Upstream kernel added support for RAW_APPENDED_DTB on ralink arch
in the following commit:
02564fc89d3d ("ralink: Introduce fw_passed_dtb to arch/mips/ralink")
Use upstream solution and get rid of our OWRTDTB hack.
This commit set DEVICE_DTS to $$(DTS) instead of replacing DTS with
DEVICE_DTS in device profile because DTS variable will be dropped
in later commits.
Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
[Tested on mt7621/mt76x8]
Tested-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
[Tested on rt305x/mt7620]
Tested-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
TP-Link TL-WR841n v14 is a router based on MediaTek MT7628N.
- MediaTek MT7628NN
- 32 MB of RAM
- 4 MB of FLASH
- 2T2R 2.4 GHz
- 5x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet
Installation:
- copy the
'openwrt-ramips-mt76x8-tl-wr841n-v14-squashfs-tftp-recovery.bin'
file to your tftp server root and rename it to 'tp_recovery.bin'.
- configure your PC running the TFTP server with the static IP address
192.168.0.66/24
- push the reset button and plug in the power connector. Wait until
the orange led starts blinking (~6sec)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Müller <donothingloop@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Couzens <lynxis@fe80.eu> [small modifications gpio-hog]
Similiar to the lantiq target use a dts alias to define the wlan led
instead of static mapping in /etc/board.d/01_leds. Reduce code
duplication.
A device tree must define the alias "led-wlan" similiar to "led-boot".
/ {
aliases {
led-wlan = &led_wlan;
};
[..]
led_wlan: wlan {
label = "tl-wr841n-v14:green:wlan";
gpios = <&gpio1 9 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;
};
};
Signed-off-by: Alexander Couzens <lynxis@fe80.eu>
Hardware specs:
SoC: Mediatek MT7621A
CPU: 4x 880Mhz
Cache: 32 KB I-Cache and 32 KB D-Cach
256 KB L2 Cache (shared by Dual-Core)
RAM: DDR3 512MB 16bits BUS
FLASH: 16MB
Switch: Mediatek Gigabit Switch (1 x LAN, 1 x WAN)
USB: 1x 3.0
PCI: 3x Mini PCIe
GPS: Quectel L70B
BTN: Reset
LED: - Power
- Ethernet
- Wifi
- USB
UART: UART is present as Pads with throughholes on the PCB.
They are located on left side.
3.3V - RX - GND - TX / 57600-8N1
3.3V is the square pad
Installation:
The stock image is a modified openwrt and can be overflashed via
# sysupgrade -F image.bin
Signed-off-by: Daniel Danzberger <daniel@dd-wrt.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[removed unused label, formatting]
This fixes lower case AC in the DTS model name.
Fixes: 88f7a29f99 ("ramips: add support for Edimax EW-7476RPC / EW-7478AC")
Reported-by: Cezary Jackiewicz <cezary@eko.one.pl>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
This patch fix and enable GELAN port in D-LINK DWR-118-A2.
Tested-by: Richard Toth <trtk1992@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
In some boards is requred to change the ephy mdio base address.
This patch add of property "mediatek,ephy-base-address" in gsw
part, which allows to change ephy base address.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
[fixed indentation in header file]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
The port initialisation is based on assumption that phy address and
port number is the same. SoC allow different numbers and some board
have it.
Use phy address instead the port number to make sure that correct
addresses are polled.
In situation when only one PHY with address 0x0 is conected to
port 4, autopolling is broken.
This patch make autopolling correct when port number and phy address
are different.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
The phy handling code forces a phy mdio address and the switch port to
which a phy is attached to be the same. Albeit such a configuration is
used for most boards, it isn't for all.
Pass the switch port number to the ethernet phy connect functions, to
ensure the correct list entry is edited and not the list entry that
matches th phys mdio address.
Use the mdio address with mdiobus_get_phy instead of the port number,
to make sure the expected ethernet phy gets connected.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The whole logic in fe_phy_connect() is based on the asumption that mdio
address and switch port id are equal. Albeit it is true for most
boards, it doesn't is for all.
It isn't yet clear which subtargets/boards require the devicetree less
ethernet phy handling. Hence change the code in a way that it doesn't
touch ethernet phys which were early attached and are already handled.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
SoC: MediaTek MT7620a @ 580MHz
RAM: 64M (Winbond W9751G6KB-25)
FLASH: 8MB (Macronix)
WiFi: SoC-integrated: MediaTek MT7620a bgn
WiFi: MediaTek MT7612EN nac
Switch: Mediatek MT7530W Gigabit Switch (4 x LAN, 1 x WAN)
USB: Yes 1 x 2.0 (+ 1 x 2.0 unpopulated header)
BTN: Reset/WPS
LED: - Power (white)
- Internet (blue)
- Wifi (blue)
- USB (blue)
UART: UART is present as Pads with throughholes on the PCB. They are
located in the lower right corner (GbE ports facing up)
3.3V - RX - GND - TX / 57600-8N1
3.3V is the square pad
Installation
------------
Update the factory image via the web-interfaces (by default:
http://edimax.setup)
Signed-off-by: Birger Koblitz <mail@birger-koblitz.de>
[merge conflicts in 01_leds and mt7620.mk, dts whitespace issues]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
SoC: MediaTek MT7620a @ 580MHz
RAM: 64M (Winbond W9751G6KB-25)
FLASH: 8MB (Macronix)
WiFi: SoC-integrated: MediaTek MT7620a bgn
WiFi: MediaTek MT7612EN nac
GbE: 1x (RTL8211E)
BTN: WPS - RFKILL/RF 50%/RF 100% toggle
LED: - Wifi 5g (blue)
- Wifi 2g (blue)
- Crossband (green)
- Power (green)
- WPS (green)
- LAN (Green)
UART: UART is present as Pads with throughholes on the PCB. They are
located next to the switch for the wifi configuration
3.3V - RX - GND - TX / 57600-8N1
3.3V is the square pad
Installation
------------
Update the factory image via the web-interfaces (by default:
192.168.9.2/24).
http://192.168.9.2/index.asp
ramips: add Edimax EW-7478AC
SoC: MediaTek MT7620a @ 580MHz
RAM: 64M (Winbond W9751G6KB-25)
FLASH: 8MB (Macronix)
WiFi: SoC-integrated: MediaTek MT7620a bgn
WiFi: MediaTek MT7612EN nac
GbE: 1x (RTL8211E)
BTN: WPS - RFKILL/RF 50%/RF 100% toggle
LED: - Wifi 5g (blue)
- Wifi 2g (blue)
- Crossband (green)
- Power (green)
- WPS (green)
- LAN (Green)
UART: UART is present as Pads with throughholes on the PCB. They are
located next to the switch for the wifi configuration
3.3V - RX - GND - TX / 57600-8N1
3.3V is the square pad
Installation
------------
Update the factory image via the web-interfaces (by default:
http://edimaxext.setup)
Or push wpa button on power on and send firmware via tftp to 192.168.1.6
The EW-7478AC is identical to the EW-7476RPC, except instead of 2 internal
antennas it has 2 external ones.
Signed-off-by: Birger Koblitz <mail@birger-koblitz.de>
[merge conflict in 01_leds]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Refreshed all patches.
This bump contains upstream commits which seem to avoid (not properly fix)
the errors as seen in FS#2305 and FS#2297
Altered patches:
- 403-net-mvneta-convert-to-phylink.patch
- 410-sfp-hack-allow-marvell-10G-phy-support-to-use-SFP.patch
Compile-tested on: ar71xx, cns3xxx, imx6, mvebu, x86_64
Runtime-tested on: ar71xx, cns3xxx, imx6, x86_64
Signed-off-by: Koen Vandeputte <koen.vandeputte@ncentric.com>
01_leds has several redundant LED-cases. This commit cleans
up the file by merging these cases into shared cases.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
ASUS RP-N53 and Buffalo WHR-600D use RT5592 for 5GHz wireless
After commit 367813b9b1 the driver for RT5592 (rt2800pci)
is not selected by default anymore, which broke their 5GHz wireless
Add it back to device packages
Fixes: 367813b9b1 ("ramips: mt7620: fix dependencies")
Signed-off-by: Deng Qingfang <dengqf6@mail2.sysu.edu.cn>
Specifications:
- SoC: MT7628DAN (MT7628AN with 64MB built-in RAM)
- Flash: 8M SPI NOR
- Ethernet: 5x 10/100Mbps
- WiFi: 2.4G: MT7628 built-in
5G: MT7612E
- 1x miniPCIe slot for LTE modem (only USB pins connected)
- 1x SIM slot
Flash instruction:
U-boot has a builtin web recovery page:
1. Hold the reset button while powering it up
2. Connect to the ethernet and set an IP in 192.168.1.0/24 range
3. Open your browser and upload firmware through http://192.168.1.1
Note about the LTE modem:
If your router comes with an EC25 module and it doesn't show up
as a QMI device, you should do the following to switch it to QMI
mode:
1. Install kmod-usb-serial-option and a terminal software
(e.g. minicom or screen). All 4 serial ports of the modem
should be available now.
2. Open /dev/ttyUSB3 with the terminal software and type this
AT command: AT+QCFG="usbnet",0
3. Power-cycle the router. You should now get a QMI device
recognized.
Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
Support for D-Link DWR-118 A1 was added before LEDs feature
in mt76x0e driver.
This fixes the 5GHz WiFi LED which was previously inverted.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
This ioctl is currently routed through generic interface code.
dev_ioctl
dev_ethtool
__ethtool_get_link_ksettings
phy_ethtool_ioctl
Cc: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
Cc: John Crispin <john@phrozen.org>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
The R6220 and WNDR3700v5 are identical apart from using NAND/NOR flash and
having a different casing. This adds a new cleaned up R6220.dtsi with the
common bits for both devices. Both devices now have feature parity.
