It has been shown that the Fritz boxes have the correct mac address set
in the wireless calibration data/eeeprom. Use this mac address as base
for the ethernet and xdsl interface increment/decrement the address to
match the values stored in the tffs.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The firmware hotplug script tries to read the mac address from a
partition with the name "uboot-env" which does not exist (instead it's
name is uboot_env). This broke calculation of the new checksum (after
patching the mac address) which resulted in ath9k refusing to use the
EEPROM data.
The original error reported by ath9k was:
PCI: Enabling device 0000:00:0e.0 (0000 -> 0002)
ath: phy0: Bad EEPROM checksum 0x2523
ath: phy0: Unable to initialize hardware; initialization status: -22
ath9k 0000:00:0e.0: Failed to initialize device
Fixes: a20616863d ("lantiq: use ath9k device tree bindings
binding/owl-loader")
Signed-off-by: Martin Blumenstingl <martin.blumenstingl@googlemail.com>
Add an extra function to patch the mac and fixup the checksum
afterwards. Calculate the checksum position automatically. The offset
to the mac address is the same for all checksum protected EEPROMs.
No EEPROM requires a byte swapped mac address. The mac byte swap code
was required due to an bug in the script that is now fixed.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The EEPROM data in the flash of the ARV7518PW, ARV8539PW22,
BTHOMEHUBV2B and BTHOMEHUBV3A is stored byte-swapped (swab16), meaning
that for example the ath9k base_eep_header fields "version" (high and
low byte), "opCapFlags" and "eepMisc" are swapped (the latter ones are
just 1 byte wide, thus their position is swapped).
The old "ath,eep-endian" property enabled the corresponding swapping
logic in the ath9k driver (swab16 in ath9k_hw_nvram_swap_data, which is
based on the magic bytes in the EEPROM data which have nothing to do
with the calibration data - thus this logic should not be used
anymore).
Since we have switched to the upstream ath9k devicetree bindings there
is no binding anymore which enables swab16 in ath9k (as this logic is
not recommended anymore as explained above), leading to ath9k
initialization errors:
ath: phy0: Bad EEPROM VER 0x0001 or REV 0x00e0
(this shows that the version field is swapped, expected values are VER
0x000E and REV 0x0001)
Swapping the ath9k calibration data when extracting it from the flash
fixes the devices listed above (all other devices do not require
additional swapping, since the position of the fields is already as
expected by ath9k). This allows ath9k to read the version correctly
again, as well as the more important "eepmisc" field (which is used for
determining whether the data inside the EEPROM is Big or Little Endian
which is required to parse the EEPROM contents correctly).
Fixes: a20616863d ("lantiq: use ath9k device tree bindings
binding/owl-loader")
Signed-off-by: Martin Blumenstingl <martin.blumenstingl@googlemail.com>
This way the on nand bad block table is preserved and used. Add support
for nand OOB ECC checksums as well. It should fix all reported ubi
errors, which were all related to bad nand blocks and a purged on nand
bad block table.
The existing ubi partition will be reused, which eliminates the need
to touch the caldata during initial install. The BT u-boot has support
for loading a kernel from an ubi volume. It isn't necessary any longer
to replace the BT u-boot with a custom compiled one to use LEDE.
It is required to restore the BT Firmware and install LEDE from scratch
to switch to the new partition layout.
An image for restoring the BT firmware and installing LEDE is provided
at https://github.com/mkresin/lede/releases.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
This moves the extraction of the eeprom/calibration data to a hotplug
firmware script. Additionally it modifies all .dts to configure ath9k
directly from within the .dts.
The owl-loader approach enables support on devices with exotic eeprom
data locations (such as unaligned positions on the flash or data
inside an UBI volume).
Signed-off-by: Martin Blumenstingl <martin.blumenstingl@googlemail.com>
[add ath9k caldata mac address patcher]
[fixes DGN3500 wifi mac]
[fixes BTHOMEHUBV3A wifi mac]
[set invalid mac for BTHOMEHUB2B, FRITZ3370, FRITZ7320 & FRITZ7360SL to restore previous random mac behavior]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Set a device specific wireless mac address for ARV7506PW11, VGV7519 and
VGV7510KW22. The one from the EEPROM is a generic one and the same on
all boards.
Use the wifi@0,0 label and the pci0,0 compatible string for the
ARV7519PW and ARV7525PW since the pci vendor and device id is unknown.
It should work anyway since the compatible string isn't evaluated
(yet).
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Older busybox versions allowed using the local keyword outside of
functions, whereas 1.25.0 (which was introduced in 06fa1c46fc) do not
allow this anymore (leading to the following error when executing the
script: "file: local: line nn: not in a function").
Signed-off-by: Martin Blumenstingl <martin.blumenstingl@googlemail.com>
Ethernet, ADSL2+ and LEDs are fully functional.
Supporting the two TAE ports and SIP gateway was not attempted.
The WiFi is unreliable, due to experimental support for rt35xx family
devices by the rt2800pci driver.
Signed-off-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de>
[rebase to LEDE HEAD]
[switch to normal image instead of brnboot image]
[remove not required pinmux child nodes keys, leds, ebu, exin, pci_in and pci_out]
[remove switch_rst pinmux child node (no support for hw reset in driver/setting a default GPIO value in DT]
[enable usage of the wireless LED]
[fixup mac address configuration]
Sgned-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
ARV7510PW22, ARV752DPW and ARV752DPW22 have the RT2860 eeprom stored in
flash as big-endian, but the driver needs it in little-endian format. We
have to swab it before handing it over. This requires my earlier patch
for busybox.
Funnily enough, ARV752DPW works also with the incorrect eeprom, but
undoubtedly unoptimally. I have a hunch that also the final remaining
Lantiq board would require this swabbing, but I'm not sure, so I just
swab it in the three boards that I know about.
v2:
* Swab also on ARV7510PW22 based on feedback from Alvaro Rojas
* Fix the offset with bs=2
Signed-off-by: Matti Laakso <malaakso at elisanet.fi>
SVN-Revision: 40328
This patch adds almost full support for this board.
- WiFi is still not working
- USB will not power up. According to some reports, it may be a passive port
Signed-off-by: Antonios Vamporakis <ant@area128.com>
SVN-Revision: 40319