FCC ID: 2AG6R-AN700APIAC
Araknis AN-700-AP-I-AC is an indoor wireless access point with
1 Gb ethernet port, dual-band wireless,
internal antenna plates, and 802.3at PoE+
this board is a Senao device:
the hardware is equivalent to EnGenius EAP1750
the software is modified Senao SDK which is based on openwrt and uboot
including image checksum verification at boot time,
and a failsafe image that boots if checksum fails
**Specification:**
- QCA9558 SOC MIPS 74kc, 2.4 GHz WMAC, 3x3
- QCA9880 WLAN PCI card, 5 GHz, 3x3, 26dBm
- AR8035-A PHY RGMII GbE with PoE+ IN
- 40 MHz clock
- 16 MB FLASH MX25L12845EMI-10G
- 2x 64 MB RAM NT5TU32M16
- UART console J10, populated, RX shorted to ground
- 4 antennas 5 dBi, internal omni-directional plates
- 4 LEDs power, 2G, 5G, wps
- 1 button reset
NOTE: all 4 gpio controlled LEDS are viewed through the same lightguide
therefore, the power LED is off for default state
**MAC addresses:**
MAC address labeled as ETH
Only one Vendor MAC address in flash at art 0x0
eth0 ETH *:xb art 0x0
phy1 2.4G *:xc ---
phy0 5GHz *:xd ---
**Serial Access:**
the RX line on the board for UART is shorted to ground by resistor R176
therefore it must be removed to use the console
but it is not necessary to remove to view boot log
optionally, R175 can be replaced with a solder bridge short
the resistors R175 and R176 are next to the UART RX pin at J10
**Installation:**
Method 1: Firmware upgrade page:
(if you cannot access the APs webpage)
factory reset with the reset button
connect ethernet to a computer
OEM webpage at 192.168.20.253
username and password 'araknis'
make a new password, login again...
Navigate to 'File Management' page from left pane
Click Browse and select the factory.bin image
Upload and verify checksum
Click Continue to confirm
wait about 3 minutes
Method 2: Serial to load Failsafe webpage:
After connecting to serial console and rebooting...
Interrupt uboot with any key pressed rapidly
execute `run failsafe_boot` OR `bootm 0x9fd70000`
wait a minute
connect to ethernet and navigate to
192.168.20.253
Select the factory.bin image and upload
wait about 3 minutes
**Return to OEM:**
Method 1: Serial to load Failsafe webpage (above)
Method 2: delete a checksum from uboot-env
this will make uboot load the failsafe image at next boot
because it will fail the checksum verification of the image
ssh into openwrt and run
`fw_setenv rootfs_checksum 0`
reboot, wait a minute
connect to ethernet and navigate to
192.168.20.253
select OEM firmware image and click upgrade
Method 3: backup mtd partitions before upgrade
**TFTP recovery:**
Requires serial console, reset button does nothing
rename initramfs-kernel.bin to '0101A8C0.img'
make available on TFTP server at 192.168.1.101
power board, interrupt boot with serial console
execute `tftpboot` and `bootm 0x81000000`
NOTE: TFTP may not be reliable due to bugged bootloader
set MTU to 600 and try many times
**Format of OEM firmware image:**
The OEM software is built using SDKs from Senao
which is based on a heavily modified version
of Openwrt Kamikaze or Altitude Adjustment.
One of the many modifications is sysupgrade being performed by a custom script.
Images are verified through successful unpackaging, correct filenames
and size requirements for both kernel and rootfs files, and that they
start with the correct magic numbers (first 2 bytes) for the respective headers.
Newer Senao software requires more checks but their script
includes a way to skip them.
The OEM upgrade script is at
/etc/fwupgrade.sh
OKLI kernel loader is required because the OEM software
expects the kernel to be less than 1536k
and the OEM upgrade procedure would otherwise
overwrite part of the kernel when writing rootfs.
Note on PLL-data cells:
The default PLL register values will not work
because of the external AR8035 switch between
the SOC and the ethernet port.
For QCA955x series, the PLL registers for eth0 and eth1
can be see in the DTSI as 0x28 and 0x48 respectively.
Therefore the PLL registers can be read from uboot
for each link speed after attempting tftpboot
or another network action using that link speed
with `md 0x18050028 1` and `md 0x18050048 1`.
The clock delay required for RGMII can be applied at the PHY side,
using the at803x driver `phy-mode` setting through the DTS.
Therefore, the Ethernet Configuration registers for GMAC0
do not need the bits for RGMII delay on the MAC side.
This is possible due to fixes in at803x driver
since Linux 5.1 and 5.3
Signed-off-by: Michael Pratt <mcpratt@pm.me>
FCC ID: 2AG6R-AN500APIAC
Araknis AN-500-AP-I-AC is an indoor wireless access point with
1 Gb ethernet port, dual-band wireless,
internal antenna plates, and 802.3at PoE+
this board is a Senao device:
the hardware is equivalent to EnGenius EAP1200
the software is modified Senao SDK which is based on openwrt and uboot
including image checksum verification at boot time,
and a failsafe image that boots if checksum fails
**Specification:**
- QCA9557 SOC MIPS 74kc, 2.4 GHz WMAC, 2x2
- QCA9882 WLAN PCI card 168c:003c, 5 GHz, 2x2, 26dBm
- AR8035-A PHY RGMII GbE with PoE+ IN
- 40 MHz clock
- 16 MB FLASH MX25L12845EMI-10G
- 2x 64 MB RAM NT5TU32M16
- UART console J10, populated, RX shorted to ground
- 4 antennas 5 dBi, internal omni-directional plates
- 4 LEDs power, 2G, 5G, wps
- 1 button reset
NOTE: all 4 gpio controlled LEDS are viewed through the same lightguide
therefore, the power LED is off for default state
**MAC addresses:**
MAC address labeled as ETH
Only one Vendor MAC address in flash at art 0x0
eth0 ETH *:e1 art 0x0
phy1 2.4G *:e2 ---
phy0 5GHz *:e3 ---
**Serial Access:**
the RX line on the board for UART is shorted to ground by resistor R176
therefore it must be removed to use the console
but it is not necessary to remove to view boot log
optionally, R175 can be replaced with a solder bridge short
the resistors R175 and R176 are next to the UART RX pin at J10
**Installation:**
Method 1: Firmware upgrade page:
(if you cannot access the APs webpage)
factory reset with the reset button
connect ethernet to a computer
OEM webpage at 192.168.20.253
username and password 'araknis'
make a new password, login again...
Navigate to 'File Management' page from left pane
Click Browse and select the factory.bin image
Upload and verify checksum
Click Continue to confirm
wait about 3 minutes
Method 2: Serial to load Failsafe webpage:
After connecting to serial console and rebooting...
Interrupt uboot with any key pressed rapidly
execute `run failsafe_boot` OR `bootm 0x9fd70000`
wait a minute
connect to ethernet and navigate to
192.168.20.253
Select the factory.bin image and upload
wait about 3 minutes
**Return to OEM:**
Method 1: Serial to load Failsafe webpage (above)
Method 2: delete a checksum from uboot-env
this will make uboot load the failsafe image at next boot
because it will fail the checksum verification of the image
ssh into openwrt and run
`fw_setenv rootfs_checksum 0`
reboot, wait a minute
connect to ethernet and navigate to
192.168.20.253
select OEM firmware image and click upgrade
Method 3: backup mtd partitions before upgrade
**TFTP recovery:**
Requires serial console, reset button does nothing
rename initramfs-kernel.bin to '0101A8C0.img'
make available on TFTP server at 192.168.1.101
power board, interrupt boot with serial console
execute `tftpboot` and `bootm 0x81000000`
NOTE: TFTP may not be reliable due to bugged bootloader
set MTU to 600 and try many times
**Format of OEM firmware image:**
The OEM software is built using SDKs from Senao
which is based on a heavily modified version
of Openwrt Kamikaze or Altitude Adjustment.
One of the many modifications is sysupgrade being performed by a custom script.
Images are verified through successful unpackaging, correct filenames
and size requirements for both kernel and rootfs files, and that they
start with the correct magic numbers (first 2 bytes) for the respective headers.
Newer Senao software requires more checks but their script
includes a way to skip them.
The OEM upgrade script is at
/etc/fwupgrade.sh
OKLI kernel loader is required because the OEM software
expects the kernel to be less than 1536k
and the OEM upgrade procedure would otherwise
overwrite part of the kernel when writing rootfs.
Note on PLL-data cells:
The default PLL register values will not work
because of the external AR8035 switch between
the SOC and the ethernet port.
For QCA955x series, the PLL registers for eth0 and eth1
can be see in the DTSI as 0x28 and 0x48 respectively.
Therefore the PLL registers can be read from uboot
for each link speed after attempting tftpboot
or another network action using that link speed
with `md 0x18050028 1` and `md 0x18050048 1`.
The clock delay required for RGMII can be applied at the PHY side,
using the at803x driver `phy-mode` setting through the DTS.
Therefore, the Ethernet Configuration registers for GMAC0
do not need the bits for RGMII delay on the MAC side.
This is possible due to fixes in at803x driver
since Linux 5.1 and 5.3
Signed-off-by: Michael Pratt <mcpratt@pm.me>
FCC ID: U2M-AN300APIN
Araknis AN-300-AP-I-N is an indoor wireless access point with
1 Gb ethernet port, dual-band wireless,
internal antenna plates, and 802.3at PoE+
this board is a Senao device:
the hardware is equivalent to EnGenius EWS310AP
the software is modified Senao SDK which is based on openwrt and uboot
including image checksum verification at boot time,
and a failsafe image that boots if checksum fails
**Specification:**
- AR9344 SOC MIPS 74kc, 2.4 GHz WMAC, 2x2
- AR9382 WLAN PCI on-board 168c:0030, 5 GHz, 2x2
- AR8035-A PHY RGMII GbE with PoE+ IN
- 40 MHz clock
- 16 MB FLASH MX25L12845EMI-10G
- 2x 64 MB RAM 1839ZFG V59C1512164QFJ25
- UART console J10, populated, RX shorted to ground
- 4 antennas 5 dBi, internal omni-directional plates
- 4 LEDs power, 2G, 5G, wps
- 1 button reset
NOTE: all 4 gpio controlled LEDS are viewed through the same lightguide
therefore, the power LED is off for default state
**MAC addresses:**
MAC address labeled as ETH
Only one Vendor MAC address in flash at art 0x0
eth0 ETH *:7d art 0x0
phy1 2.4G *:7e ---
phy0 5GHz *:7f ---
**Serial Access:**
the RX line on the board for UART is shorted to ground by resistor R176
therefore it must be removed to use the console
but it is not necessary to remove to view boot log
optionally, R175 can be replaced with a solder bridge short
the resistors R175 and R176 are next to the UART RX pin at J10
**Installation:**
Method 1: Firmware upgrade page:
(if you cannot access the APs webpage)
factory reset with the reset button
connect ethernet to a computer
OEM webpage at 192.168.20.253
username and password 'araknis'
make a new password, login again...
Navigate to 'File Management' page from left pane
Click Browse and select the factory.bin image
Upload and verify checksum
Click Continue to confirm
wait about 3 minutes
Method 2: Serial to load Failsafe webpage:
After connecting to serial console and rebooting...
Interrupt uboot with any key pressed rapidly
execute `run failsafe_boot` OR `bootm 0x9fd70000`
wait a minute
connect to ethernet and navigate to
192.168.20.253
Select the factory.bin image and upload
wait about 3 minutes
**Return to OEM:**
Method 1: Serial to load Failsafe webpage (above)
Method 2: delete a checksum from uboot-env
this will make uboot load the failsafe image at next boot
because it will fail the checksum verification of the image
ssh into openwrt and run
`fw_setenv rootfs_checksum 0`
reboot, wait a minute
connect to ethernet and navigate to
192.168.20.253
select OEM firmware image and click upgrade
Method 3: backup mtd partitions before upgrade
**TFTP recovery:**
Requires serial console, reset button does nothing
rename initramfs-kernel.bin to '0101A8C0.img'
make available on TFTP server at 192.168.1.101
power board, interrupt boot with serial console
execute `tftpboot` and `bootm 0x81000000`
NOTE: TFTP may not be reliable due to bugged bootloader
set MTU to 600 and try many times
**Format of OEM firmware image:**
The OEM software is built using SDKs from Senao
which is based on a heavily modified version
of Openwrt Kamikaze or Altitude Adjustment.
One of the many modifications is sysupgrade being performed by a custom script.
Images are verified through successful unpackaging, correct filenames
and size requirements for both kernel and rootfs files, and that they
start with the correct magic numbers (first 2 bytes) for the respective headers.
Newer Senao software requires more checks but their script
includes a way to skip them.
The OEM upgrade script is at
/etc/fwupgrade.sh
OKLI kernel loader is required because the OEM software
expects the kernel to be less than 1536k
and the OEM upgrade procedure would otherwise
overwrite part of the kernel when writing rootfs.
Note on PLL-data cells:
The default PLL register values will not work
because of the external AR8035 switch between
the SOC and the ethernet port.
For QCA955x series, the PLL registers for eth0 and eth1
can be see in the DTSI as 0x28 and 0x48 respectively.
Therefore the PLL registers can be read from uboot
for each link speed after attempting tftpboot
or another network action using that link speed
with `md 0x18050028 1` and `md 0x18050048 1`.