Performed cleanup:
* generic DTS node names
* regulator for usb power
* added missing pinctrl groups
* use switch port instead of VLAN as trigger for WAN LED
Fixes for WNDR3700v5:
* all LEDS work
* correct ethernet MAC addresses
Signed-off-by: Jan Hoffmann <jan@3e8.eu>
- SoC: MediaTek MT7628AN
- Flash: 16MB (Winbond W25Q128JV)
- RAM: 64MB
- Serial: As marked on PCB, 3V3 logic, baudrate is 115200
- Ethernet: 3x 10/100 Mbps (switched, 2x LAN + WAN)
- WIFI0: MT7628AN 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n
- WIFI1: MT7612EN 5GHz 802.11ac
- Antennas: 4x external (2 per radio), non-detachable
- LEDs: Programmable power-LED (two-colored, yellow/blue)
Non-programmable internet-LED (shows WAN-activity)
- Buttons: Reset
INSTALLATION:
1. Connect to the serial port of the router and power it up.
If you get a prompt asking for boot-mode, go to step 3.
2. Unplug the router after
> Erasing SPI Flash...
> raspi_erase: offs:20000 len:10000
occurs on the serial port. Plug the router back in.
3. At the prompt select option 2 (Load system code then
write to Flash via TFTP.)
4. Enter 192.168.1.1 as the device IP and 192.168.1.2 as the
Server-IP.
5. Connect your computer to LAN1 and assign it as 192.168.1.2/24.
6. Rename the sysupgrade image to test.bin and serve it via TFTP.
7. Enter test.bin on the serial console and press enter.
Signed-off-by: Markus Scheck <markus@mscheck.de>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[added mt76 compatible]
Cudy WR1200 is an AC1200 AP with 3-port FE and 2 non-detachable antennas
Specifications:
MT7628 (580 MHz)
64 MB of RAM (DDR2)
8 MB of FLASH
2T2R 2.4 GHz (MT7628)
2T2R 5 GHz (MT7612E)
3x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet (2 LAN + 1 WAN)
2x external, non-detachable antennas (5dbi)
UART header on PCB (57600 8n1)
7x LED, 2x button
Known issues:
The Power LED is always ON, probably because it is connected
directly to power.
Flash instructions
------------------
Load the ...-factory.bin image via the stock web interface.
Openwrt upgrade instructions
----------------------------
Use the ...-sysupgrade.bin image for future upgrades.
Revert to stock FW
------------------
Warning! This tutorial will work only with the following OEM FW:
WR1000_EU_92.122.2.4987.201806261618.bin
WR1000_US_92.122.2.4987.201806261609.bin
If in the future these firmwares will not be available anymore,
you have to find the new XOR key.
1) Download the original FW from the Cudy website.
(For example WR1000_EU_92.122.2.4987.201806261618.bin)
2) Remove the header.
dd if="WR1000_EU_92.122.2.4987.201806261618.bin" of="WR1000_EU_92.122.2.4987.201806261618.bin.mod" skip=8 bs=64
3) XOR the new file with the region key.
FOR EU: 7B76741E67594351555042461D625F4545514B1B03050208000603020803000D
FOR US: 7B76741E675943555D5442461D625F454555431F03050208000603060007010C
You can use OpenWrt's tools/firmware-utils/src/xorimage.c tool for this:
xorimage -i WR1000..bin.mod -o stock-firmware.bin -x -p 7B767..
Or, you can use this tool (CHANGE THE XOR KEY ACCORDINGLY!):
https://gchq.github.io/CyberChef/#recipe=XOR(%7B'option':'Hex','string':''%7D,'',false)
4) Check the resulting decrypted image.
Check if bytes from 0x20 to 0x3f are:
4C 69 6E 75 78 20 4B 65 72 6E 65 6C 20 49 6D 61 67 65 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
Alternatively, you can use u-boot's tool dumpimage tool to check
if the decryption was successful. It should look like:
# dumpimage -l stock-firmware.bin
Image Name: Linux Kernel Image
Created: Tue Jun 26 10:24:54 2018
Image Type: MIPS Linux Kernel Image (lzma compressed)
Data Size: 4406635 Bytes = 4303.35 KiB = 4.20 MiB
Load Address: 80000000
Entry Point: 8000c150
5) Flash it via forced firmware upgrade and don't "Keep Settings"
CLI: sysupgrade -F -n stock-firmware.bin
LuCI: make sure to click on the "Keep settings" checkbox
to disable it. You'll need to do this !TWICE! because
on the first try, LuCI will refuse the image and reset
the "Keep settings" to enable. However a new
"Force upgrade" checkbox will appear as well.
Make sure to do this very carefully!
Signed-off-by: Davide Fioravanti <pantanastyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[added wifi compatible, spiffed-up the returned to stock instructions]
This uses the existing rules for Sercomm factory images and moves them
to the ramips image Makefile, so they can be used in all subtargets.
The new factory image for WNDR3700v5 can be flashed using nmrpflash.
Signed-off-by: Jan Hoffmann <jan@3e8.eu>
Specification:
CPU: MT7628 580 MHz. MIPS 24K
RAM: 128 MB
Flash: 32 MB
WIFI: 802.11n/g/b 20/40 MHz
Ethernet: 5 Port ethernet switch
UART: 2x
Flash instruction:
The U-boot is based on Ralink SDK so we can flash the firmware using UART:
1. Configure PC with a static IP address and setup an TFTP server.
2. Put the firmware into the tftp directory.
3. Connect the UART0 line as described on the PCB.
4. Power up the device and press 2, follow the instruction to
set device and tftp server IP address and input the firmware
file name. U-boot will then load the firmware and write it into
the flash.
5. After firmware is started connect via ethernet at 192.168.1.1
Signed-off-by: Liu Yu <f78fk@live.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com> [removed dupped subject]
ZBT WE826-E is a dual-SIM version of the ZBT WE826. The router has the
following specifications:
- MT7620A (580 MHz)
- 128MB RAM
- 32MB of flash (SPI NOR)
- 5x 10/100Mbps Ethernet (MT7620A built-in switch)
- 1x microSD slot
- 1x miniPCIe slot (only USB2.0 bus)
- 2x SIM card slots (standard size)
- 1x USB2.0 port
- 1x 2.4GHz wifi (rt2800)
- 10x LEDs (4 GPIO-controlled)
- 1x reset button
The following have been tested and working:
- Ethernet switch
- wifi
- miniPCIe slot
- USB port
- microSD slot
- sysupgrade
- reset button
Installation and recovery:
In order to install OpenWRT the first time or recover the router, you
can use the web-based recovery system. Keep the reset button pressed
during boot and access 192.168.1.1 in your browser when your machine
obtains an IP address. Upload the firmware to start the recovery
process.
How to swap SIMs:
You control which SIM slot to use by writing 0/1 to
/sys/class/gpio/gpio13/value. In order for the change to take effect,
you can either use AT-commands (AT+CFUN) or power-cycle the modem (write
0/1 to /sys/class/gpio/gpio14/value).
Signed-off-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
Head Weblink HDRM200 is a dual-sim router based on MT7620A. The detailed
specifications are:
- MT7620A (580MHz)
- 64MB RAM
- 16MB of flash (SPI NOR)
- 6x 10/100Mbps Ethernet (MT7620A built-in switch)
- 1x microSD slot
- 1x miniPCIe slot (only USB2.0 bus). Device is shipped with a SIMCOM
SIM7100E LTE modem.
- 2x SIM slots (standard size)
- 1x USB2.0 port
- 1x 2.4GHz wifi (rt2800)
- 1x 5GHz wifi (mt7612)
- 1x reset button
- 1x WPS button
- 3x GPIO-controllable LEDs
- 1x 10 pin terminal block (RS232, RS485, 4 x GPIO)
Tested:
- Ethernet switch
- Wifi
- USB slot
- SD card slot
- miniPCIe-slot
- sysupgrade
- reset button
Installation instructions:
Installing OpenWRT for the first time requires a bit of work, as the
board does not ship with OpenWRT. In addition, the bootloader
automatically reboots when installing an image over tftp. In order to
install OpenWRT on the HDRM200, you need to do the following:
* Copy the initramfs-image to your tftp-root (default filename is
test.bin) and configure networking accordingly (default server IP is
10.10.10.3, client 10.10.10.123). Start your tftp server.
* Open the board and connect to UART. The pins are exposed and clearly
marked.
* Boot the board and press 1.
* Either use the default filename and client/server IP-addresses, or
specify your own.
The image should now be loaded to memory and board boot. If the router
reboots while the image is loading, you need to try again. Once the
board has booted, copy the sysupgrade-image to the router and run
sysupgrade in order to install OpenWRT to the flash.
Notes:
- You control which SIM slot to use by writing 0/1 to
/sys/class/gpio/gpio0/value. In order for the change to take
effect, you can either use AT-commands (AT+CFUN) or power-cycle the
modem (write 0/1 to /sys/class/gpio/gpio21/value).
- RS485 is available on /dev/ttyS0.
- RS232 is available on /dev/ttyS1.
- The name of the ioX-gpios map to the labels on the casing.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
[fixed whitespace issue and merge conflict in target.mk]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
The factory firmware omits the JFFS2 end-marker while flashing via
web-interface. Add a 64k padding after the marker fixes this problem.
When the end-marker is not present, OpenWRT won't save the overlayfs
after initial flash.
Reported-by: Andreas Ziegler <dev@andreas-ziegler.de>
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
MT7620 integrated WMAC does not need RT2x00 PCI driver or firmware
Also corrected kmod-eeprom-93cx6 and kmod-lib-crc-itu-t dependencies
according to original Kconfig and lsmod output
This will remove some unnecessary packages from MT7620 target to
save some space
Signed-off-by: Deng Qingfang <dengqf6@mail2.sysu.edu.cn>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[75 characters per line in the commit message]
It's OEM module with 2*26 pin header, similar to LinkIt Smart 7688 or
Vocore2.
Specification:
CPU: MT7628 580 MHz. MIPS 24K
RAM: 64 MB
Flash: 8 MB
WIFI: 802.11n/g/b 20/40 MHz
USB: 1x Port USB 2.0
Ethernet: 5 Port ethernet switch
UART: 2x
Installation: Use the installed uboot Bootloader. Connect a serial cable
to serialport 0. Turn power on. Choose the option: "Load system code
then write to Flash via TFTP". Choose the local device IP and the TFTP
server IP and the file name of the system image. After if the
Bootloader will copy the image to the local flash.
