Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Shiji Yang
01996b785d ramips: clean up useless dts partition labels
The previous NVMEM eeprom conversions[1][2] left a lot of partition
labels that were no longer used. They can be removed now.

[1] https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/13584
[2] https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/13587

Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
2024-02-21 13:31:18 +01:00
Christian Marangi
19c45b95db
ramips: convert to new LED color/function format where possible
Initial conversion to new LED color/function format
and drop label format where possible. The same label
is composed at runtime.

Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
2024-02-07 14:48:43 +01:00
Rosen Penev
3395184825
ramips: mt7621: nix mac-address-increment
nvmem-layout allows removal

Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
2023-11-26 01:30:32 +01:00
Rosen Penev
f4c33d098f
ramips: mt7621: convert to nvmem-layout
Allows replacing mac-address-increment with mac-base.

Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
2023-11-26 01:30:32 +01:00
Shiji Yang
65cd6a6fec
ramips: convert MT7613 and MT7615 EEPROM to NVMEM format for MT7621
This patch converts MT7613 and MT7615 WiFi calibration data to NVMEM
format. The EEPROM size is 0x4da8.

Signed-off-by: Shiji Yang <yangshiji66@qq.com>
2023-10-09 11:15:52 +02:00
Felix Baumann
d87482a8db
ramips: fix dts whitespace
Replace blanks with tabs
Remove whitespace from otherwise empty lines

Signed-off-by: Felix Baumann <felix.bau@gmx.de>
2023-02-09 03:03:52 +01:00
Arınç ÜNAL
f1c9afd801 ramips: mt7621-dts: mux phy0/4 to gmac1
Mux the MT7530 switch's phy0/4 to the SoC's gmac1 on devices where RGMII2
pins are available. This achieves 2 Gbps total bandwidth to the CPU using
the second RGMII.

The ports called "wan" are muxed where possible. On a minority of devices,
this is not possible. Those cases:

mt7621_ampedwireless_ally-r1900k.dts: lan3
mt7621_ubnt_edgerouter-x.dts: eth0
mt7621_gnubee_gb-pc1.dts: ethblue
mt7621_linksys_re6500.dts: lan1
mt7621_netgear_wac104.dts: lan4
mt7621_tplink_eap235-wall-v1.dts: lan0
mt7621_tplink_eap615-wall-v1.dts: lan0
mt7621_ubnt_usw-flex.dts: lan1

The "wan" port is just what the vendor designated on the board/plastic
chasis of the device. On a technical level, there is no difference between
a lan and wan port on MT7621AT, MT7621DAT and MT7621ST SoCs. Prefer
connecting to WAN via the port described above for these devices to benefit
the feature brought with this patch.

mt7621_d-team_newifi-d2.dts cannot benefit this feature, although it looks
like it should, because the rgmii2 pins are wired to unused components.

Tested on a range of devices documented on the GitHub PR.

Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/10238
Signed-off-by: Arınç ÜNAL <arinc.unal@arinc9.com>
2022-08-20 22:56:12 +02:00
Ray Wang
9a750aae62 ramips: add support for OrayBox X3A
OrayBox X3A is a 2.4/5GHz dual band AC router, based on MediaTek MT7621.

Specification:
* SoC: MT7621
* RAM: DDR3 128 MiB
* Flash: 16 MiB NOR (XM25Q128)
* Wi-Fi: (single chip hosting both 2.4G and 5G)
  * 2.4GHz: MT7615
  * 5GHz: MT7615
* Ethernet: 3x 1000Mbps
  * Switch: MT7530
* LED:
  * Ethernet LEDs: On the back of the router, hardware-controlled.
  * Status LEDs: One "pixel-like" RGB LED in the front of the router,
                 which is actually made up of 3 individual LEDs (with
                 dedicated GPIO pins) with the color of Red, Green,
                 and Blue.
                 The OEM firmware only lights up one color at a time to
                 indicate status, but that's very boring, and the colors
                 actually look great when combined, so I've improvised a
                 little and made them indicate netdev activities.
                 My test results:
                 GPIO 13/14/15
                 000 white (actually more like bright green or cyan
                            because the brightness of the green LED is
                            higher than red and blue)
                 001 bright purple
                 010 bright green
                 011 red
                 100 bright cyan
                 101 blue
                 110 green
                 111 off

Flash Layout:
 0x0000000-0x0030000 : "u-boot"
 0x0030000-0x0040000 : "u-boot-env"
 0x0040000-0x0050000 : "factory"
 0x0050000-0x0f50000 : "firmware"
 /*0x0f50000 to 0x0fe0000 is undefined, same as OEM firmware*/
 0x0fe0000-0x0ff0000 : "bdinfo"
 0x0ff0000-0x1000000 : "reserve"

MAC address:
 MAC               Source                          Description    Fix
 A0:CX:XX:BX:XX:0D BDINFO_9                        LAN(LABEL)     DTS
 A0:CX:XX:BX:XX:0E BDINFO_9 + 1                    WAN            DTS
 A2:CX:XX:BX:XX:0F FACTORY_4                       WIFI2G         DTS
 A2:CX:XX:CX:XX:0F SETBIT 7 (FACTORY_4 + 0x100000) WIFI5G         HOTPLUG
 A6:CX:XX:BX:XX:0F N/A                             WIFI2G_CLIENT  N/A
 A6:DX:XX:BX:XX:0F N/A                             WIFI5G_CLIENT  N/A

Stock dmesg:
https://pastebin.com/2t2jwLdf

Stock Dumps:
https://pastebin.com/LDLxSWX3

Installation via SSH (does not void your warranty):
1.  -----UNLOCK SSH-----
1.1 Set computer IP to DHCP mode, load 'http://10.168.1.1/cgi-bin/luci' in
    your browser. Password is 'admin'.
1.2 Click the "备份且导出" (backup and export) button, and download the
    config file.
1.3 Open the downloaded file with 7zip, navigate to '/etc/config/'.
1.4 Edit the file './system'. Change the '0' into '1' under
    "config sys 'ssh'".
1.5 Save the file.
1.6 Upload the file by clicking the "导入且恢复" (import and recover)
    button. The router will automatically reboot.
2.  -----FLASH THE OPENWRT FIRMWARE-----
2.1 Use any scp tool to upload the 'sysupgrade' firmware to the '/tmp/'
    folder to your router. It should be root@10.168.1.1 and the password
    is 'admin'.
2.2 SSH into the router, also root@10.168.1.1 and the password is 'admin'.
2.3 **IMPORTANT** Type command 'dd if=/dev/mtd3 of=/tmp/firmware.bin', to
    backup the stock firmware. Since the OEM does not provide firmware
    download on their website, this is the only way to get it.
2.3 **ALSO IMPORTANT** Use any scp tool to download your backed-up stock
    firmware from '/tmp/' to your local drive. Then you'd better use a hex
    reading tool to have a rough look at it to make sure nothing is
    corrupt. Or u can just back up again and cross check the MD5.
2.4 Type command 'mtd write /tmp/XXX.bin firmware', and it should flash
    the firmware.
2.5 Verify that nothing went wrong. If you're confident, type 'reboot' and
    reboot the router.

Revert to stock firmware:
1.  load stock firmware using mtd (make sure u have a backup).

Signed-off-by: Ray Wang <raywang777@foxmail.com>
2022-04-17 14:10:11 +02:00