The clock delay required for RGMII can be applied at the PHY side,
using the at803x driver `phy-mode` setting through the DTS.
Therefore, the Ethernet Configuration registers for GMAC0
do not need the bits for RGMII delay on the MAC side.
This is possible due to fixes in at803x driver
since Linux 5.1 and 5.3
Signed-off-by: Michael Pratt <mcpratt@pm.me>
The ZyXEL GS1900-24 v1 is a 24 port switch with two SFP ports, similar to
the other GS1900 switches.
Specifications
--------------
* Device: ZyXEL GS1900-24 v1
* SoC: Realtek RTL8382M 500 MHz MIPS 4KEc
* Flash: 16 MiB
* RAM: Winbond W9751G8KB-25 64 MiB DDR2 SDRAM
* Ethernet: 24x 10/100/1000 Mbps, 2x SFP 100/1000 Mbps
* LEDs:
* 1 PWR LED (green, not configurable)
* 1 SYS LED (green, configurable)
* 24 ethernet port link/activity LEDs (green, SoC controlled)
* 2 SFP status/activity LEDs (green, SoC controlled)
* Buttons:
* 1 "RESET" button on front panel (soft reset)
* 1 button ('SW1') behind right hex grate (hardwired power-off)
* Power: 120-240V AC C13
* UART: Internal populated 10-pin header ('J5') providing RS232;
connected to SoC UART through a SIPEX 3232EC for voltage
level shifting.
* 'J5' RS232 Pinout (dot as pin 1):
2) SoC RXD
3) GND
10) SoC TXD
Serial connection parameters: 115200 8N1.
Installation
------------
OEM upgrade method:
* Log in to OEM management web interface
* Navigate to Maintenance > Firmware > Management
* If "Active Image" has the first option selected, OpenWrt will need to be
flashed to the "Active" partition. If the second option is selected,
OpenWrt will need to be flashed to the "Backup" partition.
* Navigate to Maintenance > Firmware > Upload
* Upload the openwrt-realtek-rtl838x-zyxel_gs1900-24-v1-initramfs-kernel.bin
file by your preferred method to the previously determined partition.
When prompted, select to boot from the newly flashed image, and reboot
the switch.
* Once OpenWrt has booted, scp the sysupgrade image to /tmp and flash it:
> sysupgrade /tmp/openwrt-realtek-rtl838x-zyxel_gs1900-24-v1-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
U-Boot TFTP method:
* Configure your client with a static 192.168.1.x IP (e.g. 192.168.1.10).
* Set up a TFTP server on your client and make it serve the initramfs
image.
* Connect serial, power up the switch, interrupt U-boot by hitting the
space bar, and enable the network:
> rtk network on
> Since the GS1900-24 v1 is a dual-partition device, you want to keep the
OEM firmware on the backup partition for the time being. OpenWrt can
only be installed in the first partition anyway (hardcoded in the
DTS). To ensure we are set to boot from the first partition, issue the
following commands:
> setsys bootpartition 0
> savesys
* Download the image onto the device and boot from it:
> tftpboot 0x81f00000 192.168.1.10:openwrt-realtek-rtl838x-zyxel_gs1900-24-v1-initramfs-kernel.bin
> bootm
* Once OpenWrt has booted, scp the sysupgrade image to /tmp and flash it:
> sysupgrade /tmp/openwrt-realtek-rtl838x-zyxel_gs1900-24-v1-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
Signed-off-by: Martin Kennedy <hurricos@gmail.com>
Add option to compile kmod-inet-diag, support for INET (TCP, DCCP, etc)
socket monitoring interface used by native Linux tools such as ss.
Signed-off-by: Tianling Shen <cnsztl@immortalwrt.org>
When porting mwan3 from iptables to nftables I tried the new translation
tool for ipset ipset-translate. I noticed that no IPv6 ipset can be
created with the tool. I have reported the problem to the upstream
project and the following patch fixes the problem.
Until this upsream is included in a new release, this patch should be
used in Openwrt.
https://lore.kernel.org/netfilter-devel/20220228190217.2256371-1-pablo@netfilter.org/T/#m09cc3cb738f2e42024c7aecf5b7240d9f6bbc19c
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
OpenWrt uses a lot of (b)ash scripts for initial setup. This isn't the
best solution as they almost never consider syncing files / data. Still
this is what we have and we need to try living with it.
Without proper syncing OpenWrt can easily get into an inconsistent state
on power cut. It's because:
1. Actual (flash) inode and data writes are not synchronized
2. Data writeback can take up to 30 seconds (dirty_expire_centisecs)
3. ubifs adds extra 5 seconds (dirty_writeback_centisecs) "delay"
Some possible cases (examples) for new files:
1. Power cut during 5 seconds after write() can result in all data loss
2. Power cut happening between 5 and 35 seconds after write() can result
in empty file (inode flushed after 5 seconds, data flush queued)
Above affects e.g. uci-defaults. After executing some migration script
it may get deleted (whited out) without generated data getting actually
written. Power cut will result in missing data and deleted file.
There are three ways of dealing with that:
1. Rewriting all user-space init to proper C with syncs
2. Trying bash hacks (like creating tmp files & moving them)
3. Adding sync and hoping for no power cut during critical section
This change introduces the last solution that is the simplest. It
reduces time during which things may go wrong from ~35 seconds to
probably less than a second. Of course it applies only to IO operations
performed before /etc/init.d/boot . It's probably the stage when the
most new files get created.
All later changes are usually done using smarter C apps (e.g. busybox or
uci) that creates tmp files and uses rename() that is expected to be
atomic.
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
Acked-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Acked-by: Sergey Ryazanov <ryazanov.s.a@gmail.com>
Modems used in ZTE mobile broadband routers require to query the data
session status using the same CID as one used to establish the session,
otherwise they will report the session as "disconnected" despite
reporting correct PDH in previous step. Without this change, IPv6
connection on these modems doesn't establish properly. In IPv4 this bug
is present as well, but for some reason querying of IPv4 status works
using temporary CID, this however seems noncompliant with QMI
specifications, so fix it as well.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
Previously libxt_socket.so was included in iptables-mod-tproxy. It was
missed out when trying to make kmod-ipt-socket and kmod-ipt-tproxy
separate packages
Fixes: 4f443c88 ("netfilter: separate packages for kmod-ipt-socket and kmod-ipt-tproxy")
Signed-off-by: Yousong Zhou <yszhou4tech@gmail.com>
This patch adds the device-specific configuration to u-boot-envtools for
I-O DATA BSH-G24MB switch.
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
This switches the iwlwifi-firmware-ax200 file to API version 66, this is
the most recent version supported by our driver.
The following files used in OpenWrt changed:
amdgpu-firmware/lib/firmware/amdgpu/yellow_carp_dmcub.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_010a.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_010b.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_0303.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_gf.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_gf_010a.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_gf_010b.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_gf_0303.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/rampatch_usb_00130200.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/rampatch_usb_00130201.bin
iwlwifi-firmware-ax200/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-cc-a0-66.ucode
iwlwifi-firmware-ax210/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-ty-a0-gf-a0-66.ucode
iwlwifi-firmware-ax210/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-ty-a0-gf-a0.pnvm
iwlwifi-firmware-iwl9000/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-9000-pu-b0-jf-b0-46.ucode
iwlwifi-firmware-iwl9260/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-9260-th-b0-jf-b0-46.ucode
rtl8822ce-firmware/lib/firmware/rtw88/rtw8822c_fw.bin
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
3276aed81c73 move run_cmd() to main.c
558eabc13c64 map: move dns host based lookup code to a separate function
6ff06d66c36c dns: add code for snooping dns packets
a78bd43c4a54 ubus: remove dnsmasq subscriber
9773ffa70f1f map: process dns patterns in the order in which they were defined
f13b67c9a786 dns: allow limiting dns entry matching to cname name
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
This adds the new tc-bpf variant and removes libxtables dependency from
the tc-tiny variant. The tc-full variant stays like before and contains
everything.
This allows to use tc without libxtables.
The variants have the following sizes:
root@OpenWrt:/# ls -al /usr/libexec/tc-*
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 282453 Mar 1 21:55 /usr/libexec/tc-bpf
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 282533 Mar 1 21:55 /usr/libexec/tc-full
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 266037 Mar 1 21:55 /usr/libexec/tc-tiny
They are linking the following shared libraries:
root@OpenWrt:/# ldd /usr/libexec/tc-tiny
/lib/ld-musl-mips-sf.so.1 (0x77d6e000)
libgcc_s.so.1 => /lib/libgcc_s.so.1 (0x77d4a000)
libc.so => /lib/ld-musl-mips-sf.so.1 (0x77d6e000)
root@OpenWrt:/# ldd /usr/libexec/tc-bpf
/lib/ld-musl-mips-sf.so.1 (0x77da6000)
libbpf.so.0 => /usr/lib/libbpf.so.0 (0x77d60000)
libelf.so.1 => /usr/lib/libelf.so.1 (0x77d3e000)
libgcc_s.so.1 => /lib/libgcc_s.so.1 (0x77d1a000)
libc.so => /lib/ld-musl-mips-sf.so.1 (0x77da6000)
libz.so.1 => /usr/lib/libz.so.1 (0x77cf6000)
root@OpenWrt:/# ldd /usr/libexec/tc-full
/lib/ld-musl-mips-sf.so.1 (0x77de8000)
libbpf.so.0 => /usr/lib/libbpf.so.0 (0x77da2000)
libelf.so.1 => /usr/lib/libelf.so.1 (0x77d80000)
libxtables.so.12 => /usr/lib/libxtables.so.12 (0x77d66000)
libgcc_s.so.1 => /lib/libgcc_s.so.1 (0x77d42000)
libc.so => /lib/ld-musl-mips-sf.so.1 (0x77de8000)
libz.so.1 => /usr/lib/libz.so.1 (0x77d1e000)
This is based on a patch from Tiago Gaspar.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Add U-Boot environment settings for Ruijie RG-EW3200GX PRO to allow
users to access the bootloader environment using fw_printenv/fw_setenv
while running OpenWrt.
Signed-off-by: Langhua Ye <y1248289414@outlook.com>
Steps to reproduce:
1. Insert NVMe disk with a reduction to Turris Omnia
2. Go to U-boot
3. Run these two commands:
a) ``nvme scan``
b) ``nvme detail``
4. Wait for crash
This is backported from U-boot upstream repository.
It should be included in the upcoming release - 2022.04 [1].
It was tested on Turris Omnia, mvebu, cortex-a9, OpenWrt master.
[1] https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/uboot/patch/20211209100639.21530-1-pali@kernel.org/
Signed-off-by: Josef Schlehofer <pepe.schlehofer@gmail.com>
[Export the patch from U-Boot git]
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Without PKG_RELEASE, it's impossible to trigger package updates when
changing files included in the package that are not in the qosify git
repository.
Signed-off-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
Acked-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
The /tmp directory is mounted as tmpfs. The tmpfs filesystem is backed by
anonymous memory, which means it can be swapped out at any time, if there is
memory pressure [1]. For this reason, a zram swap device is a much better
choice than mounting /tmp on zram, since it's able to compress all anonymous
memory, and not just the memory assigned to /tmp. We already have the zram-swap
package for this specific purpose, which means procd's tmp-on-zram is both
redundant and more limited.
A follow-up patch will remove support for mounting /tmp in zram from procd
itself.
[1] https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/tmpfs.txt
Signed-off-by: Rui Salvaterra <rsalvaterra@gmail.com>
Update to the latest upstream version. In this version there is a new
tool with which you can convert ipsets into nftables sets. Since we are
now using nftables as default firewall, this could be a useful tool for
porting ipsets to nftables sets.
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
iptables-nft doesn't depend on libip{4,6}tc, so move
libiptext* libs in their own packages to clean up dependencies
Rename libxtables-nft to libiptext-nft
Signed-off-by: Etienne Champetier <champetier.etienne@gmail.com>
Using PROVIDES allows to have other packages continue to
depend on iptables and users to pick between legacy and nft
version.
Signed-off-by: Etienne Champetier <champetier.etienne@gmail.com>
'iptables-mod-' can be used directly by firewall3, by
iptables and by iptables-nft. They are not linked to
iptables but to libxtables, so fix the dependencies to allow
to remove iptables(-legacy)
Signed-off-by: Etienne Champetier <champetier.etienne@gmail.com>
libxtables doesn't depend on libnftnl, iptables-nft does,
so move the dependency to not pull libnftnl with firewall3/iptables-legacy
Also libxtables-nft depends on IPTABLES_NFTABLES
Signed-off-by: Etienne Champetier <champetier.etienne@gmail.com>
Debians' changelog by Henrique de Moraes Holschuh <hmh@debian.org>:
* upstream changelog: new upstream datafile 20220207
* Mitigates (*only* when loaded from UEFI firmware through the FIT)
CVE-2021-0146, INTEL-SA-00528: VT-d privilege escalation through
debug port, on Pentium, Celeron and Atom processors with signatures
0x506c9, 0x506ca, 0x506f1, 0x706a1, 0x706a8
https://github.com/intel/Intel-Linux-Processor-Microcode-Data-Files/issues/57#issuecomment-1036363145
* Mitigates CVE-2021-0127, INTEL-SA-00532: an unexpected code breakpoint
may cause a system hang, on many processors.
* Mitigates CVE-2021-0145, INTEL-SA-00561: information disclosure due
to improper sanitization of shared resources (fast-store forward
predictor), on many processors.