Notes: The I2C Kernel module work not correctly. You can send and
receive data. But the command i2cdetect doesn’t work. FS#845
Signed-off-by: Eike Feldmann <eike.feldmann@outlook.com>
[commit subject and message touches, DTS whitespace fixes, wifi LED
rename, pinctrl fixes, network settings fixes, lan/wmac mac addresses,
removed i2c kernel modules]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Hardware
--------
SoC: MediaTek MT7628NN
RAM: 64M DDR2 (Etron EM68B16CWQD-25H)
FLASH: 8M (Winbond W25Q64JVSIQ)
LED: Power - WLAN
BTN: Reset
UART: 115200 8N1
TX and RX are labled on the board as pads next to the SoC
Installation via web-interface
------------------------------
1. Visit the web-interface at 192.168.8.1
Note: The ethernet port is by default WAN. So you need to connect to
the router via WiFi
2. Navigate to the Update tab on the left side.
3. Select "Local Update"
4. Upload the OpenWrt sysupgrade image.
Note: Make sure you select not to preserve the configuration.
Installation via U-Boot
-----------------------
1. Hold down the reset button while powering on the device.
Wait for the LED to flash 5 times.
2. Assign yourself a static IPv4 in 192.168.1.0/24
3. Upload the OpenWrt sysupgrade image at 192.168.1.1.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Instead of assigning I2C pins as GPIOs by default, leave it up to the
user whether to install kmod-i2c-mt7621 and use them for hardware I2C
instead.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Add switch definition for the rtl8367b switch to the DTS/DTSi for
the Belkin F9K1109v1 that was mistakenly omitted from the initial
commit.
Fixes: 017ec068e3df (ramips: add support for Belkin F9K1109v1)
Signed-off-by: Kip Porterfield <kip.porterfield@gmail.com>
Upstream driver has gone through a series of cleanup and was moved
from drivers/staging into drivers/spi. Backport it to replace our
messy driver.
Tested-by: Jörg Schüler-Maroldt <joerg-linux@arcor.de>
[LinkIt Smart 7688, AcSIP AI7688H Wi-Fi module]
Tested-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Tian Xiao bo <peterwillcn@gmail.com>
[Newifi-D2 MediaTek MT7621 ver:1 eco:3]
Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
Enable the USB power for the Netgear R6120. Otherwise, no power is
supplied to an attached USB device.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Hardware spec:
CPU: MTK MT7621A
RAM: 256MB
ROM: 16MB SPI Flash
WiFi: MT7603EN + MT7612EN
Button: 2 buttons (reset, wps)
LED: 8 LEDs (Power 2G 5G WPS Internet LAN1 LAN2 USB)
Ethernet: 3 ports, 2 LAN + 1 WAN
Other: USB3.0
Flashing instructions:
Visit the openwrt forum topic for this router:
https://forum.openwrt.org/t/add-openwrt-support-for-youku-yk-l2/34692
to get the bootloader and unlock firmware.
0. upgrade your router with the telnet firmware via the
firmware upgrade page on the webui.
1. telnet 192.168.11.1 from your PC
2. Download the pb-boot-youku_l2-20190317-61b6d33.bin and transfer
it to the /tmp directory of the router.
3. mtd write /tmp/pb-boot-youku_l2-20190317-61b6d33.bin Bootloader
4. turn off the power
5. Push the reset button while turning on the router and
wait until LED start blinking (~10sec.)
6. Connect Ethernet port and goto http://192.168.1.1.
7. Upload the firmware to firmware restore page in webui.
Signed-off-by: Zhao Yu <574249312@qq.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com> [rewrote the
flashing instructions, fixed author]
This adds the SPDX license identifier for the NETGEAR EX6150. It was
missed when submitting the original patch.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
The specific flash chip used (W25Q256FVEM) accepts 50MHz for read
requests and higher for others. 104MHz for fast reads. ramips seems to
be limited to 80MHz based on testing with higher values (no speedup).
Based on upstream commit: 97738374a310b9116f9c33832737e517226d3722
time dd if=/dev/mtdblock3 of=/dev/null bs=64k from 42.96s to 7.01s
[test done with backported upstream v4.19 driver[1], for numbers on
stock 4.14 driver please take a look at `ramips: Increase GB-PC2 SPI
frequency to 80MHz` commit message]
1. https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/1578
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
[expanded note about spi driver version]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
The flash chip on the board (Spansion S25FL256SAIF00) is rated to
support at least 50MHz for normal read requests according to the
datasheet. 133MHz for fast reads. However, ramips seems to be limited to
80MHz.
>From testing this, higher values do not improve speeds.
time dd if=/dev/mtdblock3 of=/dev/null bs=64k from
42.82s to 14.09s.
boot speed is also faster:
[ 66.884087] procd: - init - vs
[ 48.976049] procd: - init -
Since spi speed was requested:
[ 3.538884] spi-mt7621 1e000b00.spi: sys_freq: 225000000
CPU is 900MHz:
[ 0.000000] CPU Clock: 900MHz
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
[fixed commit message by adding missing 0 in the spi-mt7621 clock output]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
SoC: MediaTek MT7621
RAM: 64M (Winbond W9751G6KB-25)
FLASH: 16MB (Macronix MX25L12835F)
WiFi: MediaTek MT7662E bgn 2SS
WiFi: MediaTek MT7662E nac 2SS
BTN: ON/OFF - Reset - WPS - AP/Extender toggle
LED: - Arrow Right (blue)
- Arrow Left (blue)
- WiFi 1 (red/green)
- WiFi 2 (red/green)
- Power (green/amber)
- WPS (Green)
UART: UART is present as Pads on the backside of the PCB. They are
located on the other side of the Ethernet port.
3.3V - GND - TX - RX / 57600-8N1
3.3V is the nearest one to the antenna connectors
Installation
------------
Update the factory image via the Netgear web-interfaces (by default:
192.168.1.250/24).
You can also use the factory image with the nmrpflash tool.
For more information see https://github.com/jclehner/nmrpflash
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
[merge conflict in 02_network, flash@0 node rename, wlan DTS triggers]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Device specification:
- SoC: RT5350F
- CPU Frequency: 360 MHz
- Flash Chip: Winbond 25Q32 (4096 KiB)
- RAM: 32768 KiB
- 5x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet (4x LAN, 1x WAN)
- 1x external, non-detachable antenna
- UART (J1) header on PCB (57800 8n1)
- Wireless: SoC-intergated: 2.4GHz 802.11bgn
- USB: None
- 3x LED, 2x button
Flash instruction:
1. Configure PC with static IP 192.168.1.2/24 and start TFTP server.
2. Rename "openwrt-ramips-rt305x-kn_st-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin"
to "kstart_recovery.bin" and place it in TFTP server directory.
3. Connect PC with one of LAN ports, press the reset button, power up
the router and keep button pressed until power LED start blinking.
4. Router will download file from TFTP server, write it to flash and reboot.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Kot <vova28rus@gmail.com>
[fixed git commit author and whitespace issues in DTS]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
The WIZnet WizFi630S board is in the miniPCIe form factor.
SoC: Mediatek MT7688AN
RAM: 128MB
Flash: 32Mb
WiFi: 2.4GHz
Ethernet: 3x 100Mbit
USB: 1 (USB 2.0)
serial ports: 2 (1x full, 1xlite)
Flash and recovery instructions: Use the factory installed u-boot boot
loader. It is available on UART2 (115200,8,n,1). Then get the
sysupgrade image from a tftp server.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Welz <tw@wiznet.eu>
[whitespace and device name in makefile fixes]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Some broken ISPs (e.g. Comcast) send DHCPv6 packets with hop limit=0.
This trips up the TTL=0 check in the PPE if enabled.
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
The DIR-510L Wireless Router are based on the MT7620A SoC.
Specification:
-MediaTek MT7620A (580 Mhz)
-128 MB of RAM
-16 MB of FLASH
-802.11bgn radio
-1x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet
-2x internal, non-detachable antennas
-UART (J3) header on PCB (57600 8n1)
-1x bi-color LED (GPIO-controlled), 2x button
-JBOOT bootloader
Known issues:
-Ethernet port is used as LAN
-No communication with charger IC. (uart bitbang needed)
Installation:
Apply factory image via d-link http web-gui.
How to revert to OEM firmware:
1.) Push the reset button and turn on the power. Wait until LED start blinking (~10sec.)
2.) Upload original factory image via JBOOT http (IP: 192.168.123.254)
3.) If http doesn't work, it can be done with curl command:
curl -F FN=@XXXXX.binhttp://192.168.123.254/upg
where XXXXX.bin is name of firmware file.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
[fixed whitespace issue in 10-rt2x00-eeprom]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Some boards with JBOOT have partiton between bootloader
and kernel image. This patch add possibility to change kernel
partition start address.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
clk_get_rate returns the current clock rate in Hz for a clock source so
if we divide it by 1M, then we get frequency in MHz and not kHz.
Signed-off-by: Qin Wei <support@vocore.io>
[added missing commit message, and fixed author with SoB from PR message]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Reading and writing to and from flash storage is slowed down
enormously by some functions which use a block size of 1.
This patch reworks the extraction scripts to be much faster and
efficient by reading and writing in possibly one big block.
This is based on the initial commit a69e101 for ipq40xx by
Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Tested-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
- Former "mir3g" board name becomes "xiaomi,mir3g".
- Reorder some entries to maintain alphabetical order.
- Change DTS so status LEDs (yellow/red/blue) mimic
Xiaomi stock firmware: (Section Indicator)
<http://files.xiaomi-mi.co.uk/files/router_pro/router%20PRO%20EN.pdf>
<http://files.xiaomi-mi.co.uk/files/Mi_WiFi_router_3/MiWiFi_router3_EN.pdf>
|Yellow: Update (LED flickering), the launch of the system (steady light);
|Blue: during normal operation (steady light);
|Red: Safe mode (display flicker), system failure (steady light);
Signed-off-by: Ozgur Can Leonard <ozgurcan@gmail.com>
[Added link to similar Router 3 model]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
To be able to configure pwms the pwm driver needs to know the number off
cells in the "pwms" property. For this platform this is 2.
Signed-off-by: Micke Prag <micke.prag@telldus.se>
Hardware:
CPU: MediaTek MT7621AT (2x880MHz)
RAM: 512MB DDR3
FLASH: 256MB NAND
WiFi: 2.4GHz 4x4 MT7615 b/g/n (Needs driver, See Issues!)
