pin. The lan led is connected to GPIO#38.
Name the rootfs partition ubi and remove the mtd/rootfs related kernel
bootargs to use the OpenWrt autoprobing based on the partition name.
Enable sysupgrade support to allow an upgrade from a running system.
Since sysupgrade wasn't supported till now, drop image build code which
was added to allow a sysupgrade from earlier OpenWrt versions.
Build images that allow an (initial) installation via EVA bootloader.
To install OpenWrt via Eva bootloader, within the first seconds after
power on a ftp connection need to be established to the FRITZ!Box at
192.168.178.1 and the the following ftp commands need to be run:
ftp> quote USER adam2
ftp> quote PASS adam2
ftp> binary
ftp> debug
ftp> passive
ftp> quote SETENV linux_fs_start 0
ftp> quote MEDIA FLSH
ftp> put /path/to/openwrt-lantiq-xrx200-FRITZ3370-eva-kernel.bin mtd1
ftp> put /path/to/openwrt-lantiq-xrx200-FRITZ3370-eva-filesystem.bin mtd0
Signed-off-by: Andrea Merello <andrea.merello@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Calling nand_do_upgrade() from platform_pre_upgrade() was deprecated
with 30f61a34b4 ("base-files: always use staged sysupgrade").
Update the platform upgrade code to use platform_do_upgrade() for NAND
images as well.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The watchdog kill command was meant for busybox watchdog. Busybox watchdog
was replaced by the procd watchdog mid 2013 with commit df7ce9301a
("busybox: disable the watchdog utility by default"), which makes the kill
command obsolete since quite some time.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Use the first compatible string as board name in userspace. Add the new
board name as well as the former used board name to the image metadata
to keep compatibilty with already deployed installations.
Don't add the former used boardname for boards which exists only in
master or evaluation boards.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
As explained in recent sysupgrade/nand.sh commits, current NAND
sysupgrade is a bit misleading because of nand_do_platform_check
behavior. It leaves a special mark in /tmp/sysupgrade-nand-path
triggering some diffent code path in nand_upgrade_stage1.
The plan is to have the check function only check the image and nothing
else. Then platform code (platform_pre_upgrade) should trigger NAND
specific upgrade path. This is what this patch implements.
Please note that because of current nand_upgrade_stage1 implementation
this patch doesn't change any behaior yet. It only prepares lantiq
target for changing nand_do_platform_check (it will be possible after
preparing all other targets as well).
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <zajec5@gmail.com>
SVN-Revision: 46939
ARGC is a 'C-ism', but not known/valid in shell-syntax - insert the correct
var $# (=number of args) here. under normal conditions this had no impact,
but we should at least correct it. the error was observable like this:
root@box:~ [ -e "/etc/functions.sh" ] && . /etc/functions.sh
root@box:~ [ -e "/lib/functions.sh" ] && . /lib/functions.sh
root@box:~ . /lib/upgrade/platform.sh
root@box:~ . /lib/upgrade/common.sh
root@box:~ platform_check_image /tmp/myfirmware.bin
ash: bad number
root@box:~ echo $?
0
Signed-off-by: Bastian Bittorf <bittorf@bluebottle.com>
SVN-Revision: 40915