* Mitigates CVE-2021-33120, INTEL-SA-00589: out-of-bounds read on some
Atom Processors may allow information disclosure or denial of service
via network access.
* Fixes critical errata (functional issues) on many processors
* Adds a MSR switch to enable RAPL filtering (default off, once enabled
it can only be disabled by poweroff or reboot). Useful to protect
SGX and other threads from side-channel info leak. Improves the
mitigation for CVE-2020-8694, CVE-2020-8695, INTEL-SA-00389 on many
processors.
* Disables TSX in more processor models.
* Fixes issue with WBINDV on multi-socket (server) systems which could
cause resets and unpredictable system behavior.
* Adds a MSR switch to 10th and 11th-gen (Ice Lake, Tiger Lake, Rocket
Lake) processors, to control a fix for (hopefully rare) unpredictable
processor behavior when HyperThreading is enabled. This MSR switch
is enabled by default on *server* processors. On other processors,
it needs to be explicitly enabled by an updated UEFI/BIOS (with added
configuration logic). An updated operating system kernel might also
be able to enable it. When enabled, this fix can impact performance.
* Updated Microcodes:
sig 0x000306f2, pf_mask 0x6f, 2021-08-11, rev 0x0049, size 38912
sig 0x000306f4, pf_mask 0x80, 2021-05-24, rev 0x001a, size 23552
sig 0x000406e3, pf_mask 0xc0, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 105472
sig 0x00050653, pf_mask 0x97, 2021-05-26, rev 0x100015c, size 34816
sig 0x00050654, pf_mask 0xb7, 2021-06-16, rev 0x2006c0a, size 43008
sig 0x00050656, pf_mask 0xbf, 2021-08-13, rev 0x400320a, size 35840
sig 0x00050657, pf_mask 0xbf, 2021-08-13, rev 0x500320a, size 36864
sig 0x0005065b, pf_mask 0xbf, 2021-06-04, rev 0x7002402, size 28672
sig 0x00050663, pf_mask 0x10, 2021-06-12, rev 0x700001c, size 28672
sig 0x00050664, pf_mask 0x10, 2021-06-12, rev 0xf00001a, size 27648
sig 0x00050665, pf_mask 0x10, 2021-09-18, rev 0xe000014, size 23552
sig 0x000506c9, pf_mask 0x03, 2021-05-10, rev 0x0046, size 17408
sig 0x000506ca, pf_mask 0x03, 2021-05-10, rev 0x0024, size 16384
sig 0x000506e3, pf_mask 0x36, 2021-04-29, rev 0x00ec, size 108544
sig 0x000506f1, pf_mask 0x01, 2021-05-10, rev 0x0036, size 11264
sig 0x000606a6, pf_mask 0x87, 2021-12-03, rev 0xd000331, size 291840
sig 0x000706a1, pf_mask 0x01, 2021-05-10, rev 0x0038, size 74752
sig 0x000706a8, pf_mask 0x01, 2021-05-10, rev 0x001c, size 75776
sig 0x000706e5, pf_mask 0x80, 2021-05-26, rev 0x00a8, size 110592
sig 0x000806a1, pf_mask 0x10, 2021-09-02, rev 0x002d, size 34816
sig 0x000806c1, pf_mask 0x80, 2021-08-06, rev 0x009a, size 109568
sig 0x000806c2, pf_mask 0xc2, 2021-07-16, rev 0x0022, size 96256
sig 0x000806d1, pf_mask 0xc2, 2021-07-16, rev 0x003c, size 101376
sig 0x000806e9, pf_mask 0x10, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 104448
sig 0x000806e9, pf_mask 0xc0, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 104448
sig 0x000806ea, pf_mask 0xc0, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 103424
sig 0x000806eb, pf_mask 0xd0, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 104448
sig 0x000806ec, pf_mask 0x94, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 104448
sig 0x00090661, pf_mask 0x01, 2021-09-21, rev 0x0015, size 20480
sig 0x000906c0, pf_mask 0x01, 2021-08-09, rev 0x2400001f, size 20480
sig 0x000906e9, pf_mask 0x2a, 2021-04-29, rev 0x00ec, size 106496
sig 0x000906ea, pf_mask 0x22, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 102400
sig 0x000906eb, pf_mask 0x02, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 104448
sig 0x000906ec, pf_mask 0x22, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 103424
sig 0x000906ed, pf_mask 0x22, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 103424
sig 0x000a0652, pf_mask 0x20, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 93184
sig 0x000a0653, pf_mask 0x22, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ec, size 94208
sig 0x000a0655, pf_mask 0x22, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ee, size 94208
sig 0x000a0660, pf_mask 0x80, 2021-04-28, rev 0x00ea, size 94208
sig 0x000a0661, pf_mask 0x80, 2021-04-29, rev 0x00ec, size 93184
sig 0x000a0671, pf_mask 0x02, 2021-08-29, rev 0x0050, size 102400
* Removed Microcodes:
sig 0x00080664, pf_mask 0x01, 2021-02-17, rev 0xb00000f, size 130048
sig 0x00080665, pf_mask 0x01, 2021-02-17, rev 0xb00000f, size 130048
* update .gitignore and debian/.gitignore.
Add some missing items from .gitignore and debian/.gitignore.
* ucode-blacklist: do not late-load 0x406e3 and 0x506e3.
When the BIOS microcode is older than revision 0x7f (and perhaps in some
other cases as well), the latest microcode updates for 0x406e3 and
0x506e3 must be applied using the early update method. Otherwise, the
system might hang. Also: there must not be any other intermediate
microcode update attempts [other than the one done by the BIOS itself],
either. It must go from the BIOS microcode update directly to the
latest microcode update.
* source: update symlinks to reflect id of the latest release, 20220207
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
iucode-tool/host is used by intel-microcode to manipulate with
microcode.bin file. iucode-tool requires cpuid.h at compile time
for autodection feature, but non-x86 build hosts does not have
this header file (e.g. ubuntu 20.04 aarch64) or this header
generates compile time error (#error macro) (e.g. macos arm64).
This patch provides compat cpuid.h to build iucode-tool/host on
non-x86 linux hosts and macos. CPU autodectection is not required
for intel-microcode package build so compat cpuid.h is ok for
OpenWrt purposes.
glibc and argp lib are not present in macos so iucode-tool/host
build fails. This patch adds argp-standalone/host as build
dependency if host os is macos.
Generated ucode (intel-microcode package) is exactly the same on
Linux x86_64 (Ubuntu 20.04), Linux aarch64 (Ubuntu 20.04) and
Darwin arm64 (MacOS 11.6) build hosts.
Signed-off-by: Sergey V. Lobanov <sergey@lobanov.in>
This patch adds host-compile ability to argp-standalone for build
hosts without glibc and argp lib, e.g. MacOS.
iucode-tool/host can not be built on MacOS due to lack of argp.
Signed-off-by: Sergey V. Lobanov <sergey@lobanov.in>
<https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbedtls/releases/tag/v2.28.0>
"Mbed TLS 2.28 is a long-time support branch.
It will be supported with bug-fixes and security
fixes until end of 2024."
<https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbedtls/blob/development/BRANCHES.md>
"Currently, the only supported LTS branch is: mbedtls-2.28.
For a short time we also have the previous LTS, which has
recently ended its support period, mbedtls-2.16.
This branch will move into the archive namespace around the
time of the next release."
this will also add support for uacme ualpn support.
size changes
221586 libmbedtls12_2.28.0-1_mips_24kc.ipk
182742 libmbedtls12_2.16.12-1_mips_24kc.ipk
Signed-off-by: Lucian Cristian <lucian.cristian@gmail.com>
(remark about 2.16's EOS, slightly reworded)
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
ZTE MF286A and MF286R are indoor LTE category 6/7 CPE router with simultaneous
dual-band 802.11ac plus 802.11n Wi-Fi radios and quad-port gigabit
Ethernet switch, FXS and external USB 2.0 port.
Hardware highlights:
- CPU: QCA9563 SoC at 775MHz,
- RAM: 128MB DDR2,
- NOR Flash: MX25L1606E 2MB SPI Flash, for U-boot only,
- NAND Flash: W25N01GV 128MB SPI NAND-Flash, for all other data,
- Wi-Fi 5GHz: QCA9886 2x2 MIMO 802.11ac Wave2 radio,
- WI-Fi 2.4GHz: QCA9563 3x3 MIMO 802.11n radio,
- Switch: QCA8337v2 4-port gigabit Ethernet, with single SGMII CPU port,
- WWAN:
[MF286A] MDM9230-based category 6 internal LTE modem
[MF286R] PXA1826-based category 7 internal LTE modem
in extended mini-PCIE form factor, with 3 internal antennas and
2 external antenna connections, single mini-SIM slot.
- FXS: one external ATA port (handled entirely by modem part) with two
physical connections in parallel,
- USB: Single external USB 2.0 port,
- Switches: power switch, WPS, Wi-Fi and reset buttons,
- LEDs: Wi-Fi, Test (internal). Rest of LEDs (Phone, WWAN, Battery,
Signal state) handled entirely by modem. 4 link status LEDs handled by
the switch on the backside.
- Battery: 3Ah 1-cell Li-Ion replaceable battery, with charging and
monitoring handled by modem.
- Label MAC device: eth0
The device shares many components with previous model, MF286, differing
mostly by a Wave2 5GHz radio, flash layout and internal LED color.
In case of MF286A, the modem is the same as in MF286. MF286R uses a
different modem based on Marvell PXA1826 chip.
Internal modem of MF286A is supported via uqmi, MF286R modem isn't fully
supported, but it is expected to use comgt-ncm for connection, as it
uses standard 3GPP AT commands for connection establishment.
Console connection: connector X2 is the console port, with the following
pinout, starting from pin 1, which is the topmost pin when the board is
upright:
- VCC (3.3V). Do not use unless you need to source power for the
converer from it.
- TX
- RX
- GND
Default port configuration in U-boot as well as in stock firmware is
115200-8-N-1.
Installation:
Due to different flash layout from stock firmware, sysupgrade from
within stock firmware is impossible, despite it's based on QSDK which
itself is based on OpenWrt.
STEP 0: Stock firmware update:
As installing OpenWrt cuts you off from official firmware updates for
the modem part, it is recommended to update the stock firmware to latest
version before installation, to have built-in modem at the latest firmware
version.
STEP 1: gaining root shell:
Method 1:
This works if busybox has telnetd compiled in the binary.
If this does not work, try method 2.
Using well-known exploit to start telnetd on your router - works
only if Busybox on stock firmware has telnetd included:
- Open stock firmware web interface
- Navigate to "URL filtering" section by going to "Advanced settings",
then "Firewall" and finally "URL filter".
- Add an entry ending with "&&telnetd&&", for example
"http://hostname/&&telnetd&&".
- telnetd will immediately listen on port 4719.
- After connecting to telnetd use "admin/admin" as credentials.
Method 2:
This works if busybox does not have telnetd compiled in. Notably, this
is the case in DNA.fi firmware.
If this does not work, try method 3.
- Set IP of your computer to 192.168.0.22. (or appropriate subnet if
changed)
- Have a TFTP server running at that address
- Download MIPS build of busybox including telnetd, for example from:
https://busybox.net/downloads/binaries/1.21.1/busybox-mips
and put it in it's root directory. Rename it as "telnetd".
- As previously, login to router's web UI and navigate to "URL
filtering"
- Using "Inspect" feature, extend "maxlength" property of the input
field named "addURLFilter", so it looks like this:
<input type="text" name="addURLFilter" id="addURLFilter" maxlength="332"
class="required form-control">
- Stay on the page - do not navigate anywhere
- Enter "http://aa&zte_debug.sh 192.168.0.22 telnetd" as a filter.
- Save the settings. This will download the telnetd binary over tftp and
execute it. You should be able to log in at port 23, using
"admin/admin" as credentials.
Method 3:
If the above doesn't work, use the serial console - it exposes root shell
directly without need for login. Some stock firmwares, notably one from
finnish DNA operator lack telnetd in their builds.
STEP 2: Backing up original software:
As the stock firmware may be customized by the carrier and is not
officially available in the Internet, IT IS IMPERATIVE to back up the
stock firmware, if you ever plan to returning to stock firmware.
It is highly recommended to perform backup using both methods, to avoid
hassle of reassembling firmware images in future, if a restore is
needed.
Method 1: after booting OpenWrt initramfs image via TFTP:
PLEASE NOTE: YOU CANNOT DO THIS IF USING INTERMEDIATE FIRMWARE FOR INSTALLATION.
- Dump stock firmware located on stock kernel and ubi partitions:
ssh root@192.168.1.1: cat /dev/mtd4 > mtd4_kernel.bin
ssh root@192.168.1.1: cat /dev/mtd9 > mtd9_ubi.bin
And keep them in a safe place, should a restore be needed in future.
Method 2: using stock firmware:
- Connect an external USB drive formatted with FAT or ext4 to the USB
port.