WiFI: 5GHz 4x4 MT7615 a/n/ac (Needs driver, See Issues!)
USB: 1x 3.0
ETH: 1x WAN 10/100/1000 3x LAN 10/100/1000
LED: Power/Status
BTN: RESET
UART: 115200 8n1
Partition layout and boot:
Stock Xiaomi firmware has the MTD split into (among others)
- kernel0 (@0x200000)
- kernel1 (@0x600000)
- rootfs0
- rootfs1
- overlay (ubi)
Xiaomi uboot expects to find kernels at 0x200000 & 0x600000
referred to as system 1 & system 2 respectively.
a kernel is considered suitable for handing control over
if its linux magic number exists & uImage CRC are correct.
If either of those conditions fail, a matching sys'n'_fail flag
is set in uboot env & a restart performed in the hope that the
alternate kernel is okay.
If neither kernel checksums ok and both are marked failed, system 2
is booted anyway.
Note uboot's tftp flash install writes the transferred
image to both kernel partitions.
Installation:
Similar to the Xiaomi MIR3G, we keep stock Xiaomi firmware in
kernel0 for ease of recovery, and install OpenWRT into kernel1 and
after.
The installation file for OpenWRT is a *squashfs-factory.bin file that
contains the kernel and a ubi partition. This is flashed as follows:
nvram set flag_try_sys1_failed=1
nvram set flag_try_sys2_failed=0
nvram commit
dd if=factory.bin bs=1M count=4 | mtd write - kernel1
dd if=factory.bin bs=1M skip=4 | mtd write - rootfs0
reboot
Reverting to stock:
The part of stock firmware we've kept in kernel0 allows us to run stock
recovery, which will re-flash stock firmware from a *.bin file on a USB.
For this we do the following:
fw_setenv flag_try_sys1_failed 0
fw_setenv flag_try_sys2_failed 1
reboot
After reboot the LED status light will blink red, at which point pressing
the 'reset' button will cause stock firmware to be installed from USB.
Issues:
OpenWRT currently does not have support for the MT7615 wifi chips. There is
ongoing work to add mt7615 support to the open source mt76 driver. Until that
support is in place, there are closed-source kernel modules that can be used.
See: https://forum.openwrt.org/t/support-for-xiaomi-wifi-r3p-pro/20290/170
Signed-off-by: Ozgur Can Leonard <ozgurcan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[02_network remaps, Added link to notes]
ALFA Network Tube-E4G is an outdoor, dual-SIM LTE Cat. 4 CPE, based on
MediaTek MT7620A, equipped with Quectel EC25 miniPCIe modem.
Specification:
- MT7620A (580 MHz)
- 64/128/256 MB of RAM (DDR2)
- 16/32 MB of flash (SPI NOR)
- 1x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet, with passive PoE support (24 V)
- 1x miniPCIe slot (with PCIe and USB 2.0 buses)
- 2x SIM slot (mini, micro) with detect and switch driven by GPIO
- 1x detachable antenna (modem main)
- 1x internal antenna (modem div)
- 1x GPS passive antenna (optional)
- 5x LED (all driven by GPIO)
- 1x button (reset)
- UART (4-pin, 2.54 mm pitch) header on PCB
Other:
Default SIM slot is selected at an early stage by U-Boot, based on
'default_sim' environment value: 1 or unset = SIM1 (mini), 2 = SIM2
(micro). U-Boot also resets the modem, using #PERST signal, before
starting kernel.
Flash instruction:
You can use the 'sysupgrade' image directly in vendor firmware which is
based on OpenWrt (make sure to not preserve settings - use 'sysupgrade
-n -F ...' command). Alternatively, use web recovery mode in U-Boot:
1. Power the device with reset button pressed, the LAN LED will start
blinking slowly and after ~3 seconds, when it starts blinking faster,
you can release the button.
2. Setup static IP 192.168.1.2/24 on your PC.
3. Go to 192.168.1.1 in browser and upload 'sysupgrade' image.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
dts: disable port4 and leave it ephy mode because it connect to nothing
switch port5 connected to GE port we use it as wan port
Signed-off-by: Chen Minqiang <ptpt52@gmail.com>
Similar to the (currently unused) mt7620_get_eco() function, introduce
mt7620_get_chipver() and mt7620_get_pkg() functions to allow rt2x00 to
probe for the type of WiSoC. This is ugly and probably unacceptable
for upstream, however, it should help to evaluate which of those hacks
are actually really needed, enumerate the possible values and label
them in a more meaningful way than currently done in the vendor driver.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Device specification:
- SoC: Ralink RT3883 (MIPS 74Kc) 500Mhz
- RAM: 64Mb
- Flash: 8MB (SPI-NOR)
- Ethernet: 10/100/1000 Mbps
- WLAN
Wireless 1: SoC-integrated : 2.4/5 GHz
Wireless 2: 2.4 GHz RT3092L
- LED: 2x USB, WAN, LAN
- Key: WPS, reset
- Serial: 4-pin header, (57600,8,N,1), 3.3V TTL,
GND, RX, TX, V - J12 marking on board
- USB ports: 2 x USB 2.0
Flashing instructions:
Option 1 (from bootloader web)
- Hold reset button on the back of router when plugging
in power (for at-least 10 seconds after plugged in)
- Connect to a Lan port
- Set computer IP to 10.10.10.3
- Go to http://10.10.10.123 in a web browser
- Click the Browse... Button and select the
*squashfs.sysupgrade.bin file then click APPLY
Option 2 (from the stock admin web)
- Go to firmware upgrade
- Upload the **factory** image *initramfs.bin first
- Boot into openwrt
- From Luci web in openwrt upload the *squashfs.sysupgrade.bin
Signed-off-by: Kip Porterfield <kip.porterfield@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
[added v1 to the compatible identifier, added pciid for
the RT3092L, fixed pci unit-address, split out the F9K110X.dtsi
to prepare for a possible F9K1103 patch]
This patch adds support for the TP-Link TL-WR802N-v4.
https://openwrt.org/toh/tp-link/tl-wr802n
Specification:
- MT7628N (580 MHz)
- 64 MB RAM
- 8 MB FLASH
- 2T2R 2.4 GHz
- 1x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet
- 1x LED
Flash instruction:
The only way to flash the image in TL-WR802N v4 is to use
tftp recovery mode in U-Boot:
1. Configure PC with static IP 192.168.0.225/24 and tftp server.
2. Rename "openwrt-ramips-mt76x8-tplink_tl-wr802n-v4-squashfs-tftp-recovery.bin"
to "tp_recovery.bin" and place it in tftp server directory.
3. Connect PC with the LAN port, press the reset button, power up
the router and keep button pressed for around 10 seconds, until
device starts downloading the file.
4. Router will download file from server, write it to flash and reboot.
Signed-off-by: Marcel Jost <majo@icutech.ch>
* assign pinmux groups to gpio function for LEDs/buttons
* rename flash node to be more generic in line with other device nodes
* remove useless/incorrect eeprom property from wmac node
* correct base mac address for embedded switch
Signed-off-by: Thomas Vincent-Cross <me@tvc.id.au>
Buffalo WHR-G300N has a LED for power status indication, but it is not
connected to the GPIO and cannot be controlled by the kernel. So,
WHR-G300N uses "ROUTER" LED as the system status LED instead.
This commit changes it to use "DIAG" LED insted of "ROUTER" like
WHR-G301N in ath79 target.
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
The R6120 has no 5GHz WLAN LED, the assigned GPIO in fact controls
the WAN LED.
Renames the LED accordingly in the device-tree.
Removes the 5GHz WLAN LED trigger.
Adds the correct WAN port LED trigger.
----
Currently, the MAC address for the Netgear R6120 is read from the NVRAM
partition. The offset for the MAC address however is not consistent
across devices or firmware versions.
Switch to using the factory partition like all other Netgear devices do.
----
The LAN ports of the R6120 are labled in reverse on the casing.
Adjust LuCI switchport numbering accordingly.
----
The WiFi eeprom offsets for the R6120 are currently wrong (5GHz offset
is bigger than the partition itself).
Fixes poor performance on 2.4 and 5 GHz.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
This option was a spi nor hack which is dropped in commit
bcf4a5f474 ("ramips: remove chunked-io patch and set spi->max_transfer_size instead")
Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com> [edit message]
The WeVo 11AC NAS has a MT7612E 802.11ac chip on the PCB.
Signed-off-by: Ju Se Hoon <joosahoon@gmail.com>
[renamed author from Albis-dev to real name, editted commit message]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Two regmap dependencies were wrong, this patch fixes them.
This was detected by the build bots.
Fixes: fd5c168701 ("kernel: Build: Split kmod-regmap")
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This reduces the needed modifications to the mainline Linux kernel and
also makes the regmap package work with an out of tree kernel which
does not have these modifications.
The regmap-core is only added when it is really build as a module.
The regmap-core is normally bool so it cannot be built as a module in an
unmodified kernel. When it is selected by on other kernel module it will
always be selected as build in and it also does not show up in
$(LINUX_DIR)/modules.builtin as it is not supposed to be a kernel module.
When it is not in $(LINUX_DIR)/modules.builtin the build system expects
it to be built as a .ko file.
Just check if the module is really there and only add it in that case.
This splits the regmap package into multiple packages, one for each bus type.
This way only the bus maps which are really needed have to be added.
This also splits the I2C, SPI and MMIO regmap into separate packages to not
require all these subsystems to build them, on an unmodified upstream kernel
this also causes problems in some situations.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke.mehrtens@intel.com>
It's no longer needed as all mt7621 devices use DT binding (supported by
upstream mtd code) for specifying "firmware" part format explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
It results in calling the right MTD parser directly instead of trying
them one by one.
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
[use the lzma splitter for the AR670W]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
This adds support for the TP-Link Archer C50 v4.
It uses the same hardware as the v3 variant, sharing the same FCC-ID.
CPU: MediaTek MT7628 (580MHz)
RAM: 64M DDR2
FLASH: 8M SPI
WiFi: 2.4GHz 2x2 MT7628 b/g/n integrated
WiFI: 5GHz 2x2 MT7612 a/n/ac
ETH: 1x WAN 4x LAN
LED: Power, WiFi2, WiFi5, LAN, WAN, WPS
BTN: WPS/WiFi, RESET
UART: Near ETH ports, 115200 8n1, TP-Link pinout
Create Factory image
--------------------
As all installation methods require a U-Boot to be integrated into the
Image (and we do not ship one with the image) we are not able to create
an image in the OpenWRT build-process.
Download a TP-Link image from their Wesite and a OpenWRT sysupgrade
image for the device and build yourself a factory image like following:
TP-Link image: tpl.bin
OpenWRT sysupgrade image: owrt.bin
> dd if=tpl.bin of=boot.bin bs=131584 count=1
> cat owrt.bin >> boot.bin
Installing via Web-UI
---------------------
Upload the boot.bin via TP-Links firmware upgrade tool in the
web-interface.
Installing via Recovery
-----------------------
Activate Web-Recovery by beginning the upgrade Process with a
Firmware-Image from TP-Link. After starting the Firmware Upgrade,
wait ~3 seconds (When update status is switching to 0%), then
disconnect the power supply from the device. Upgrade flag (which
activates Web-Recovery) is written before the OS-image is touched and
removed after write is succesfull, so this procedure should be safe.
Plug the power back in. It will come up in Recovery-Mode on 192.168.0.1.
When active, all LEDs but the WPS LED are off.
Remeber to assign yourself a static IP-address as DHCP is not active in
this mode.
The boot.bin can now be uploaded and flashed using the web-recovery.
Installing via TFTP
-------------------
Prepare an image like following (Filenames from factory image steps
apply here)
> dd if=/dev/zero of=tp_recovery.bin bs=196608 count=1
> dd if=tpl.bin of=tmp.bin bs=131584 count=1
> dd if=tmp.bin of=boot.bin bs=512 skip=1
> cat boot.bin >> tp_recovery.bin
> cat owrt.bin >> tp_recovery.bin
Place tp_recovery.bin in root directory of TFTP server and listen on
192.168.0.66/24.
Connect router LAN ports with your computer and power up the router
while pressing the reset button. The router will download the image via
tftp and after ~1 Minute reboot into OpenWRT.
U-Boot CLI
----------
U-Boot CLI can be activated by holding down '4' on bootup.
Dual U-Boot
-----------
This is the first TP-Link MediaTek device to feature a split-uboot
design. The first (factory-uboot) provides recovery via TFTP and HTTP,
jumping straight into the second (firmware-uboot) if no recovery needs
to be performed. The firmware-uboot unpacks and executed the kernel.
Web-Recovery
------------
TP-Link integrated a new Web-Recovery like the one on the Archer C7v4 /
TL-WR1043v5. Stock-firmware sets a flag in the "romfile" partition
before beginning to write and removes it afterwards. If the router boots
with this flag set, bootloader will automatically start Web-recovery and
listens on 192.168.0.1. This way, the vendor-firmware or an OpenWRT
factory image can be written.
By doing the same while performing sysupgrade, we can take advantage of
the Web-recovery in OpenWRT.
It is important to note that Web-Recovery is only based on this flag. It
can't detect e.g. a crashing kernel or other means. Once activated it
won't boot the OS before a recovery action (either via TFTP or HTTP) is
performed. This recovery-mode is indicated by an illuminated WPS-LED on
boot.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Patch picked from commit 82618062cf
This enables 4B opcodes for MX25L25635F, to fix the reboot crash
issue (FS#1120) At least 3 devices are using this flash
- GeHua GHL-R-001
- Youku YK1
- Newifi D1
Now the MX25L25635F can be correctly detected without breaking MX25L25635E
[ 3.034324] spi-mt7621 1e000b00.spi: sys_freq: 220000000
[ 3.045962] m25p80 spi0.0: mx25l25635f (32768 Kbytes)
[ 3.056098] 4 fixed-partitions partitions found on MTD device spi0.0
[ 3.068748] Creating 4 MTD partitions on "spi0.0":
Signed-off-by: Deng Qingfang <dengqf6@mail2.sysu.edu.cn>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com> [added deprecation notice]
Current code directly writes the FOE entry to hash_val+1 position
when hash collision occurs. However, it is found that this behavior
will cause the cache and the hardware FOE table to be inconsistent.
For example, there are three flows, and their hashed values are all
equal to 100. The first flow is written to the position of 100. The
second flow is written to the position of 100+1. Then, the logic of
the current code will also write the third flow to 100+1.
At this time, the cache has flow 1 and 2; and the hardware FOE table
has flow 1 and 3, where these two parts store different contents.
So it is necessary to check whether the hash_val+1 is also occupied
before writing. If hash_val+1 is also occupied, we won’t bind th
third flow to the FOE table.
Addition to that, we also cancel the processing of foe_entry removal
because the hardware has auto age-out ability. The hardware will
periodically iterate through the FOE table to find out the time-out
entry and set it as INVALID.
Signed-off-by: HsiuWen Yen <y.hsiuwen@gmail.com>
Move the zip compression into a build recipe. Pad the image using the
existing build recipes as well to remove duplicate functionality
Change the code to append header and footer in two steps. Allow to use a
fixed filename as the netgear update image does.
Use a fixed timestamp within the zip archive to make the images
reproducible.
Due to the changes we are now compatible to the gnu89 c standard used by
default on the buildbots and we don't need to force a more recent
standard anymore.
Beside all changes, the footer still looks wrong in compare to the
netgear update image.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Sometimes the tuples might be hashed to the same FOE entry.
When this hash collision problem occurs, some of the
connections will not be bound and consequently the CPU
idle rate cannot reach 100%. Therefore, two-way hashing
is adopted to alleviate this problem.
Signed-off-by: HsiuWen Yen <y.hsiuwen@gmail.com>
Always enable the pwr led and use the usr led for boot status indication.
Rename nodes in the dts, to match what is recommend in the devicetree
specification.
Increase the maximum spi frequency to 20MHz and drop the m25p,chunked-io
which isn't required on mt7621.
Use the BTN_0 keycode for the mode button. This board doesn't have any
wireless.
Use a more descriptive label for the reset button and the GPIO enabling
the usb vcc supply.
Use the beeper kernel module for the buzzer.
Fix the pinmux to switch only pins used as GPIOs to the GPIO function.
Add support for the PoE enable GPIO to the userspace. The PoE power
status can be read via GPIO7. Since OpenWrt doesn't have support for
reading inputs from userspace, prepare only the pinmux for the GPIO.
Signed-off-by: Anton Arapov <arapov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thibaut VARÈNE <hacks@slashdirt.org>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
This patch adds support of MikroTik RouterBOARD 750Gr3, without the need
to reflashing the bootloader.
Installation through RouterBoot follows the usual MikroTik method
https://openwrt.org/toh/mikrotik/common
Since the image isn't compatible with RouterBOARD 750Gr3 installations
which have replaced the bootloader, the former used userspace boardname
is not added to the SUPPORTED_DEVICES, to prevent a brick while trying
to upgrade to the image with native support.
Signed-off-by: Anton Arapov <arapov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thibaut VARÈNE <hacks@slashdirt.org>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Create a common template which has the required image build code
defined. Add some new variables to pass individual parts to the seama
recipes.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Specs
SoC: MT7621AT
RAM: 512MiB
Flash: 32MiB MX25L25635F SPI NOR
2.4G: MT7603EN
5G: MT7612EN
Ethernet: 4x GE ports (1x WAN, 3x LAN) with link status LEDs
USB 3.0
LEDs: POWER, 5G WIFI, 2.4G WIFI, USB, Internet.
The last two ones are controlled by GPIO
UART: There are 2 UARTs (UARTLITE1/ttyS0 and UARTLITE3/ttyS1) on board.
UARTLITE1 is close to LEDs, and UARTLITE3 is close to flash chip.
The stock u-boot uses UARTLITE1 by default. Baud rate is 57600
Flash instruction
1. telnet 192.168.9.1 2317, username is "root" and password is "admin"
One can alternatively use UART to log in
2. Put OpenWrt firmware in a FAT32 USB drive, and connect it to the router
One can alternatively download the firmware via wget through Internet
3. mtd write /path/to/openwrt.bin firmware
4. reboot
Signed-off-by: Deng Qingfang <dengqf6@mail2.sysu.edu.cn>
Very similar to the DWR-921-C1, except has a telephony/RJ11 port (not
sure if supported, I didn't try), wireless router with QMI LTE embedded
modem is based on the MT7620N SoC.
Specification:
* MediaTek MT7620N (580 Mhz)
* 64 MB of RAM
* 16 MB of FLASH
* 802.11bgn radio
* 5x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet (1 WAN and 4 LAN)
* 2x external, detachable (LTE) antennas
* UART header on PCB (57600 8n1)
* 6x LED (GPIO-controlled)
* 1x bi-color Signal Strength LED (GPIO-controlled)
* 2x button
* JBOOT bootloader
The status led has been assigned to the dwr-922-e2:green:signalstrength
(lte signal strength) led. At the end of the boot it is switched off and
is available for lte operation. Works correctly also during sysupgrade
operation.
Installation:
Apply factory image via d-link http web-gui, or via recovery interface:
How to recover/revert to OEM firmware:
1.) Push and hold the reset button and turn on the power. Wait until all
LEDs start rapidly blinking (~10sec.)
2.) DHCP should give you an IP in the 192.168.123.0/24 subnet, or set
one manually
3.) Upload original factory image via JBOOT http interface at IP
192.168.123.254
4.) If http doesn't work, it can be done with curl command:
curl -F FN=@XXXXX.binhttp://192.168.123.254/upg
where XXXXX.bin is name of firmware file.
5.) You can optionally telnet to 192.168.123.254 before or during the
upload and it will report the flashing status, memory address etc.
6.) Once web UI and/or telnet says "Success", power cycle the router, or
type "reboot" into the telnet session.
Signed-off-by: Simon Quigley <squigley@squigley.net>
[squashed commits, word wrap commit message, rename signal strenght led
name to match what is used for the DWR-921-C1 since they share the led
configuration, add label referenced in the aliases node]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
>From the Documentation/devicetree/bindings/leds/common.txt:
- default-state : The initial state of the LED. Valid values are "on", "off",
and "keep". If the LED is already on or off and the default-state property is
set the to same value, then no glitch should be produced where the LED
momentarily turns off (or on). The "keep" setting will keep the LED at
whatever its current state is, without producing a glitch. The default is
off if this property is not present.