- The drive will be auto-mounted to /var/usb_disk
- Check the flash layout of the device:
cat /proc/mtd
It should show the following:
mtd0: 000a0000 00010000 "u-boot"
mtd1: 00020000 00010000 "u-boot-env"
mtd2: 00140000 00010000 "reserved1"
mtd3: 000a0000 00020000 "fota-flag"
mtd4: 00080000 00020000 "art"
mtd5: 00080000 00020000 "mac"
mtd6: 000c0000 00020000 "reserved2"
mtd7: 00400000 00020000 "cfg-param"
mtd8: 00400000 00020000 "log"
mtd9: 000a0000 00020000 "oops"
mtd10: 00500000 00020000 "reserved3"
mtd11: 00800000 00020000 "web"
mtd12: 00300000 00020000 "kernel"
mtd13: 01a00000 00020000 "rootfs"
mtd14: 01900000 00020000 "data"
mtd15: 03200000 00020000 "fota"
mtd16: 01d00000 00020000 "firmware"
Differences might indicate that this is NOT a MF286A device but
one of other variants.
- Copy over all MTD partitions, for example by executing the following:
for i in 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15; do cat /dev/mtd$i > \
/var/usb_disk/mtd$i; done
"Firmware" partition can be skipped, it is a concatenation
of "kernel" and "rootfs".
- If the count of MTD partitions is different, this might indicate that
this is not a MF286A device, but one of its other variants.
- (optionally) rename the files according to MTD partition names from
/proc/mtd
- Unmount the filesystem:
umount /var/usb_disk; sync
and then remove the drive.
- Store the files in safe place if you ever plan to return to stock
firmware. This is especially important, because stock firmware for
this device is not available officially, and is usually customized by
the mobile providers.
STEP 3: Booting initramfs image:
Method 1: using serial console (RECOMMENDED):
- Have TFTP server running, exposing the OpenWrt initramfs image, and
set your computer's IP address as 192.168.0.22. This is the default
expected by U-boot. You may wish to change that, and alter later
commands accordingly.
- Connect the serial console if you haven't done so already,
- Interrupt boot sequence by pressing any key in U-boot when prompted
- Use the following commands to boot OpenWrt initramfs through TFTP:
setenv serverip 192.168.0.22
setenv ipaddr 192.168.0.1
tftpboot 0x81000000 openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286a-initramfs-kernel.bin
bootm 0x81000000
(Replace server IP and router IP as needed). There is no emergency
TFTP boot sequence triggered by buttons, contrary to MF283+.
- When OpenWrt initramfs finishes booting, proceed to actual
installation.
Method 2: using initramfs image as temporary boot kernel
This exploits the fact, that kernel and rootfs MTD devices are
consecutive on NAND flash, so from within stock image, an initramfs can
be written to this area and booted by U-boot on next reboot, because it
uses "nboot" command which isn't limited by kernel partition size.
- Download the initramfs-kernel.bin image
- After backing up the previous MTD contents, write the images to the
"firmware" MTD device, which conveniently concatenates "kernel" and
"rootfs" partitions that can fit the initramfs image:
nandwrite -p /dev/<firmware-mtd> \
/var/usb_disk/openwrt-ath79-zte_mf286a-initramfs-kernel.bin
- If write is OK, reboot the device, it will reboot to OpenWrt
initramfs:
reboot -f
- After rebooting, SSH into the device and use sysupgrade to perform
proper installation.
Method 3: using built-in TFTP recovery (LAST RESORT):
- With that method, ensure you have complete backup of system's NAND
flash first. It involves deliberately erasing the kernel.
- Download "-initramfs-kernel.bin" image for the device.
- Prepare the recovery image by prepending 8MB of zeroes to the image,
and name it root_uImage:
dd if=/dev/zero of=padding.bin bs=8M count=1
cat padding.bin openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286a-initramfs-kernel.bin >
root_uImage
- Set up a TFTP server at 192.0.0.1/8. Router will use random address
from that range.
- Put the previously generated "root_uImage" into TFTP server root
directory.
- Deliberately erase "kernel" partition" using stock firmware after
taking backup. THIS IS POINT OF NO RETURN.
- Restart the device. U-boot will attempt flashing the recovery
initramfs image, which will let you perform actual installation using
sysupgrade. This might take a considerable time, sometimes the router
doesn't establish Ethernet link properly right after booting. Be
patient.
- After U-boot finishes flashing, the LEDs of switch ports will all
light up. At this moment, perform power-on reset, and wait for OpenWrt
initramfs to finish booting. Then proceed to actual installation.
STEP 4: Actual installation:
- Set your computer IP to 192.168.1.22/24
- scp the sysupgrade image to the device:
scp openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286a-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin \
root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/
- ssh into the device and execute sysupgrade:
sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286a-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
- Wait for router to reboot to full OpenWrt.
STEP 5: WAN connection establishment
Since the router is equipped with LTE modem as its main WAN interface, it
might be useful to connect to the Internet right away after
installation. To do so, please put the following entries in
/etc/config/network, replacing the specific configuration entries with
one needed for your ISP:
config interface 'wan'
option proto 'qmi'
option device '/dev/cdc-wdm0'
option auth '<auth>' # As required, usually 'none'
option pincode '<pin>' # If required by SIM
option apn '<apn>' # As required by ISP
option pdptype '<pdp>' # Typically 'ipv4', or 'ipv4v6' or 'ipv6'
For example, the following works for most polish ISPs
config interface 'wan'
option proto 'qmi'
option device '/dev/cdc-wdm0'
option auth 'none'
option apn 'internet'
option pdptype 'ipv4'
The required minimum is:
config interface 'wan'
option proto 'qmi'
option device '/dev/cdc-wdm0'
In this case, the modem will use last configured APN from stock
firmware - this should work out of the box, unless your SIM requires
PIN which can't be switched off.
If you have build with LuCI, installing luci-proto-qmi helps with this
task.
Restoring the stock firmware:
Preparation:
If you took your backup using stock firmware, you will need to
reassemble the partitions into images to be restored onto the flash. The
layout might differ from ISP to ISP, this example is based on generic stock
firmware
The only partitions you really care about are "web", "kernel", and
"rootfs". These are required to restore the stock firmware through
factory TFTP recovery.
Because kernel partition was enlarged, compared to stock
firmware, the kernel and rootfs MTDs don't align anymore, and you need
to carve out required data if you only have backup from stock FW:
- Prepare kernel image
cat mtd12_kernel.bin mtd13_rootfs.bin > owrt_kernel.bin
truncate -s 4M owrt_kernel_restore.bin
- Cut off first 1MB from rootfs
dd if=mtd13_rootfs.bin of=owrt_rootfs.bin bs=1M skip=1
- Prepare image to write to "ubi" meta-partition:
cat mtd6_reserved2.bi mtd7_cfg-param.bin mtd8_log.bin mtd9_oops.bin \
mtd10_reserved3.bin mtd11_web.bin owrt_rootfs.bin > \
owrt_ubi_ubi_restore.bin
You can skip the "fota" partition altogether,
it is used only for stock firmware update purposes and can be overwritten
safely anyway. The same is true for "data" partition which on my device
was found to be unused at all. Restoring mtd5_cfg-param.bin will restore
the stock firmware configuration you had before.
Method 1: Using initramfs:
This method is recmmended if you took your backup from within OpenWrt
initramfs, as the reassembly is not needed.
- Boot to initramfs as in step 3:
- Completely detach ubi0 partition using ubidetach /dev/ubi0_0
- Look up the kernel and ubi partitions in /proc/mtd
- Copy over the stock kernel image using scp to /tmp
- Erase kernel and restore stock kernel:
(scp mtd4_kernel.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/)
mtd write <kernel_mtd> mtd4_kernel.bin
rm mtd4_kernel.bin
- Copy over the stock partition backups one-by-one using scp to /tmp, and
restore them individually. Otherwise you might run out of space in
tmpfs:
(scp mtd3_ubiconcat0.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/)
mtd write <ubiconcat0_mtd> mtd3_ubiconcat0.bin
rm mtd3_ubiconcat0.bin
(scp mtd5_ubiconcat1.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/)
mtd write <ubiconcat1_mtd> mtd5_ubiconcat1.bin
rm mtd5_ubiconcat1.bin
- If the write was correct, force a device reboot with
reboot -f
Method 2: Using live OpenWrt system (NOT RECOMMENDED):
- Prepare a USB flash drive contatining MTD backup files
- Ensure you have kmod-usb-storage and filesystem driver installed for
your drive
- Mount your flash drive
mkdir /tmp/usb
mount /dev/sda1 /tmp/usb
- Remount your UBI volume at /overlay to R/O
mount -o remount,ro /overlay
- Write back the kernel and ubi partitions from USB drive
cd /tmp/usb
mtd write mtd4_kernel.bin /dev/<kernel_mtd>
mtd write mtd9_ubi.bin /dev/<kernel_ubi>
- If everything went well, force a device reboot with
reboot -f
Last image may be truncated a bit due to lack of space in RAM, but this will happen over "fota"
MTD partition which may be safely erased after reboot anyway.
Method 3: using built-in TFTP recovery:
This method is recommended if you took backups using stock firmware.
- Assemble a recovery rootfs image from backup of stock partitions by
concatenating "web", "kernel", "rootfs" images dumped from the device,
as "root_uImage"
- Use it in place of "root_uImage" recovery initramfs image as in the
TFTP pre-installation method.
Quirks and known issuesa
- It was observed, that CH340-based USB-UART converters output garbage
during U-boot phase of system boot. At least CP2102 is known to work
properly.
- Kernel partition size is increased to 4MB compared to stock 3MB, to
accomodate future kernel updates - at this moment OpenWrt 5.10 kernel
image is at 2.5MB which is dangerously close to the limit. This has no
effect on booting the system - but keep that in mind when reassembling
an image to restore stock firmware.
- uqmi seems to be unable to change APN manually, so please use the one
you used before in stock firmware first. If you need to change it,
please use protocok '3g' to establish connection once, or use the
following command to change APN (and optionally IP type) manually:
echo -ne 'AT+CGDCONT=1,"IP","<apn>' > /dev/ttyUSB0
- The only usable LED as a "system LED" is the blue debug LED hidden
inside the case. All other LEDs are controlled by modem, on which the
router part has some influence only on Wi-Fi LED.
- Wi-Fi LED currently doesn't work while under OpenWrt, despite having
correct GPIO mapping. All other LEDs are controlled by modem,
including this one in stock firmware. GPIO19, mapped there only acts
as a gate, while the actual signal source seems to be 5GHz Wi-Fi
radio, however it seems it is not the LED exposed by ath10k as
ath10k-phy0.
- GPIO5 used for modem reset is a suicide switch, causing a hardware
reset of whole board, not only the modem. It is attached to
gpio-restart driver, to restart the modem on reboot as well, to ensure
QMI connectivity after reboot, which tends to fail otherwise.
- Modem, as in MF283+, exposes root shell over ADB - while not needed
for OpenWrt operation at all - have fun lurking around.
The same modem module is used as in older MF286.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
Both struct net_device_path_ctx and struct net_device_path
are not available in 5.4. This causes an build error on the
bcm63xx target.
|mac80211/driver-ops.h: In function 'drv_net_fill_forward_path':
|driver-ops.h:1502:57: error: passing argument 4 of
|'local->ops->net_fill_forward_path' from incompatible pointer type
| [-Werror=incompatible-pointer-types]
| 1502 | ctx, path);
| | ^~~
| | |
| | struct net_device_path_ctx *
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Package the ability to log kernel crashes to 'ramoops' pstore
files into RAM in /sys/fs/pstore
Reference to the ramoops admin guide in upstream Linux:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v5.10/admin-guide/ramoops.html
The files in RAM survive a warm reboot, but not a cold reboot.
Note: kmod-ramoops selects kmod-pstore and kmod-reed-solomon.
The feature can be used by selecting the kmod-ramoops and
adding a ramoops reserved-memory definition to the device DTS.
Example from R7800:
reserved-memory {
rsvd@5fe00000 {
reg = <0x5fe00000 0x200000>;
reusable;
};
ramoops@42100000 {
compatible = "ramoops";
reg = <0x42100000 0x40000>;
record-size = <0x4000>;
console-size = <0x4000>;
ftrace-size = <0x4000>;
pmsg-size = <0x4000>;
};
};
If no definition has been made in DTS, no crash log is stored
for the device.
Signed-off-by: Hannu Nyman <hannu.nyman@iki.fi>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
(added CONFIG_EFI_VARS_PSTORE disable)
Previously, grub2 was hardcoded to always look on "hd0" for the
kernel.
This works well when the system only had a single disk.
But if there was a second disk/stick present, it may have look
on the wrong drive because of enumeration races.
This patch utilizes grub2 search function to look for a filesystem
with the label "kernel". This works thanks to existing setup in
scripts/gen_image_generic.sh. Which sets the "kernel" label on
both the fat and ext4 filesystem variants.
Signed-off-by: Jax Jiang <jax.jiang.007@gmail.com>
Suggested-by: Alberto Bursi <bobafetthotmail@gmail.com> (MX100 WA)
(word wrapped, slightly rewritten commit message, removed MX100 WA)
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
AT91Bootstrap version 4 is available only for SAM9X60, SAMA5D2, SAMA5D3,
SAMA5D4, SAMA7G5. Thus use v4.0.1 for the above targets and v3.10.4 for
the rest of them. With the switch to v4 AT91Bootstrap binaries are now
on build/binaries. Take also this into account. Also, patches directory
is not needed anymore with the version update.
Signed-off-by: Claudiu Beznea <claudiu.beznea@microchip.com>
In the default shadow file, as visible in the failsafe mode, the user
root has value of `0` set in the 3rd field, the date of last password
change. This setting means that the password needs to be changed the
next time the user will log in the system. `dropbear` server is ignoring
this setting but `openssh-server` tries to enforce it and fails in the
failsafe mode because the rootfs is R/O.
Disable the password aging feature for user root by setting the 3rd
filed empty.
Signed-off-by: Rucke Teg <rucketeg@protonmail.com>
Enable both the hunting-and-pecking loop and hash-to-element mechanisms
by default in OpenWRT with SAE.
Commercial Wi-Fi solutions increasingly frequently now ship with both
hunting-and-pecking and hash-to-element (H2E) enabled by default as this
is more secure and more performant than offering hunting-and-pecking
alone for H2E capable clients.
The hunting and pecking loop mechanism is inherently fragile and prone to
timing-based side channels in its design and is more computationally
intensive to perform. Hash-to-element (H2E) is its long-term
replacement to address these concerns.
For clients that only support the hunting-and-pecking loop mechanism,
this is still available to use by default.
For clients that in addition support, or were to require, the
hash-to-element (H2E) mechanism, this is then available for use.
Signed-off-by: Nick Lowe <nick.lowe@gmail.com>
Backport fix for API breakage of SSL_get_verify_result() introduced in
v5.1.1-stable. In v4.8.1-stable SSL_get_verify_result() used to return
X509_V_OK when used on LE powered sites or other sites utilizing
relaxed/alternative cert chain validation feature. After an update to
v5.1.1-stable that API calls started returning X509_V_ERR_INVALID_CA
error and thus rendered all such connection attempts imposible:
$ docker run -it openwrt/rootfs:x86_64-21.02.2 sh -c "wget https://letsencrypt.org"
Downloading 'https://letsencrypt.org'
Connecting to 18.159.128.50:443
Connection error: Invalid SSL certificate
Fixes: #9283
References: https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl/issues/4879
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Not all targets create /var/lock or touch /var/lock/fw_printenv.lock in
their platform.sh. This is problematic as fw_printenv then fails in
case /var/lock/fw_printenv.lock has not been created by previous calls
to fw_printenv/fw_setenv before sysupgrade is run.
Targets using fw_printenv/fw_setenv during sysupgrade:
* ath79/*
* ipq40xx/*
* ipq806x/*
* kirkwood/*
* layerscape/*
* mediatek/mt7622
* mvebu/*
* ramips/*
* realtek/*
Targets currently using additional steps in /lib/upgrade/platform.sh
to make sure /var/lock/fw_printenv.lock (or at least /var/lock)
actually exists:
* ath79/* (openmesh devices)
* ipq40xx/* (linksys devices)
* ipq806x/* (linksys devices)
* kirkwood/* (linksys devices)
* layerscape/*
* mvebu/cortexa9 (linksys devices)
Given that accessing the U-Boot environment during sysupgrade is not
uncommon and the situation across targets is currently quite diverse,
just make sure both tools as well fw_env.config are always copied to
the ramdisk used for sysupgrade. Also make sure /var/lock always
exists.
This now allows to remove copying of fw_printenv/fw_setenv as well as
fw_env.config, creation of /var/lock or even /var/lock/fw_printenv.lock
from lib/upgrade/platform.sh or files included there.
As the same applies also to 'fwtool' which is used by generic eMMC
sysupgrade, also always copy that to ramdisk.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This uses uci to configure engines, by generating a list of enabled
engines in /var/etc/ssl/engines.cnf from engines configured in
/etc/config/openssl:
config engine 'devcrypto'
option enabled '1'
Currently the only options implemented are 'enabled', which defaults to
true and enables the named engine, and the 'force' option, that enables
the engine even if the init script thinks the engine does not exist.
The existence test is to check for either a configuration file
/etc/ssl/engines.cnf.d/%ENGINE%.cnf, or a shared object file
/usr/lib/engines-1.1/%ENGINE%.so.
The engine list is generated by an init script which is set to run after
'log' because it informs the engines being enabled or skipped. It
should run before any service using OpenSSL as the crypto library,
otherwise the service will not use any engine.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
This enables an engine during its package's installation, by adding it
to the engines list in /etc/ssl/engines.cnf.d/engines.cnf.
The engine build system was reworked, with the addition of an engine.mk
file that groups some of the engine packages' definitions, and could be
used by out of tree engines as well.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
This changes the configuration of engines from the global openssl.cnf to
files in the /etc/ssl/engines.cnf.d directory. The engines.cnf file has
the list of enabled engines, while each engine has its own configuration
file installed under /etc/ssl/engines.cnf.d.
Patches were refreshed with --zero-commit.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
100-ddr-marvell-a38x-fix-BYTE_HOMOGENEOUS_SPLIT_OUT-deci.patch [1]:
SoC Marvell A38x is used in Turris Omnia, and we thought that with recent
fiddling around DDR training to fix it once for all, there were
reproduced the issue in the upcoming new revision Turris Omnia boards.
101-arm-mvebu-spl-Add-option-to-reset-the-board-on-DDR-t.patch [2]:
This is useful when some board may occasionally fail with DDR training,
and it adds the option to reset the board on the DDR training failure
102-arm-mvebu-turris_omnia-Reset-the-board-immediately-o.patch [3]:
This enables the option CONFIG_DDR_RESET_ON_TRAINING_FAILURE (added by
101 patch), so the Turris Omnia board is restarted immediately, and it
does not require to reset the board manually or wait 120s for MCU to
reset the board
[1] https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/uboot/patch/20220217000837.13003-1-kabel@kernel.org/
[2] https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/uboot/patch/20220217000849.13028-1-kabel@kernel.org/
[3] https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/uboot/patch/20220217000849.13028-2-kabel@kernel.org/
Signed-off-by: Josef Schlehofer <pepe.schlehofer@gmail.com>
This commit adds the following package compile options.
CONFIG_PACKAGE_RTW88_DEBGUG:
Compile the driver with additional debug logging output
CONFIG_PACKAGE_RTW88_DEBGUGFS:
Add the possibility to map information about the driver rtw88 into
debugfs.
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
Contains following changes:
136006b88826 cmake: fix usage of implicit library and include paths
bc0e84d689e2 netifd: interface-ip: don't set fib6 policies if ipv6 disabled
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
e061299 wireless-regdb: Raise DFS TX power limit to 250 mW (24 dBm) for the US
2ce78ed wireless-regdb: Update regulatory rules for Croatia (HR) on 6GHz
0d39f4c wireless-regdb: Update regulatory rules for South Korea (KR)
acad231 wireless-regdb: Update regulatory rules for France (FR) on 6 and 60 GHz
ea83a82 wireless-regdb: add support for US S1G channels
4408149 wireless-regdb: add 802.11ah bands to world regulatory domain
5f3cadc wireless-regdb: Update regulatory rules for Spain (ES) on 6GHz
e0ac69b Revert "wireless-regdb: Update regulatory rules for South Korea (KR)"
40e5e80 wireless-regdb: Update regulatory rules for South Korea (KR)
e427ff2 wireless-regdb: Update regulatory rules for China (CN)
0970116 wireless-regdb: Update regulatory rules for the Netherlands (NL) on 6GHz
4dac44b wireless-regdb: update regulatory database based on preceding changes
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
package hwmon's lm70.ko. This module supports the
National Semiconductor/TI LM70,LM71,LM74 and
TI TMP121,TMP122,TMP123 and TMP124 chips (all SPI).
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
When Kernel 5.10 was enabled for mpc85xx, the kernel once again became too
large upon decompression (>7MB or so) to decompress itself on boot (see
FS#4110[1]).
There have been many attempts to fix booting from a compressed kernel on
the HiveAP-330:
- b683f1c36d ("mpc85xx: Use gzip compressed kernel on HiveAP-330")
- 98089bb8ba ("mpc85xx: Use uncompressed kernel on the HiveAP-330")
- 26cb167a5c ("mpc85xx: Fix Aerohive HiveAP-330 initramfs image")
We can no longer compress the kernel due to size, and the stock bootloader
does not support any other types of compression. Since an uncompressed
kernel no longer fits in the 8MiB kernel partition at 0x2840000, we need to
patch u-boot to autoboot by running variable which isn't set by the
bootloader on each autoboot.
This commit repartitions the HiveAP, requiring a new COMPAT_VERSION,
and uses the DEVICE_COMPAT_MESSAGE to guide the user to patch u-boot,
which changes the variable run on boot to be `owrt_boot`; the user can
then set the value of that variable appropriately.
The following has been documented in the device's OpenWrt wiki page:
<https://openwrt.org/toh/aerohive/hiveap-330>. Please look there
first/too for more information.
The from-stock and upgrade from a previous installation now becomes:
0) setup a network with a dhcp server and a tftp server at serverip
(192.168.1.101) with the initramfs image in the servers root directory.
1) Hook into UART (9600 baud) and enter U-Boot. You may need to enter
a password of administrator or AhNf?d@ta06 if prompted. If the password
doesn't work. Try reseting the device by pressing and holding the reset
button with the stock OS.
2) Once in U-Boot, set the new owrt_boot and tftp+boot the initramfs image:
Use copy and paste!
# fw_setenv owrt_boot 'setenv bootargs \"console=ttyS0,$baudrate\";bootm 0xEC040000 - 0xEC000000'
# save
# dhcp
# setenv bootargs console=ttyS0,$baudrate
# tftpboot 0x1000000 192.168.1.101:openwrt-mpc85xx-p1020-aerohive_hiveap-330-initramfs-kernel.bin
# bootm
3) Once openwrt booted:
carefully copy and paste this into the root shell. One step at a time
# 3.0 install kmod-mtd-rw from the internet and load it
opkg update; opkg install kmod-mtd-rw
insmod mtd-rw i_want_a_brick=y
# 3.1 create scripts that modifies uboot
cat <<- "EOF" > /tmp/uboot-update.sh
. /lib/functions/system.sh
cp "/dev/mtd$(find_mtd_index 'u-boot')" /tmp/uboot
cp /tmp/uboot /tmp/uboot_patched
ofs=$(strings -n80 -td < /tmp/uboot | grep '^ [0-9]* setenv bootargs.*cp\.l' | cut -f2 -d' ')
for off in $ofs; do
printf "run owrt_boot; " | dd of=/tmp/uboot_patched bs=1 seek=${off} conv=notrunc
done
md5sum /tmp/uboot*
EOF
# 3.2 run the script to do the modification
sh /tmp/uboot-update.sh
# verify that /tmp/uboot and /tmp/uboot_patched are good
#
# my uboot was: (is printed during boot)
# U-Boot 2009.11 (Jan 12 2017 - 00:27:25), Build: jenkins-HiveOS-Honolulu_AP350_Rel-245
#
# d84b45a2e8aca60d630fbd422efc6b39 /tmp/uboot
# 6dc420f24c2028b9cf7f0c62c0c7f692 /tmp/uboot_patched
# 98ebc7e7480ce9148cd2799357a844b0 /tmp/uboot-update.sh <-- just for reference
# 3.3 this produces the /tmp/u-boot_patched file.
mtd write /tmp/uboot_patched u-boot
3) scp over the sysupgrade file to /tmp/ and run sysupgrade to flash OpenWrt:
sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-mpc85xx-p1020-aerohive_hiveap-330-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
4) after the reboot, you are good to go.
Other notes:
- Note that after this sysupgrade, the AP will be unavailable for 7 minutes
to reformat flash. The tri-color LED does not blink in any way to
indicate this, though there is no risk in interrupting this process,
other than the jffs2 reformat being reset.
- Add a uci-default to fix the compat version. This will prevent updates
from previous versions without going through the installation process.
- Enable CONFIG_MTD_SPLIT_UIMAGE_FW and adjust partitioning to combine
the kernel and rootfs into a single dts partition to maximize storage
space, though in practice the kernel can grow no larger than 16MiB due
to constraints of the older mpc85xx u-boot platform.
- Because of that limit, KERNEL_SIZE has been raised to 16m.
- A .tar.gz of the u-boot source for the AP330 (a.k.a. Goldengate) can
be found here[2].
- The stock-jffs2 partition is also removed to make more space -- this
is possible only now that it is no longer split away from the rootfs.
- the console-override is gone. The device will now get the console
through the bootargs. This has the advantage that you can set a different
baudrate in uboot and the linux kernel will stick with it!
- due to the repartitioning, the partition layout and names got a makeover.
- the initramfs+fdt method is now combined into a MultiImage initramfs.
The separate fdt download is no longer needed.
- added uboot-envtools to the mpc85xx target. All targets have uboot and
this way its available in the initramfs.
[1]: https://bugs.openwrt.org/index.php?do=details&task_id=4110
[2]: magnet:?xt=urn:btih:e53b27006979afb632af5935fa0f2affaa822a59
Tested-by: Martin Kennedy <hurricos@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Kennedy <hurricos@gmail.com>
(rewrote parts of the commit message, Initramfs-MultiImage,
dropped bootargs-override, added wiki entry + link, uboot-envtools)
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
ksmbd is an upstream linux alternative to Samba which is lighterweight
and more performant, especially on underpowered devices.
Moving it here from the packages feed as it is now an upstream kernel
module. Also easier to update as version updates can be coordinated better
The next LTS kernel (5.15) has this included. A depend on kernel < 5.15
will need to be added later.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
The 80211r r0kh and r1kh defaults are generated from the md5sum of
"$mobility_domain/$auth_secret". auth_secret is only set when using EAP
authentication, but the default key is used for SAE/PSK as well. In
this case, auth_secret is empty, and the default value of the key can
be computed from the SSID alone.