So setting the default-state of the LEDs to `off` is redundant as `off`
is default LED state anyway. We should remove it as almost every new
PR/patch submission contains this property by default which seems to be
just copy&paste from some DTS file already present in the tree.
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Netgear R6350 is a wireless router, aka Netgear AC1750.
Specification:
- SoC: Mediatek MT7621AT (2 CPU cores, 4 threads)
- RAM: 128MiB (Nanya NT5CC64M16GP-DI)
- ROM: 128MiB NAND Flash (Macronix MX30LF1G18AC-TI)
- Wireless:
for 11b/g/n (upto 300Mbps): MT7603
for 11a/ac (upto 1450Mbps) : MT7615, is not avaliable now
- Ethernet LAN speed: up to 1000Mbps
- Ethernet LAN ports: 4
- Ethernet WAN speed: up to 1000Mbps
- Ethernet WAN ports: 1
- USB ports: 1 (USB 2.0)
- LEDs: 4 (all can be controlled by SoC's GPIO)
- buttons: 2
- serial ports: unknown
Installation through telnet:
- Copy kernel.bin and rootfs.bin to a USB flash disk,
plug to usb port on the router.
- Enable telnet with link: http://192.168.1.1/setup.cgi?todo=debug
(login if required, default: admin password)
- You will see "Debug Enabled!"
- Telnet 192.168.1.1 and login with "root"
- ls /mnt/shares/ to find out path of your USB disk.
'myUdisk' for example.
- cd /mnt/shares/myUdisk
- mtd_write write rootfs.bin Rootfs
- mtd_write write kernel.bin Kernel
- reboot
recovery when bricked:
nmrpflash can be used to recover to the netgear firmware
if a broken image was flashed.
The SC_PART_MAP partition suggests that an on flash partition table
exists. After implementing a partition parser/builder for the sercom
partition format, the definitions don't match the flash layout used by
the stock firmware.
It either means the partition format has not yet been completely
understood or it isn't used by the stock firmware. For now, use fixed
partitions instead.
Signed-off-by: NOGUCHI Hiroshi <drvlabo@gmail.com>
[apply latest ramips changes and document the on flash partition map
issues]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
- Mark other partitions as read-only for HC5x61
- Only enable USB and PCIe for HC5761/HC5861
HC5661 doesn't have a USB port, and there is nothing attached to its PCIe.
- Fix HC5761 switch ports
HC5761 has only 3 ethernet ports (1x WAN + 2x LAN). Remove unused ports.
- Fix HC5861 5GHz radio
HC5861 has MT7612EN 5GHz WiFi chip, not MT7610EN.
- Fix HC5761/HC5861 WiFi LEDs
After 5GHz is enabled, it becomes wlan0. And 2.4GHz would be wlan1.
- Fix HC5x61 image size
It should be 15872k (0xf80000)
Signed-off-by: Deng Qingfang <dengqf6@mail2.sysu.edu.cn>
It's no longer needed as all mt7621 devices use DT binding (supported by
upstream mtd code) for specifying "firmware" part format explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
Due to the enforced image metadata we ensure that the correct image is
uploaded. Checks based on a magic arn't required any more.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Beside one exception, no one took care of these two remaining boards
still using the legacy image build code during the last two years.
Since OpenWrt 14.07 the ALLNET ALL0239-3G image building is broken.
The Sitecom WL-341 v3 image build code looks pretty hackish and broken.
It's questionable if the legacy image works as all.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Drop the factory images and the firmware tool to create them. They don't
work any more, since the factory image has an uImage header covering the
whole kernel + rootfs. This way the uImage splitter will not be able to
find the rootfs and the kernel will panic later on.
The factory images were most likely added at a time the board had
distinct partitions for kernel and rootfs.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
In commit d70ec3008d, a firmware compatible
string of "denx,uimage" was added for the Dlink DIR-860L-B1. Unfortunately,
this was the wrong string. It needs "seama" instead.
Signed-off-by: Russell Senior <russell@personaltelco.net>
The latest dtc compiler considers nodes named i2c or spi as the
respective bus:
/pinctrl/i2c: incorrect #address-cells for I2C bus
/pinctrl/spi: incorrect #address-cells for SPI bus
Rename the node to fix the false positives.
Fix the spi node unit address for the DWR-512-B and UBNT-ER-e50 to get
rid of the following warning:
SPI bus unit address format error, expected "n"
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Select the matching mt76 driver for the PCI wireless of the following
devices:
- HiWiFi HC5861B
- Mercury MAC1200R v2.0
- Netgear AC1200 R6120
- Buffalo WCR-1166DS
- ZyXEL Keenetic Extra II
- Wavlink WL-WN575A3
Because every device has selected the corresponding mt76 driver, we can
include kmod-mt7603 instead of the mt76 metapackage, which used for the
wireless of the mt7628 and mt7688 WiSoC.
Signed-off-by: Chen Minqiang <ptpt52@gmail.com>
[select kmod-mt7603 as target default package, add wireless driver for
WL-WN575A3]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Currently OpenWrt doesn't support switching MT7628 into AP mode
(which is done by writing some undocumented registers in MTK SDK)
Without doing so, enabling SD breaks 4 FE ports and the SD controller
doesn't work since SD pins aren't configured correctly.
Disable SDHC on HC5661A to recover the 4 FE ports.
Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
[drop the sdhci node completely]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
I wanted to add status LEDs support to my imx6 based board and have found out,
that I could use diag.sh script found in ramips platform, which seems to be
also shared in a few other platforms:
4801276bc2078c5bcf03003c831e3b0a target/linux/ramips/base-files/etc/diag.sh
4801276bc2078c5bcf03003c831e3b0a target/linux/ipq40xx/base-files/etc/diag.sh
4801276bc2078c5bcf03003c831e3b0a target/linux/ath79/base-files/etc/diag.sh
And @chunkeey suggested to me, that I can also add lantiq, ipq806x and
apm821xx to the list of platforms which could share this generic
diag.sh.
I've extended the base diag.sh in a way, that if it detects any of the
DTS LED aliases, then it would use the generic DTS set_led_state code.
The code in platform's diag.sh has moved to base-files package in this
commit:
base-files: diag.sh: Make it more generic towards DTS so it could be reused
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Tested-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com> (apm821xx and ipq40xx)
The DWR-118-A1 Wireless Router is based on the MT7620A SoC.
Specification:
- MediaTek MT7620A (580 Mhz)
- 64 MB of RAM
- 16 MB of FLASH
- 1x 802.11bgn radio
- 1x 802.11ac radio (MT7610EN)
- 3x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet (3 LAN)
- 2x 10/100/1000 Mbps ICPlus IP1001 Ethernet PHY (1 WAN AND 1 LAN)
- 1x internal, non-detachable antenna
- 2x external, non-detachable antennas
- 1x USB 2.0
- UART (J1) header on PCB (57600 8n1)
- 7x LED (5x GPIO-controlled), 2x button
- JBOOT bootloader
Known issues:
- WIFI 5G LED not working
- flash is very slow
The status led has been assigned to the dwr-118-a1:green:internet led.
At the end of the boot it is switched off and is available for other
operation. Work correctly also during sysupgrade operation.
Installation:
Apply factory image via http web-gui or JBOOT recovery page
How to revert to OEM firmware:
- push the reset button and turn on the power. Wait until LED start
blinking (~10sec.)
- upload original factory image via JBOOT http (IP: 192.168.123.254)
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
Because every device has selected the corresponding mt76 driver, we can
now disable the mt76 metapackage by default to make sure that other
devices (those don't need mt76) avoid selecting unwanted packages.
We can find the hardware specifies and determine the dependencies on
these sites:
https://wikidevi.com/wiki/https://openwrt.org/toh/hwdata/
Signed-off-by: Chen Minqiang <ptpt52@gmail.com>
All boards neither expose the PCIe as Mini-PCIe nor have anything
attached to the PCIe Bus. Disable PCIe for those by dropping the node
from the dts files.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Compile the loader if the relocate-kernel image recipe is used and get
rid of the legacy build code to do so.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Specify firmware partition format by compatible string.
List of devices:
-DWR-116-A1
-DWR-118-A2
-DWR-512-B
-DWR-921-C1
-LR-25G001
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
MTC Wireless Router WR1201 is the OEM name of the board. It is also sold
rebranded as STRONG Dual Band Gigabit Router 1200.
Specification:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7621A (880 MHz)
- Flash: 16 MiB
- RAM: 128 MiB
- Wireless: 2.4Ghz(MT7602EN) and 5Ghz (MT7612EN)
- Ethernet speed: 10/100/1000
- Ethernet ports: 4+1
- 1x USB 3.0
- 1x microSD reader
- Serial baud rate of Bootloader and factory firmware: 57600
The OEM webinterface writes only as much bytes as listed in the
uImage header field to the flash. Also, the OEM webinterface
evaluates the name field of uImage header before flashing (the
string "WR1201_8_128")
To flash via webinterface, is mandatory to use first initramfs.bin
and after (from the OpenWrt) the sysupgrade.bin
Some notes:
- Some microSD will not work:
mtk-sd 1e130000.sdhci: no support for card's volts
mmc0: error -22 whilst initialising SDIO card
mtk-sd 1e130000.sdhci: no support for card's volts
mmc0: error -22 whilst initialising MMC card
mtk-sd 1e130000.sdhci: no support for card's volts
mmc0: error -22 whilst initialising SDIO card
mtk-sd 1e130000.sdhci: card claims to support voltages below defined range
mtk-sd 1e130000.sdhci: no support for card's volts
mmc0: error -22 whilst initialising MMC card
mtk-sd 1e130000.sdhci: no support for card's volts
mmc0: error -22 whilst initialising SDIO card
mtk-sd 1e130000.sdhci: no support for card's volts
mmc0: error -22 whilst initialising MMC card
Signed-off-by: Valentín Kivachuk <vk18496@gmail.com>
Specify firmware partition format by compatible string.
formats in ramips:
- denx,uimage
- tplink,firmware
- seama
It's unlikely but the firmware splitting might not work any longer for
the following boards, due to a custom header:
- EX2700: two uImage headers
- BR-6478AC-V2: edimax-header
- 3G-6200N: edimax-header
- 3G-6200NL: edimax-header
- BR-6475ND: edimax-header
- TEW-638APB-V2: umedia-header
- RT-N56U: mkrtn56uimg
But it rather looks like the uImage splitter is fine with the extra
header.