Fallback to using $key when auth_secret is empty. While at it, rename
the variable holding the generated key from 'key' to 'ft_key', to avoid
clobbering the PSK.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
[make ft_key local]
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Add the STAs extended capabilities to the ubus STA information. This
way, external daemons can be made aware of a STAs capabilities.
This field is of an array type and contains 0 or more bytes of a STAs
advertised extended capabilities.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This patch adds support for creation heartbeat led trigger with,
for example, this command:
ucidef_set_led_heartbeat "..." "..." "..."
from /etc/board.d/01_leds.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Smirnov <s.alexey@gmail.com>
This module was used solely by Buffalo WZR-HP-G300NH devices
and has become obsolete with the introduction of gpio-cascade.
Signed-off-by: Mauri Sandberg <maukka@ext.kapsi.fi>
Adds new kernel module for GPIO controlled multiplexer support.
Signed-off-by: Mauri Sandberg <maukka@ext.kapsi.fi>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz> [missing commit description]
a87d010 uxc: remove unused printf parameter
ad65249 instance: exit in case asprintf() fails
Build with glibc should again work after this commit.
Fixes: e9e61d76fd ("procd: update to git HEAD")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
df1123e uxc: add support for user-defined settings
0272c7c uxc: allow editing settings using 'create'
a839518 uxc: clean up error handling
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
For sysupgrade on NAND/UBI devices there is the U-Boot environment
variable rootfs_data_max which can be used to limit the size of the
rootfs_data volume created on sysupgrade.
This stopped working reliable with recent kernels, probably due to a
race condition when reading the number of free erase blocks from sysfs
just after removing a volume.
Change the script to just try creating rootfs_data with the desired
size and retry with maximum size in case that fails. Hence calculating
the available size in the script can be dropped which works around the
problem.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
'uxc boot' is inteded to be called multiple times, so there is not need
to guard the first call on boot -- the actual code anyway didn't do
that, so just remove it.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This fixes the following security problem:
The command-line argument parser in tcpdump before 4.99.0 has a buffer
overflow in tcpdump.c:read_infile(). To trigger this vulnerability the
attacker needs to create a 4GB file on the local filesystem and to
specify the file name as the value of the -F command-line argument of
tcpdump.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
53caa1a fw4: resolve zone layer 2 devices for hw flow offloading
9fe58f5 fw4: rework and fix family inheritance logic
8795296 tests: mocklib: fix infinite recursion in wrapped print()
281b1bc tests: change mocked wan interface type to PPPoE
93b710d tests: mocklib: forward compatibility change
1a94915 fw4: only stage reflection rules if all required addrs are known
5c21714 fw4: add device iifname/oifname matches to DSCP and MARK rules
3eacc97 tests: adjust 01_ruleset test case to latest changes
Signed-off-by: Jo-Philipp Wich <jo@mein.io>
a29bad9 compiler: fix patchlist corruption on switch statement syntax errors
86f0662 lib: change `ord()` to always return single byte value
116a8ce vallist: fix storing/retrieving short strings with 8bit byte value
Signed-off-by: Jo-Philipp Wich <jo@mein.io>
When the uci configuration is created automatically during a very early
stage, where no entropy daemon is set up, generating the key directly is
not an option. Therefore we allow to set the private_key to "generate"
and generate the private key directly before the interface is taken up.
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Mörlein <me@irrelefant.net>
Tested-by: Jan-Niklas Burfeind <git@aiyionpri.me>
11adf0c source: convert source objects into proper uc_value_t type
3a49192 treewide: rework function memory model
7edad5c tests: add functional tests for builtin functions
d5003fd lib: fix leaking tokener in uc_json() on parse exception
5d0ecd9 lib: fix infinite loop on empty regexp matches in uc_replace()
3ad57f1 lib: fix infinite loop on empty regexp matches in uc_match()
32d596d lib: fix infinite loop on empty regexp matches in uc_split()
3e3f38d vm: ensure consistent trace output between gcc and clang compiled ucode
3600ded vm: fix leaking function value on call exception
3059295 vm: NULL-initialize pointer to make cppcheck happy
98e59bf source: zero-initialize conversion union to make cppcheck happy
7a65c14 run_tests.sh: change workdir to testcase directory during execution
afec8d7 run_tests.sh: support placing supplemental testcase files
3ada6e0 run_tests.sh: always treat outputs as text data
2cb627f program: rename bytecode load/write functions, track path of executed file
1094ffa lib: fix memory leak in uc_require_ucode()
Signed-off-by: Jo-Philipp Wich <jo@mein.io>
Xiaomi Mi Router CR6606 is a Wi-Fi6 AX1800 Router with 4 GbE Ports.
Alongside the general model, it has three carrier customized models:
CR6606 (China Unicom), CR6608 (China Mobile), CR6609 (China Telecom)
Specifications:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7621AT
- RAM: 256MB DDR3 (ESMT M15T2G16128A)
- Flash: 128MB NAND (ESMT F59L1G81MB)
- Ethernet: 1000Base-T x4 (MT7530 SoC)
- WLAN: 2x2 2.4GHz 574Mbps + 2x2 5GHz 1201Mbps (MT7905DAN + MT7975DN)
- LEDs: System (Blue, Yellow), Internet (Blue, Yellow)
- Buttons: Reset, WPS
- UART: through-hole on PCB ([VCC 3.3v](RX)(GND)(TX) 115200, 8n1)
- Power: 12VDC, 1A
Jailbreak Notes:
1. Get shell access.
1.1. Get yourself a wireless router that runs OpenWrt already.
1.2. On the OpenWrt router:
1.2.1. Access its console.
1.2.2. Create and edit
/usr/lib/lua/luci/controller/admin/xqsystem.lua
with the following code (exclude backquotes and line no.):
```
1 module("luci.controller.admin.xqsystem", package.seeall)
2
3 function index()
4 local page = node("api")
5 page.target = firstchild()
6 page.title = ("")
7 page.order = 100
8 page.index = true
9 page = node("api","xqsystem")
10 page.target = firstchild()
11 page.title = ("")
12 page.order = 100
13 page.index = true
14 entry({"api", "xqsystem", "token"}, call("getToken"), (""),
103, 0x08)
15 end
16
17 local LuciHttp = require("luci.http")
18
19 function getToken()
20 local result = {}
21 result["code"] = 0
22 result["token"] = "; nvram set ssh_en=1; nvram commit; sed -i
's/channel=.*/channel=\"debug\"/g' /etc/init.d/dropbear; /etc/init.d/drop
bear start;"
23 LuciHttp.write_json(result)
24 end
```
1.2.3. Browse http://{OWRT_ADDR}/cgi-bin/luci/api/xqsystem/token
It should give you a respond like this:
{"code":0,"token":"; nvram set ssh_en=1; nvram commit; ..."}
If so, continue; Otherwise, check the file, reboot the rout-
er, try again.
1.2.4. Set wireless network interface's IP to 169.254.31.1, turn
off DHCP of wireless interface's zone.
1.2.5. Connect to the router wirelessly, manually set your access
device's IP to 169.254.31.3, make sure
http://169.254.31.1/cgi-bin/luci/api/xqsystem/token
still have a similar result as 1.2.3 shows.
1.3. On the Xiaomi CR660x:
1.3.1. Login to the web interface. Your would be directed to a
page with URL like this:
http://{ROUTER_ADDR}/cgi-bin/luci/;stok={STOK}/web/home#r-
outer
1.3.2. Browse this URL with {STOK} from 1.3.1, {WIFI_NAME}
{PASSWORD} be your OpenWrt router's SSID and password:
http://{MIROUTER_ADDR}/cgi-bin/luci/;stok={STOK}/api/misy-
stem/extendwifi_connect?ssid={WIFI_NAME}&password={PASSWO-
RD}
It should return 0.
1.3.3. Browse this URL with {STOK} from 1.3.1:
http://{MIROUTER_ADDR}/cgi-bin/luci/;stok={STOK}/api/xqsy-
stem/oneclick_get_remote_token?username=xxx&password=xxx&-
nonce=xxx
1.4. Before rebooting, you can now access your CR660x via SSH.
For CR6606, you can calculate your root password by this project:
https://github.com/wfjsw/xiaoqiang-root-password, or at
https://www.oxygen7.cn/miwifi.
The root password for carrier-specific models should be the admi-
nistration password or the default login password on the label.
It is also feasible to change the root password at the same time
by modifying the script from step 1.2.2.
You can treat OpenWrt Router however you like from this point as
long as you don't mind go through this again if you have to expl-
oit it again. If you do have to and left your OpenWrt router unt-
ouched, start from 1.3.
2. There's no official binary firmware available, and if you lose the
content of your flash, no one except Xiaomi can help you.
Dump these partitions in case you need them:
"Bootloader" "Nvram" "Bdata" "crash" "crash_log"
"firmware" "firmware1" "overlay" "obr"
Find the corespond block device from /proc/mtd
Read from read-only block device to avoid misoperation.
It's recommended to use /tmp/syslogbackup/ as destination, since files
would be available at http://{ROUTER_ADDR}/backup/log/YOUR_DUMP
Keep an eye on memory usage though.
3. Since UART access is locked ootb, you should get UART access by modify
uboot env. Otherwise, your router may become bricked.
Excute these in stock firmware shell:
a. nvram set boot_wait=on
b. nvram set bootdelay=3
c. nvram commit
Or in OpenWrt:
a. opkg update && opkg install kmod-mtd-rw
b. insmod mtd-rw i_want_a_brick=1
c. fw_setenv boot_wait on
d. fw_setenv bootdelay 3
e. rmmod mtd-rw
Migrate to OpenWrt:
1. Transfer squashfs-firmware.bin to the router.
2. nvram set flag_try_sys1_failed=0
3. nvram set flag_try_sys2_failed=1
4. nvram commit
5. mtd -r write /path/to/image/squashfs-firmware.bin firmware
Additional Info:
1. CR660x series routers has a different nand layout compared to other
Xiaomi nand devices.
2. This router has a relatively fresh uboot (2018.09) compared to other
Xiaomi devices, and it is capable of booting fit image firmware.
Unfortunately, no successful attempt of booting OpenWrt fit image
were made so far. The cause is still yet to be known. For now, we use
legacy image instead.
Signed-off-by: Raymond Wang <infiwang@pm.me>
Hardware
--------
SoC: QCN5502
Flash: 16 MiB
RAM: 128 MiB
Ethernet: 1 gigabit port
Wireless No1: QCN5502 on-chip 2.4GHz 4x4
Wireless No2: QCA9984 pcie 5GHz 4x4
USB: none
Installation
------------
Flash the factory image using the stock web interface or TFTP the
factory image to the bootloader.
What works
----------
- LEDs
- Ethernet port
- 5GHz wifi (QCA9984 pcie)
What doesn't work
-----------------
- 2.4GHz wifi (QCN5502 on-chip)
(I was not able to make this work, probably because ath9k requires
some changes to support QCN5502.)
Signed-off-by: Wenli Looi <wlooi@ucalgary.ca>
fgrep is deprecated and replaced by grep -F. The latter is used
throughout the tree whereas this is the only usage of the former.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
Now that we have separate files for each kernel version,
only the version/hash for the target kernel are available.
This cause a missing hash error (and wrong kernel version) for
bpf-headers when a testing kernel version is used for the current target.
Fix this error by manually including the kernel version/hash file for the
specific kernel version requested.
Signed-off-by: Ansuel Smith <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Add a package for util-linux' ipcs command, to show information about
System V inter-process communication facilities.
Signed-off-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
ZTE MF286 is an indoor LTE category 6 CPE router with simultaneous
dual-band 802.11ac plus 802.11n Wi-Fi radios and quad-port gigabit
Ethernet switch, FXS and external USB 2.0 port.
Hardware highlights:
- CPU: QCA9563 SoC at 775MHz,
- RAM: 128MB DDR2,
- NOR Flash: MX25L1606E 2MB SPI Flash, for U-boot only,
- NAND Flash: GD5F1G04UBYIG 128MB SPI NAND-Flash, for all other data,
- Wi-Fi 5GHz: QCA9882 2x2 MIMO 802.11ac radio,
- WI-Fi 2.4GHz: QCA9563 3x3 MIMO 802.11n radio,
- Switch: QCA8337v2 4-port gigabit Ethernet, with single SGMII CPU port,
- WWAN: MDM9230-based category 6 internal LTE modem in extended
mini-PCIE form factor, with 3 internal antennas and 2 external antenna
connections, single mini-SIM slot. Modem model identified as MF270,
- FXS: one external ATA port (handled entirely by modem part) with two
physical connections in parallel,
- USB: Single external USB 2.0 port,
- Switches: power switch, WPS, Wi-Fi and reset buttons,
- LEDs: Wi-Fi, Test (internal). Rest of LEDs (Phone, WWAN, Battery,
Signal state) handled entirely by modem. 4 link status LEDs handled by
the switch on the backside.
- Battery: 3Ah 1-cell Li-Ion replaceable battery, with charging and
monitoring handled by modem.
- Label MAC device: eth0
Console connection: connector X2 is the console port, with the following
pinout, starting from pin 1, which is the topmost pin when the board is
upright:
- VCC (3.3V). Do not use unless you need to source power for the
converer from it.
- TX
- RX
- GND
Default port configuration in U-boot as well as in stock firmware is
115200-8-N-1.
Installation:
Due to different flash layout from stock firmware, sysupgrade from
within stock firmware is impossible, despite it's based on QSDK which
itself is based on OpenWrt.
STEP 0: Stock firmware update:
As installing OpenWrt cuts you off from official firmware updates for
the modem part, it is recommended to update the stock firmware to latest
version before installation, to have built-in modem at the latest firmware
version.
STEP 1: gaining root shell:
Method 1:
This works if busybox has telnetd compiled in the binary.
If this does not work, try method 2.
Using well-known exploit to start telnetd on your router - works
only if Busybox on stock firmware has telnetd included:
- Open stock firmware web interface
- Navigate to "URL filtering" section by going to "Advanced settings",
then "Firewall" and finally "URL filter".
- Add an entry ending with "&&telnetd&&", for example
"http://hostname/&&telnetd&&".
- telnetd will immediately listen on port 4719.
- After connecting to telnetd use "admin/admin" as credentials.
Method 2:
This works if busybox does not have telnetd compiled in. Notably, this
is the case in DNA.fi firmware.
If this does not work, try method 3.
- Set IP of your computer to 192.168.1.22.
- Have a TFTP server running at that address
- Download MIPS build of busybox including telnetd, for example from:
https://busybox.net/downloads/binaries/1.21.1/busybox-mips
and put it in it's root directory. Rename it as "telnetd".
- As previously, login to router's web UI and navigate to "URL
filtering"
- Using "Inspect" feature, extend "maxlength" property of the input
field named "addURLFilter", so it looks like this:
<input type="text" name="addURLFilter" id="addURLFilter" maxlength="332"
class="required form-control">
- Stay on the page - do not navigate anywhere
- Enter "http://aa&zte_debug.sh 192.168.1.22 telnetd" as a filter.
- Save the settings. This will download the telnetd binary over tftp and
execute it. You should be able to log in at port 23, using
"admin/admin" as credentials.
Method 3:
If the above doesn't work, use the serial console - it exposes root shell
directly without need for login. Some stock firmwares, notably one from
finnish DNA operator lack telnetd in their builds.
STEP 2: Backing up original software:
As the stock firmware may be customized by the carrier and is not
officially available in the Internet, IT IS IMPERATIVE to back up the
stock firmware, if you ever plan to returning to stock firmware.
Method 1: after booting OpenWrt initramfs image via TFTP:
PLEASE NOTE: YOU CANNOT DO THIS IF USING INTERMEDIATE FIRMWARE FOR INSTALLATION.
- Dump stock firmware located on stock kernel and ubi partitions:
ssh root@192.168.1.1: cat /dev/mtd4 > mtd4_kernel.bin
ssh root@192.168.1.1: cat /dev/mtd8 > mtd8_ubi.bin
And keep them in a safe place, should a restore be needed in future.
Method 2: using stock firmware:
- Connect an external USB drive formatted with FAT or ext4 to the USB
port.
- The drive will be auto-mounted to /var/usb_disk
- Check the flash layout of the device:
cat /proc/mtd
It should show the following:
mtd0: 00080000 00010000 "uboot"
mtd1: 00020000 00010000 "uboot-env"
mtd2: 00140000 00020000 "fota-flag"
mtd3: 00140000 00020000 "caldata"
mtd4: 00140000 00020000 "mac"
mtd5: 00600000 00020000 "cfg-param"
mtd6: 00140000 00020000 "oops"
mtd7: 00800000 00020000 "web"
mtd8: 00300000 00020000 "kernel"
mtd9: 01f00000 00020000 "rootfs"
mtd10: 01900000 00020000 "data"
mtd11: 03200000 00020000 "fota"
Differences might indicate that this is NOT a vanilla MF286 device but
one of its later derivatives.
- Copy over all MTD partitions, for example by executing the following:
for i in 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11; do cat /dev/mtd$i > \
/var/usb_disk/mtd$i; done
- If the count of MTD partitions is different, this might indicate that
this is not a standard MF286 device, but one of its later derivatives.
- (optionally) rename the files according to MTD partition names from
/proc/mtd
- Unmount the filesystem:
umount /var/usb_disk; sync
and then remove the drive.
- Store the files in safe place if you ever plan to return to stock
firmware. This is especially important, because stock firmware for
this device is not available officially, and is usually customized by
the mobile providers.
STEP 3: Booting initramfs image:
Method 1: using serial console (RECOMMENDED):
- Have TFTP server running, exposing the OpenWrt initramfs image, and
set your computer's IP address as 192.168.1.22. This is the default
expected by U-boot. You may wish to change that, and alter later
commands accordingly.
- Connect the serial console if you haven't done so already,
- Interrupt boot sequence by pressing any key in U-boot when prompted
- Use the following commands to boot OpenWrt initramfs through TFTP:
setenv serverip 192.168.1.22
setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.1
tftpboot 0x81000000 openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286-initramfs-kernel.bin
bootm 0x81000000
(Replace server IP and router IP as needed). There is no emergency
TFTP boot sequence triggered by buttons, contrary to MF283+.
- When OpenWrt initramfs finishes booting, proceed to actual
installation.
Method 2: using initramfs image as temporary boot kernel
This exploits the fact, that kernel and rootfs MTD devices are
consecutive on NAND flash, so from within stock image, an initramfs can
be written to this area and booted by U-boot on next reboot, because it
uses "nboot" command which isn't limited by kernel partition size.
- Download the initramfs-kernel.bin image
- Split the image into two parts on 3MB partition size boundary, which
is the size of kernel partition. Pad the output of second file to
eraseblock size:
dd if=openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286-initramfs-kernel.bin \
bs=128k count=24 \
of=openwrt-ath79-zte_mf286-intermediate-kernel.bin
dd if=openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286-initramfs-kernel.bin \
bs=128k skip=24 conv=sync \
of=openwrt-ath79-zte_mf286-intermediate-rootfs.bin
- Copy over /usr/bin/flash_eraseall and /usr/bin/nandwrite utilities to
/tmp. This is CRITICAL for installation, as erasing rootfs will cut
you off from those tools on flash!
- After backing up the previous MTD contents, write the images to the
respective MTD devices:
/tmp/flash_eraseall /dev/<kernel-mtd>
/tmp/nandwrite /dev/<kernel-mtd> \
/var/usb_disk/openwrt-ath79-zte_mf286-intermediate-kernel.bin
/tmp/flash_eraseall /dev/<kernel-mtd>
/tmp/nandwrite /dev/<rootfs-mtd> \
/var/usb_disk/openwrt-ath79-zte_mf286-intermediate-rootfs.bin
- Ensure that no bad blocks were present on the devices while writing.
If they were present, you may need to vary the split between
kernel and rootfs parts, so U-boot reads a valid uImage after skipping
the bad blocks. If it fails, you will be left with method 3 (below).
- If write is OK, reboot the device, it will reboot to OpenWrt
initramfs:
reboot -f
- After rebooting, SSH into the device and use sysupgrade to perform
proper installation.
Method 3: using built-in TFTP recovery (LAST RESORT):
- With that method, ensure you have complete backup of system's NAND
flash first. It involves deliberately erasing the kernel.
- Download "-initramfs-kernel.bin" image for the device.
- Prepare the recovery image by prepending 8MB of zeroes to the image,
and name it root_uImage:
dd if=/dev/zero of=padding.bin bs=8M count=1
cat padding.bin openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286-initramfs-kernel.bin >
root_uImage
- Set up a TFTP server at 192.0.0.1/8. Router will use random address
from that range.
- Put the previously generated "root_uImage" into TFTP server root
directory.
- Deliberately erase "kernel" partition" using stock firmware after
taking backup. THIS IS POINT OF NO RETURN.
- Restart the device. U-boot will attempt flashing the recovery
initramfs image, which will let you perform actual installation using
sysupgrade. This might take a considerable time, sometimes the router
doesn't establish Ethernet link properly right after booting. Be
patient.
- After U-boot finishes flashing, the LEDs of switch ports will all
light up. At this moment, perform power-on reset, and wait for OpenWrt
initramfs to finish booting. Then proceed to actual installation.
STEP 4: Actual installation:
- scp the sysupgrade image to the device:
scp openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin \
root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/
- ssh into the device and execute sysupgrade:
sysupgrade -n /tmp/openwrt-ath79-nand-zte_mf286-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
- Wait for router to reboot to full OpenWrt.
STEP 5: WAN connection establishment
Since the router is equipped with LTE modem as its main WAN interface, it
might be useful to connect to the Internet right away after
installation. To do so, please put the following entries in
/etc/config/network, replacing the specific configuration entries with
one needed for your ISP:
config interface 'wan'
option proto 'qmi'
option device '/dev/cdc-wdm0'
option auth '<auth>' # As required, usually 'none'
option pincode '<pin>' # If required by SIM
option apn '<apn>' # As required by ISP
option pdptype '<pdp>' # Typically 'ipv4', or 'ipv4v6' or 'ipv6'
For example, the following works for most polish ISPs
config interface 'wan'
option proto 'qmi'
option device '/dev/cdc-wdm0'
option auth 'none'
option apn 'internet'
option pdptype 'ipv4'
If you have build with LuCI, installing luci-proto-qmi helps with this
task.
Restoring the stock firmware:
Preparation:
If you took your backup using stock firmware, you will need to
reassemble the partitions into images to be restored onto the flash. The
layout might differ from ISP to ISP, this example is based on generic stock
firmware.
The only partitions you really care about are "web", "kernel", and
"rootfs". For easy padding and possibly restoring configuration, you can
concatenate most of them into images written into "ubi" meta-partition
in OpenWrt. To do so, execute something like:
cat mtd5_cfg-param.bin mtd6-oops.bin mtd7-web.bin mtd9-rootfs.bin > \
mtd8-ubi_restore.bin
You can skip the "fota" partition altogether,
it is used only for stock firmware update purposes and can be overwritten
safely anyway. The same is true for "data" partition which on my device
was found to be unused at all. Restoring mtd5_cfg-param.bin will restore
the stock firmware configuration you had before.
Method 1: Using initramfs:
- Boot to initramfs as in step 3:
- Completely detach ubi0 partition using ubidetach /dev/ubi0_0
- Look up the kernel and ubi partitions in /proc/mtd
- Copy over the stock kernel image using scp to /tmp
- Erase kernel and restore stock kernel:
(scp mtd4_kernel.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/)
mtd write <kernel_mtd> mtd4_kernel.bin
rm mtd4_kernel.bin
- Copy over the stock partition backups one-by-one using scp to /tmp, and
restore them individually. Otherwise you might run out of space in
tmpfs:
(scp mtd3_ubiconcat0.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/)
mtd write <ubiconcat0_mtd> mtd3_ubiconcat0.bin
rm mtd3_ubiconcat0.bin
(scp mtd5_ubiconcat1.bin root@192.168.1.1:/tmp/)
mtd write <ubiconcat1_mtd> mtd5_ubiconcat1.bin
rm mtd5_ubiconcat1.bin
- If the write was correct, force a device reboot with
reboot -f
Method 2: Using live OpenWrt system (NOT RECOMMENDED):
- Prepare a USB flash drive contatining MTD backup files
- Ensure you have kmod-usb-storage and filesystem driver installed for
your drive
- Mount your flash drive
mkdir /tmp/usb
mount /dev/sda1 /tmp/usb
- Remount your UBI volume at /overlay to R/O
mount -o remount,ro /overlay
- Write back the kernel and ubi partitions from USB drive
cd /tmp/usb
mtd write mtd4_kernel.bin /dev/<kernel_mtd>
mtd write mtd8_ubi.bin /dev/<kernel_ubi>
- If everything went well, force a device reboot with
reboot -f
Last image may be truncated a bit due to lack of space in RAM, but this will happen over "fota"
MTD partition which may be safely erased after reboot anyway.
Method 3: using built-in TFTP recovery (LAST RESORT):
- Assemble a recovery rootfs image from backup of stock partitions by
concatenating "web", "kernel", "rootfs" images dumped from the device,
as "root_uImage"
- Use it in place of "root_uImage" recovery initramfs image as in the
TFTP pre-installation method.
Quirks and known issues
- Kernel partition size is increased to 4MB compared to stock 3MB, to
accomodate future kernel updates - at this moment OpenWrt 5.10 kernel
image is at 2.5MB which is dangerously close to the limit. This has no
effect on booting the system - but keep that in mind when reassembling
an image to restore stock firmware.
- uqmi seems to be unable to change APN manually, so please use the one
you used before in stock firmware first. If you need to change it,
please use protocok '3g' to establish connection once, or use the
following command to change APN (and optionally IP type) manually:
echo -ne 'AT+CGDCONT=1,"IP","<apn>' > /dev/ttyUSB0
- The only usable LED as a "system LED" is the green debug LED hidden
inside the case. All other LEDs are controlled by modem, on which the
router part has some influence only on Wi-Fi LED.
- Wi-Fi LED currently doesn't work while under OpenWrt, despite having
correct GPIO mapping. All other LEDs are controlled by modem,
including this one in stock firmware. GPIO19, mapped there only acts
as a gate, while the actual signal source seems to be 5GHz Wi-Fi
radio, however it seems it is not the LED exposed by ath10k as
ath10k-phy0.
- GPIO5 used for modem reset is a suicide switch, causing a hardware
reset of whole board, not only the modem. It is attached to
gpio-restart driver, to restart the modem on reboot as well, to ensure
QMI connectivity after reboot, which tends to fail otherwise.