The following dts are not touched, due to lack of a compatible string in
the matching firmware splitter submodule:
- CONFIG_MTD_SPLIT_JIMAGE_FW
DWR-116-A1.dts
DWR-118-A2.dts
DWR-512-B.dts
DWR-921-C1.dts
LR-25G001.dts
- CONFIG_MTD_SPLIT_TRX_FW
WCR-1166DS.dts
WSR-1166.dts
- CONFIG_MTD_SPLIT_MINOR_FW
RBM11G.dts
RBM33G.dts
- CONFIG_MTD_SPLIT_LZMA_FW
AR670W.dts
- CONFIG_MTD_SPLIT_WRGG_FW
DAP-1522-A1.dts
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
Use .bin as file extension where possible. The user doesn't need to that
sysupgrade images for NAND boards are tarballs.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Having MIT as alternative is sometimes preferred by upstream maintainers
and allows sharing that simple code with other projects. We don't really
want multiple DTS versions for the same device.
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
The previous offset was invalid and pointed to the end of the partition,
which was causing issues with mt76
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
The 5GHz radio of this device uses an mt7610e PCI-E chip, which has
been recently started to be supported.
mt76x0e 0000:01:00.0: card - bus=0x1, slot = 0x0 irq=4
mt76x0e 0000:01:00.0: ASIC revision: 76100002
mt76x0e 0000:01:00.0: Firmware Version: 0.1.00
mt76x0e 0000:01:00.0: EEPROM ver:01 fae:00
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Specify firmware partition format to denx,uimage in compatible DTS property.
2 uimage-fw partitions found on MTD device firmware
Creating 2 MTD partitions on "firmware":
0x000000000000-0x00000017f72b : "kernel"
0x00000017f72b-0x000000f70000 : "rootfs"
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Flash partitions were moved under partition table node, but addition of
compatible property was omitted which lead to following boot failure:
VFS: Cannot open root device "(null)" or unknown-block(0,0): error -6
Please append a correct "root=" boot option; here are the available partitions:
1f00 16384 mtdblock0
(driver?)
Kernel panic - not syncing: VFS: Unable to mount root fs on unknown-block(0,0)
Fixes: e4d9217f (ramips: improve BDCOM WAP2100-SK support)
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
The 5 GHz radio of this device uses an mt7610e pci-e chip, which has
been recently added support.
Tested on the actual device as AP and client, TCP throughput ~90 Mbps
U/D.
Signed-off-by: Roger Pueyo Centelles <roger.pueyo@guifi.net>
Add support for UniElec U7621-06 variant with 512MB RAM and 64MB flash.
Additional specs are below:
CPU: MT7621 (880Mhz)
Bootloader: Ralink U-Boot
Flash: 64MB
- U-Boot identifies as Macronix MX66L51235F
- kernel identifies as MX66L51235l (65536 Kbytes)
RAM: 512MB
Rest of the details as per commit 46ab81e405 ("ramips add support for
UniElec U7621-06")
Signed-off-by: Nishant Sharma <nishant@unmukti.in>
[use generic board detection, add firmware partition compatible, extend
firmware partition to use all of the remaining flash space, add a
maximum image size matching the firmware partition size]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Use the generic board detection for the board instead of the target
specific one. Mark the sysupgrade image compatible with the former used
userspace boardname to allow an upgrade from earlier versions.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The RavPower WD03 is a mt7620n based baord. With the change applied, I2C
should work now with the RavPower WD03.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Badaire <mbadaire@gmail.com>
[reworded commit message]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
With ed25e3ac02 ("ramips: fix some clocks in mt7621.dtsi") the
cpuclock node was dropped from the mt7621.dtsi without removing the
references to this node from the GB-PC1/PC2 dts files.
Remove them now, to fix the build error.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
It has to be <board>:<colour>:<function> and is expected exactly this
way by the userspace scripts.
While at it, fix some whitespace issues in the dts file and rename the
flash node as required upstream.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Use the generic board detection instead of the target specific one as
all recent additions are doing.
Setup the USB led via devicetree (a58535771f) and include the required
driver by default. Merge the led userspace setting with an existing
identical case.
Use the wps led for boot status indication.
Move the partitions into a partition table node (6031ab345d) and drop
needless labels. Drop misplaced cells properties (53624c1702).
Cleanup the pinmux and only switch pins to gpio functions which a
referenced as gpio in the dts.
Match the maximum image size with the size of the firmware partition.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The sd function of the nd_sd group configures two of the groups pins as
gpios. The pins are used as PCIe reset/power.
Due to the driver load order, the pins are configured way to late if
triggered by the sd-card driver.
To not introduce another kind of driver load order dependency and
configure the pins as early as possible, means during pinmux driver
load.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
In case the nd_sd group is set to the sd-card function, Pins 45 + 46 are
configured as GPIOs. If they are blocked by the sd function, they can't
be used as GPIOs.
Reported-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
This reverts commit dcdc6d9dad.
Even if described this way in the datasheet, it causes a bootloop on a
RT-N56U (v1):
of-flash 1c000000.nor-flash: do_map_probe() failed for type cfi_probe
of-flash 1c000000.nor-flash: do_map_probe() failed
VFS: Cannot open root device “(null)” or unknown-block(0,0): error -6
Fixes: FS#1930
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Use the generic board detection instead of the target specific one as
all recent additions are doing.
Add the wireless led according the gpio number from the datasheet.
Rename the board part of the leds to match the name used for the
compatible string. Finally, do not hijack the wps led for boot status
indication longer than necessary.
Merge userspace config into existing cases.
Include the manufacture Name in the dts model string.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The Lava LR-25G001 Wireless Router is based on the MT7620A SoC.
Specification:
- MediaTek MT7620A (580 Mhz)
- 64 MB of RAM
- 16 MB of FLASH
- 1x 802.11bgn radio
- 1x 802.11ac radio (MT7610EN)
- 5x 10/100/1000 Mbps AR8337 Switch (1 WAN AND 4 LAN)
- 2x external, detachable antennas
- 1x USB 2.0
- UART (J3) header on PCB (57600 8n1)
- 8x LED (3x GPIO-controlled), 2x button
- JBOOT bootloader
Known issues:
- Work only three Gigabit ports (3/5, 1 WAN and 2LAN)
Installation:
Apply factory image via http web-gui or JBOOT recovery page
How to revert to OEM firmware:
- push the reset button and turn on the power. Wait until LED start
blinking (~10sec.)
- upload original factory image via JBOOT http (IP: 192.168.123.254)
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
Some boards have external switches different than mt7530.
This patch allow to use mdio-mode without 0x1f register.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Dembicki <paweldembicki@gmail.com>
For a long time the mt7621 uses a fixed cpu clock which causes a problem
if the cpu frequency is not 880MHz.
This patch fixes the cpu clock calculation and adds the cpu/bus clkdev
which will be used in dts.
Signed-off-by: Weijie Gao <hackpascal@gmail.com>
The memc node from mt7621.dtsi has incorrect register resource.
Fix it according to the programming guide.
Signed-off-by: Weijie Gao <hackpascal@gmail.com>
These two patches both modified the mt7621.c, and the patch file
998-mt7621-needs-jiffies.patch adds only one line which is used by the
another patch file. So merge them into one file.
Signed-off-by: Weijie Gao <hackpascal@gmail.com>
Introduce mt76x0e device tree node in RT-AC51U dts.
Define mt76x0e mtd partition and offset
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo.bianconi@redhat.com>
The gpio-ralink driver has everything it needs to be used as an
interrupt controller except for device tree support. This simple patch
adds that support by configuring the irq domain to use two cells and
adding the appropriate documentation to the devicetree bindings.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Santos <daniel.santos@pobox.com>
On the bottom sticker it's branded as ZTE ZXECS EBG3130 device, but in factory
OpenWrt image it's referenced as BDCOM WAP2100-SK device.
Specifications:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7620A
- RAM: 128 MB
- Flash: 16 MB
- Ethernet: 5 FE ports
- Wireless radio: 2T2R 2.4 GHz and 1T1R 5 GHz (MT7610EN, unsupported)
- UART: 1 x UART on PCB marked as J2 (R=RX, T=TX, G=GND) with 115200 8N1 config
- LEDs: Power, FE ports 1-5, WPS, USB, RF 2.4G, RF 5G
- Other: USB port, SD card slot and 2x external antennas (non-detachable)
Flashing instructions:
A) The U-Boot has HTTP based firmware upgrade
A1) Flashing notes
We've identified so far two different batches of units, unfortunately
each batch has different U-Boot bootloader flashed with different
default environment variables, thus each batch has different IP address
for accessing web based firmware updater.
* First batch has web based bootloader IP address 1.1.1.1
* Second batch has web based bootloader IP address 192.168.1.250
In case you can't connect to either of those IPs, you can try to get
the default IP address via two methods:
A1.1) Serial console, then the IP address is visible during the boot
...
HTTP server is starting at IP: 1.1.1.1
raspi_read: from:40004 len:6
HTTP server is ready!
...
A1.2) Over telnet/SSH using this command:
root@bdcom:/# grep ipaddr= /dev/mtd0
ipaddr=1.1.1.1
A2) Flashing with browser
* Change IP address of PC to 1.1.1.2 with 255.255.255.0 netmask
* Reboot the device and try to reach web based bootloader in the
browser with the following URL http://1.1.1.1
* Quickly select the firmware sysupgrade file and click on the
`Update firmware` button, this all has to be done within 10 seconds,
bootloader doesn't wait any longer
If done correctly, the web page should show UPDATE IN PROGRESS page
with progress indicator. Once the flashing completes (it takes roughly
around 1 minute), the device will reboot to the OpenWrt firmware
A3) Flashing with curl
sudo ip addr add 1.1.1.2/24 dev eth0
curl \
--verbose \
--retry 3 \
--retry-delay 1 \
--retry-max-time 30 \
--connect-timeout 30 \
--form "firmware=@openwrt-ramips-mt7620-BDCOM-WAP2100-SK-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin" \
http://1.1.1.1
Now power on the router.