- Modem, as in MF283+, exposes root shell over ADB - while not needed
for OpenWrt operation at all - have fun lurking around.
- MAC address shift for 5GHz Wi-Fi used in stock firmware is
0x320000000000, which is impossible to encode in the device tree, so I
took the liberty of using MAC address increment of 1 for it, to ensure
different BSSID for both Wi-Fi interfaces.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
ZTE MF286D is a LTE router with four gigabit ethernet ports
and integrated QMI mPCIE modem.
Hardware specification:
- CPU: IPQ4019
- RAM: 256MB
- Flash: NAND 128MB + NOR 2MB
- WLAN1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 2.4GHz 802.11bgn 2x2:2
- WLAN2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA4019 5GHz 802.11anac 2x2:2
- LTE: mPCIe cat 12 card (Modem chipset MDM9250)
- LAN: 4 Gigabit Ports
- USB: 1x USB2.0 (regular port). 1x USB3.0 (mpcie - used by the modem)
- Serial console: X8 connector 115200 8n1
Known issues:
- Many LEDs are driven by the modem. Only internal LEDs and wifi LEDs
are driven by cpu.
- Wifi LED is triggered by phy0tpt only
- No VoIP support
- LAN1/WAN port is configured as WAN
- ZTE gives only one MAC per device. Use +1/+2/+3 increment for WAN
and WLAN0/1
Opening the case:
1. Take of battery lid (no battery support for this model, battery cage
is dummy).
2. Unscrew screw placed behind battery lid.
3. Take off back cover. It attached with multiple plastic clamps.
4. Unscrew four more screws hidden behind back case.
5. Remove front panel from blue chassis. There are more plastic
clamps.
6. Unscrew two boards, which secures the PCB in the chassis.
7. Extract board from blue chassis.
Console connection (X8 connector):
1. Parameters: 115200 8N1
2. Pin description: (from closest pin to X8 descriptor to farthest)
- VCC (3.3V)
- TX
- RX
- GND
Install Instructions:
Serial + initramfs:
1. Place OpenWrt initramfs image for the device on a TFTP in
the server's root. This example uses Server IP: 192.168.1.3
2. Connect serial console (115200,8n1) to X8 connector.
3. Connect TFTP server to RJ-45 port.
4. Stop in u-Boot and run u-Boot commands:
setenv serverip 192.168.1.3
setenv ipaddr 192.168.1.72
set fdt_high 0x85000000
tftp openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-zte_mf286d-initramfs-fit-zImage.itb
bootm $loadaddr
5. Please make backup of original partitions, if you think about revert
to stock.
6. Login via ssh or serial and remove stock partitions:
ubiattach -m 9
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N ubi_rootfs
ubirmvol /dev/ubi0 -N ubi_rootfs_data
7. Install image via "sysupgrade -n".
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
(cosmetic changes to the commit message)
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Kalle Valo ath10k-firmware repository no longer provides the
legacy board.bin files for the qca99x0 chips. Instead he
copied over the codeaurora version and add more board files.
In the future, this board-2.bin should find its way to
linux-firmware.git, which would allow us to remove the
extra download code completely.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
this should have been removed together with linux 5.4 APM821XX
support. Currently, this didn't hurt or broke something. But it
will in the next stable kernel release.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
The SDK does not ship the generic platform files. Use relative path for
GENERIC_PLATFORM_DIR to make it work. This points it at the files from
the feed directory instead of the base SDK path
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
All devices which used this package migrated to the kernel GPIO-line
watchdog driver and configure it over their DT.
Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven@narfation.org>
This solves issue with DDR training on Turris Omnia.
Log:
******** DRAM initialization Failed (res 0x1) ********
DDR3 Training Sequence - FAILED
ERROR ### Please RESET the board ###
Signed-off-by: Josef Schlehofer <pepe.schlehofer@gmail.com>
Now that we can have both legacy and nft iptables variants
installed at the same time, install the legacy symlinks
Signed-off-by: Etienne Champetier <champetier.etienne@gmail.com>
As nftables is now the default, ip(6)tables-nft gets higher priority
The removed symlinks ("$(CP)" line) will now be installed by the
ALTERNATIVES mechanism
Signed-off-by: Etienne Champetier <champetier.etienne@gmail.com>
according to iptables-nft man page,
"These tools use the libxtables framework extensions and hook to the nf_tables
kernel subsystem using the nft_compat module."
This means that to work, iptables-nft needs the same modules as
iptables legacy except the ip(6)table-{filter,mangle,nat,raw}
ip_tables, ip6tables.
When those modules are loaded iptables-nft-save output contains
"# Warning: iptables-legacy tables present, use iptables-legacy-save to see them"
But as long as it's empty it should not be a problem.
To have nft properly display the rules created by ip(6)tables-nft we need
all iptables targets and matches to be built as extension and not built-in
(/usr/lib/iptables/libip(6)t_*.so)
When switching a package to iptables-nft, you need to keep the
iptables-mod-* dependencies
This patch does minimal changes:
- remove the direct iptables-nft -> iptables dependency
- and more important add nft-compat dependency
The rule
iptables-nft -A OUTPUT -d 8.8.8.8 -m comment --comment "aaa" -j REJECT
becomes
table ip filter {
chain OUTPUT {
type filter hook output priority filter; policy accept;
ip daddr 8.8.8.8 # xt_comment counter packets 0 bytes 0 # xt_REJECT
}
}
Signed-off-by: Etienne Champetier <champetier.etienne@gmail.com>
Add option to compile kmod-vrf, support for Virtual Routing and
Forwarding (Lite).
This module depends on NET_L3_MASTER_DEV, which is a boolean kernel
option, so we need to create a configuration option also for this, and
make kmod-vrf depend on it.
Signed-off-by: Marek Behún <kabel@kernel.org>
The sizes of the ipk changed on MIPS 24Kc like this:
13281 uboot-envtools_2021.01-54_mips_24kc.ipk
13308 uboot-envtools_2022.01-1_mips_24kc.ipk
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
The sizes of the ipk changed on MIPS 24Kc like this:
11248 libcap_2.51-1_mips_24kc.ipk
14461 libcap_2.63-1_mips_24kc.ipk
18864 libcap-bin_2.51-1_mips_24kc.ipk
20576 libcap-bin_2.63-1_mips_24kc.ipk
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This release fixes two security mount(8) and umount(8) issues:
CVE-2021-3996
Improper UID check in libmount allows an unprivileged user to unmount FUSE
filesystems of users with similar UID.
CVE-2021-3995
This issue is related to parsing the /proc/self/mountinfo file allows an
unprivileged user to unmount other user's filesystems that are either
world-writable themselves or mounted in a world-writable directory.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
The man page of the raw tool does not build because the disk-utils/raw.8
file is missing. It looks like it should be in the tar.xz file we
download, but it is missing.
We do not package the raw tool, so this is not a problem.
This fixes the following build error:
No rule to make target 'disk-utils/raw.8', needed by 'all-am'. Stop.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
The sizes of the ipk changed on MIPS 24Kc like this:
289764 strace_5.14-1_mips_24kc.ipk
310899 strace_5.16-1_mips_24kc.ipk
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
795f420 cmis: Rename CMIS parsing functions
369b43a cmis: Initialize CMIS memory map
da16288 cmis: Use memory map during parsing
6acaeb9 cmis: Consolidate code between IOCTL and netlink paths
d7d15f7 sff-8636: Rename SFF-8636 parsing functions
4230597 sff-8636: Initialize SFF-8636 memory map
b74c040 sff-8636: Use memory map during parsing
799572f sff-8636: Consolidate code between IOCTL and netlink paths
9fdf45c sff-8079: Split SFF-8079 parsing function
2ccda25 netlink: eeprom: Export a function to request an EEPROM page
86792db cmis: Request specific pages for parsing in netlink path
6e2b32a sff-8636: Request specific pages for parsing in netlink path
c2170d4 sff-8079: Request specific pages for parsing in netlink path
9538f38 netlink: eeprom: Defer page requests to individual parsers
664586e Merge branch 'review/next/module-mem-map' into master
50fdaec ethtool: Set mask correctly for dumping advertised FEC modes
c5e7133 cable-test: Fix premature process termination
73091cd sff-8636: Use an SFF-8636 specific define for maximum number of channels
837c166 sff-common: Move OFFSET_TO_U16_PTR() to common header file
8658852 cmis: Initialize Page 02h in memory map
27b42a9 cmis: Initialize Banked Page 11h in memory map
340d88e cmis: Parse and print diagnostic information
eae6a99 cmis: Print Module State and Fault Cause
82012f2 cmis: Print Module-Level Controls
d7b1007 sff-8636: Print Power set and Power override bits
429f2fc Merge branch 'review/cmis-diag' into master
32457a9 monitor: do not show duplicate options in help text
c01963e Release version 5.16.
The sizes of the ipk changed on MIPS 24Kc like this:
34317 ethtool_5.15-1_mips_24kc.ipk
34311 ethtool_5.16-1_mips_24kc.ipk
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This fixes the following security problems:
* Zeroize several intermediate variables used to calculate the expected
value when verifying a MAC or AEAD tag. This hardens the library in
case the value leaks through a memory disclosure vulnerability. For
example, a memory disclosure vulnerability could have allowed a
man-in-the-middle to inject fake ciphertext into a DTLS connection.
* Fix a double-free that happened after mbedtls_ssl_set_session() or
mbedtls_ssl_get_session() failed with MBEDTLS_ERR_SSL_ALLOC_FAILED
(out of memory). After that, calling mbedtls_ssl_session_free()
and mbedtls_ssl_free() would cause an internal session buffer to
be free()'d twice. CVE-2021-44732
The sizes of the ipk changed on MIPS 24Kc like this:
182454 libmbedtls12_2.16.11-2_mips_24kc.ipk
182742 libmbedtls12_2.16.12-1_mips_24kc.ipk
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This is a minor corrective release over GDB 11.1, fixing the following issues:
* PR sim/28302 (gdb fails to build with glibc 2.34)
* PR build/28318 (std::thread support configure check does not use CXX_DIALECT)
* PR gdb/28405 (arm-none-eabi: internal-error: ptid_t remote_target::select_thread_for_ambiguous_stop_reply(const target_waitstatus*): Assertion `first_resumed_thread != nullptr' failed)
* PR tui/28483 ([gdb/tui] breakpoint creation not displayed)
* PR build/28555 (uclibc compile failure since commit 4655f8509fd44e6efabefa373650d9982ff37fd6)
* PR rust/28637 (Rust characters will be encoded using DW_ATE_UTF)
* PR gdb/28758 (GDB 11 doesn't work correctly on binaries with a SHT_RELR (.relr.dyn) section)
* PR gdb/28785 (Support SHT_RELR (.relr.dyn) section)
The sizes of the ipk changed on mips 24Kc like this:
2285775 gdb_11.1-3_mips_24kc.ipk
2287441 gdb_11.2-4_mips_24kc.ipk
191828 gdbserver_11.1-3_mips_24kc.ipk
191811 gdbserver_11.2-4_mips_24kc.ipk
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Add the most recent supported firmware file for Intel Wi-Fi 6E AX210
wireless chip. The API version 67 is not yet supported by the driver.
Additional PNVM file is required since API version 62.
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
Just use 'start' action which will have the desired effect instead of
trying to introduce a 'start_file' action which didn't work that way
because procd jshn magic would have to wrap around it.
Fixes: 88baf6ce2c ("ubox: only start log to file when filesystem has been mounted")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
From: Peter Lundkvist <peter.lundkvist@gmail.com>
This fixes the make_syscall_h.sh script to recognize both
__NR_Linux, used by mips, and __NR_SYSCALL_BASE and
__ARM_NR_BASE used by arm.
Run-tested on arm (ipq806x) and mips (ath79), both with glibc.
Compile-tested and checked resulting syscall_names.h file wuth
glibc: aarch64, powerpc, x86_64, i486
musl: arm, mips
Fixes: FS#4194, FS#4195
Signed-off-by: Peter Lundkvist <peter.lundkvist@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
If log_file is on an filesystem mounted using /etc/config/fstab we have
to wait for that to happen before starting the logread process.
Inhibit the start of the file-writer process and use a mount trigger to
fire it up once the filesystem actually becomes available.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Allow init scripts to trigger free-form actions by exposing
procd_add_action_mount_trigger.
Clean up mount trigger wrappers while at it to reduce code duplication.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The arc700 target is not booting up since some time, see here:
https://github.com/foss-for-synopsys-dwc-arc-processors/toolchain/issues/400
It looks like there is a problem in the toolchain when using glibc.
Currently no one is working on fixing this problem, remove the target
instead. This target also does not have many users we are aware of.
If someone wants to have this target back, feel free to add a fixed
version of this target again.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Acked-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Acked-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
bpftool will enabled libbfd and libopcodes which gets picked up by perf
as libraries to link against. Add those missing dependencies when either
of these packages are enabled.
Signed-off-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
nf-nathelper-extra and nf-conntrack-netlink had iptables related
dependencies, yet, when looking for the respective kernel symbols and
checking it's dependencies it was confirmed that iptables wasn't
required and that these were either it's own moodule or tool independent
(nftables or iptables).
Correct these and make sure no unneeded extras are pulled in.
Signed-off-by: Tiago Gaspar <tiagogaspar8@gmail.com>
Add U-Boot env settings to allow accessing the environment using
fw_printenv and fw_setenv tools on the UniElec U7623 board.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>