B) The U-boot is based on Ralink SDK so we can flash the firmware using UART.
1. Configure PC with a static IP address and setup an TFTP server.
2. Put the firmware into the tftp directory.
3. Connect the UART line as described on the PCB (G=GND, R=RX, T=TX)
4. Power up the device and press 2, follow the instruction to set device and
tftp server IP address and input the firmware file name. U-boot will then load
the firmware and write it into the flash.
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Belkin F5D8235 v2 has two ethernet switches on board.
One internal rt3052 and rtl8366rb on rgmii interface.
Looks like internal switch settings were lost in
translation to device tree infrastructure.
Signed-off-by: Roman Yeryomin <roman@advem.lv>
Specifically, SKW92A_E16, described here:
http://www.skylabmodule.com/wp-content/uploads/SkyLab_SKW92A_V1.04_datasheet.pdf
Specification:
- MediaTek MT7628N/N (580 Mhz)
- 64 MB of RAM
- 16 MB of FLASH
- 2T2R 2.4 GHz
- 5x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet
- 2x u.FL
- Power by micro-USB connector at USB1 on EVB
- UART via micro-USB connector at USB3 on EVB (57600 8n1)
- 5x Ethernet LEDs
- 1x WLAN LEDs
- 1x WPS LED connected by jumper wire from I2S_CK on J20 to WPS_LED pin hole next
to daughter board on EVB
- WPS/Reset button (S2 on EVB)
- RESET button (S1 on EVB) is *not* connected to RST hole next to daughter board
Flash instruction:
>From Skylab firmware:
1. Associate with SKYLAP_AP
2. In a browser, load: http://10.10.10.254/
3. Username/password: admin/admin
4. In web admin interface: Administration / Upload Firmware, browse to
sysupgrade image, apply, flash will fail with a message:
Not a valid firmware. *** Warning: "/var/tmpFW" has corrupted data!
5. Telnet to 10.10.10.254, drops you into a root shell with no credentials
6. # cd /var
7. # mtd_write -r write tmpFW mtd4
Unlocking mtd4 ...
Writing from tmpFW to mtd4 ... [e]
8. When flash has completed, you will have booted into your firmware.
>From U-boot via TFTP and initramfs:
1. Place openwrt-ramips-mt76x8-skw92a-initramfs-kernel.bin on a TFTP server
2. Connect to serial console at USB3 on EVB
3. Connect ethernet between port 1 (not WAN) and your TFTP server (e.g.
192.168.11.20)
4. Start terminal software (e.g. screen /dev/ttyUSB0 57600) on PC
5. Apply power to EVB
6. Interrupt u-boot with keypress of "1"
7. At u-boot prompts:
Input device IP (10.10.10.123) ==:192.168.11.21
Input server IP (10.10.10.3) ==:192.168.11.20
Input Linux Kernel filename (root_uImage) ==:openwrt-ramips-mt76x8-skw92a-initramfs-kernel.bin
8. Move ethernet to port 0 (WAN) on EVB
9. At new OpenWrt console shell, fetch squashfs-sysupgrade image and flash
with sysupgrade.
>From U-boot via TFTP direct flash:
1. Place openwrt-ramips-mt76x8-skw92a-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin on a TFTP server
2. Connect to serial console at USB3 on EVB (57600 8N1)
3. Connect ethernet between port 1 (not WAN) an your TFTP server (e.g.
192.168.11.20)
4. Start terminal software (e.g. screen /dev/ttyUSB0 57600) on PC
5. Apply power to EVB
6. Interrupt u-boot with keypress of "2"
7. At u-boot prompts:
Warning!! Erase Linux in Flash then burn new one. Are you sure?(Y/N) Y
Input device IP (10.10.10.123) ==:192.168.11.21
Input server IP (10.10.10.3) ==:192.168.11.20
Input Linux Kernel filename (root_uImage) ==:openwrt-ramips-mt76x8-skw92a-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
8. When transfer is complete or as OpenWrt begins booting, move ethernet to
port 0 (WAN).
Signed-off-by: Russell Senior <russell@personaltelco.net>
Both devices come with a MediaTek MT7610E 5GHz 802.11ac 1T1R radio
which wasn't supported at the time the devices were added to OpenWrt.
Now that we got it, include kmod-mt76x0e in images for those devices.
Reported-by: Arian Sanusi <openwrt@semioptimal.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
as indicated in commit c5bf408ed6 "(ramips: fix image generation for mt76x8")
more rework was needed to fix the other issues.
Building on another machine, but using the same arch, showed
the application failing again for different reasons.
Fix this by completely rewriting the application, fixing following found issues:
- buffer overflows, resulting in stack corruption
- flaws in memory requirement calculations (too small, too large)
- memory leaks
- missing bounds checking on string handling
- non-reproducable images, by using unitilized memory in checksum calculation
- missing error handling, resulting in succes on specific image errors
- endianness errors when building on BE machines
- various minor build warnings
- documentation did not match the code actions (header item locations)
- allowing input to be decimal, hex or octal now
Signed-off-by: Koen Vandeputte <koen.vandeputte@ncentric.com>
Newer batches of several Mikrotik boards contain this yet-unsupported
flash chip, for instance:
- rb941-2nd (hAP lite)
- rb952ui-5ac2nd (hAP ac lite)
- RBM33G
and probably other Mikrotik boards need this patch as well.
The patch was submitted upstream by Robert Marko: https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/934181/
Closes: FS#1715
Signed-off-by: Baptiste Jonglez <git@bitsofnetworks.org>
Cc: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Add out of the box support for 802.11r and 802.11w to all targets not
suffering from small flash.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Mathias did all the heavy lifting on this, but I'm the one who should
get shouted at for committing.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Darbyshire-Bryant <ldir@darbyshire-bryant.me.uk>
Don't hijack the status led to indicate the wireless state. If we don't
have a dedicated wireless led, it's as simply as the wireless status
can't be indicated.
Such a led misuse should be set by the user and not shipped by default.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Release the led used for boot status indication via devicetree instead
of setting a default off trigger in userspace.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Use diag.sh version used for other targets supporting different leds
for the different boot states.
The existing led sequences should be the same as before.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Assign the usbdev trigger via devicetree for all subtargets and drop
the userspace handling of the usb leds.
With the change all usb ports are triggering the usb led instead of
only usb 1.1 XOR usb 2.0 XOR usb 3.0 as it was before.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The sysupgrade image failed the check due to the wrong string in the
supported devices. This patch provides the correct name by dropping the
SUPPORTED_DEVICES to use the default generated name.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Förster <steffen@chemnitz.freifunk.net>
[drop the SUPPORTED_DEVICES, the old name was never used in a release]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Since c134210 power LED is no longer lights after boot-up.
Reversing gpio polarity makes it work as it should be.
Signed-off-by: Emil Muratov <gpm@hotplug.ru>
When building using the multiple devices option with per-device root
filesystem, only the meta package mt76 is omitted but not the
dependencies selected by the package.
Explicitly exclude all 3 mt76 packages, plus the metapackage.
Otherwise, these modules will be included in the build, wasting
a few hundred kilobytes.
Signed-off-by: Joseph C. Lehner <joseph.c.lehner@gmail.com>
[mention the root cause of the issue in the commit message]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Refreshed all patches.
Added new patch:
- 192-Revert-ubifs-xattr-Don-t-operate-on-deleted-inodes.patch
This fixes a bug introduced in upstream 4.14.68 which caused targets using
ubifs to produce file-system errors on boot, rendering them useless.
Compile-tested on: cns3xxx, imx6, x86_64
Runtime-tested on: cns3xxx, imx6, x86_64
Signed-off-by: Koen Vandeputte <koen.vandeputte@ncentric.com>
Kernel upstream commit 67a3ba25aa95 ("MIPS: Fix incorrect mem=X@Y handling") introduced a new issue for rt288x where "PHYS_OFFSET" is 0x0 but the calculated "ramstart" is not. As the prerequisite of custom memory map has been removed, this results in the full memory range of 0x0 - 0x8000000 to be marked as reserved
for this platform.
This patch adds the originally intended prerequisite again.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Wolf <dev-NTEO@vplace.de>
TP-Link TL-MR3020 v3 is a pocket-size router based on MediaTek MT7628N.
This PR is based on the work of @meyergru[1], with his permission.
Specification:
- MediaTek MT7628N/N (575 Mhz)
- 64 MB of RAM
- 8 MB of FLASH
- 2T2R 2.4 GHz
- 1x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet
Flash instruction:
The only way to flash the image in TL-MR3020 v3 is to use
tftp recovery mode in U-Boot:
1. Configure PC with static IP 192.168.0.225/24 and tftp server.
2. Rename "openwrt-ramips-mt76x8-tplink_tl-mr3020-v3-squashfs-tftp-recovery.bin"
to "tp_recovery.bin" and place it in tftp server directory.
3. Connect PC with the LAN port, press the reset button, power up
the router and keep button pressed for around 6-7 seconds, until
device starts downloading the file.
4. Router will download file from server, write it to flash and reboot.
[1] https://github.com/meyergru/lede-source/commits/TL-MR3020-V3
Signed-off-by: Carlo Nel <carlojnel@gmail.com>
The pinmux for all SoCs using this driver is now set via the pinmux. It
makes this code obsolete.
Some of the code targeting the mt76x8 SoCs is still required. The sd
card pins share the pads with the EPHY. These pads need to be switched
to digital mode if the pins are used for sd cards.
The eMMC 8-bit mode has to be enabled via pinmux instead of a kernel
option. The uart2 group need to be set to function "sdxc d5 d4", pwm1
to "sdxc d6" and pwm0 to "sdxc d7" to do so. It can't be done by as
part of a default pinmux, as it would break the normal operation of
uart2.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Set the pins to the required mode via the pinmux driver. It allows to
get rid of the pinmux related code in the sd card driver.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Drop the nd_sd gpio pinmux in case sdcard is used. They're mutually
exclusive and for most of the boards not even used as GPIOs.
If the pins are in sdcard mode, the pins ND_WE_N and ND_CS_N are still
GPIOs (#45 and #46).
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The rt3352 has a pin that can be used as second spi chip select,
watchdog reset or GPIO. The pinmux setup was missing the definition of
said pin but it is already used in the SoC dtsi.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>