With d2b6bf1416 ("ramips: fix image validation errors") the board
name was changed to fix an image validation error. But this change
wasn't applied to all other files using the board name, which broke
sysupgrade.
Revert this change and use the former board name in the metadata
instead.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The WMDR-143N is a small module originally used as a Wifi client
in some Loewe smart TV sets. It is sold cheaply at german surplus
shops. The module contains a RT3662 SOC.
Specifications:
- 500 MHz CPU Clock
- 1x 10/100Mbps Ethernet (pin header)
- 32 MB of RAM
- 8 MB of FLASH
- 2T3R 2.4/5 GHz (SOC internal)
- 3 Antennas on PCB
- UART pads on PCB (J3: 1 = +3.3V, 2 = RX, 3 = TX, 4 = GND), TX
and RX are 3,3V only! The square hole is pin 1
- Power supply pads on PCB (J6: 1 and 2 = +5V, 3 and 4 = GND)
The square hole is pin 1
The original firmware has two identical kernel/rootfs images and
two "Factory" calibration data blocks in flash. The LEDE image
leaves only the first "Factory" block in place and uses both
"Kernel" blocks and the redundant "Factory" block together to gain
enough space for the jffs2 partition.
Flash instructions:
You need UART and Ethernet connections to flash the board. Use
the LEDE "sysupgrade.bin" image with tftp.
Apply power to the board and in the first 5 seconds, hit 2 to
select TFTP upload. The bootloader asks for board- and server IP
addresses and filename.
Alternate method: With the vendor firmware running, assign an IP
address to the ethernet port, tftp the firmware image to
/tmp and write to mtd4 ("KernelA").
Signed-off-by: Oliver Fleischmann <ogf@bnv-bamberg.de>
[remove pinctrl node from dts, no pin is used as GPIO]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The GnuBee Personal Cloud One crowdfunded on https://www.crowdsupply.com
It is a low-cost, low-power, network-attached storage device.
Specifications:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7621AT
- RAM: DDR3 512 MB
- Flash: 32 MB
- Six SATA ports for 2.5" Drives
- One micro SDcard
- One USB 3.0
- Two USB 2.0
- Gigabit Ethernet: 1 x WAN and 1 x LAN
- UART 3.5mm Audio Jack or 3 pin header - 57600 8N1
- Four GPIOs available on a pin header
Flash instructions:
The GnuBee Personal Cloud One ships with libreCMC installed.
libreCMC is a Free Software Foundation approved fork of LEDE/OpenWrt.
As such one can upgrade using the webinterface or sysupgrade.
Das U-Boot has multiple options for recovery or updates including :
- USB
- http
- tftp
Signed-off-by: L. D. Pinney <ldpinney@gmail.com>
[use switchdev led trigger, all interfaces are in vlan1; rename leds
according to board.d setting; remove ge2 group from the pinmux, this
group doesn't exist in the driver]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The TP-Link RE350 is a wall-wart AC1200 range extender/access point with
a single gigabit ethernet port and two non-detachable antennas, based on
the MT7621A SoC with MT7603E and MT7612E radios.
Firmware wise it is very similar to the QCA based RE450.
SoC: MediaTek MT7621A (880MHz)
Flash: 8MiB (Winbond W25Q64)
RAM: 64MiB (DDR2)
Ethernet: 1x 1Gbit
Wireless: 2T2R 2.4Ghz (MT7603E) and 5GHz (MT7612E)
LEDs: Power, 2.4G, 5G (blue), WPS (red and blue), ethernet link/act
(green)
Buttons: On/off, LED, reset, WPS
Serial header at J1, 57600 8n1:
Pin 1 TX
Pin 2 RX
Pin 3 GND
Pin 4 3.3V
Factory image can be uploaded directly through the stock UI.
Signed-off-by: Alex Maclean <monkeh@monkeh.net>
It uses one MT7615D radio chip with DBDC mode enabled. This mode allows
this single chip act as an 2x2 11n radio and an 2x2 11ac radio at the
same time. However mt76 doesn't support it currently so there is no
wireless available.
Specification:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7621AT
- Flash: 16 MB
- RAM: 128 MB
- Ethernet: 1 x WAN (10/100/1000Mbps) and 4 x LAN (10/100/1000 Mbps)
- Wireless radio: MT7615D on PCIE0
- UART: 1 x UART on PCB - 57600 8N1
Issue:
- Wireless radio doesn't work due to the lack of driver.
Flash instruction:
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.
4. Power up the device and press 2,then 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: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
Most of the ubnt-erx definition can be reused; the package removals in
DEVICE_PACKAGES have become redundant after d17cb4a68a "ramips: purge
default packages on MT7621".
Signed-off-by: Matthias Schiffer <mschiffer@universe-factory.net>
TP-Link TL-WR840N v4 and TL-WR841N v13 are simple N300 routers with
5-port FE switch and non-detachable antennas. Both are very similar
and are based on MediaTek MT7628NN (aka MT7628N) WiSoC.
The difference between these two models is in number of available
LEDs, buttons and power input switch.
This work is partially based on GitHub PR#974.
Specification:
- MT7628N/N (580 MHz)
- 64 MB of RAM (DDR2)
- 8 MB of FLASH
- 2T2R 2.4 GHz
- 5x 10/100 Mbps Ethernet
- 2x external, non-detachable antennas
- UART (J1) header on PCB (115200 8n1)
- TL-WR840N v4: 5x LED (GPIO-controlled), 1x button
- TL-WR841N v13: 8x LED (GPIO-controlled*), 2x button, power input
switch
* WAN LED in TL-WR841N v13 is a dual-color, dual-leads type which isn't
(fully) supported by gpio-leds driver. This type of LED requires both
GPIOs state change at the same time to select color or turn it off.
For now, we support/use only the green part of the LED.
Factory image notes:
These devices use version 3 of TP-Link header, fortunately without RSA
signature (at least in case of devices sold in Europe). The difference
lays in the requirement for a non-zero value in "Additional Hardware
Version" field. Ideally, it should match the value stored in vendor
firmware header on device ("0x4"/"0x13" for these devices) but it seems
that anything other than "0" is correct.
We are able to prepare factory firwmare file which is accepted and
(almost) correctly flashed from the vendor GUI. As it turned out, it
accepts files without U-Boot image with second header at the beginning
but due to some kind of bug in upgrade routine, flashed image gets
corrupted before it's written to flash.
Tests showed that the GUI upgrade routine copies value of "Additional
Hardware Version" from existing firmware into offset "0x2023c" in
provided file, _before_ storing it in flash. In case of vendor firmware
upgrade files (which all include U-Boot image and two headers), this
offset points to the matching field in kernel+rootfs firmware part
header. Unfortunately, in case of LEDE factory image file which contains
only one header, it points to the offset "0x2023c" in kernel image. This
leads to a corrupted kernel and ends up with a "soft-bricked" device.
The good news is that U-Boot in these devices contains well known tftp
recovery mode, which can be triggered with "reset" button. What's more,
in comparison to some of older MediaTek based TP-Link devices, this
recovery mode doesn't write whole file at offset "0x0" in flash, without
verifying provided file in advance. In case of recovery mode in these
devices, first "0x20000" bytes are always skipped and "0x7a0000" bytes
from rest of the file are stored in flash at offset "0x20000".
Flash instruction:
Until (if at all) TP-Link fixes described problem, the only way to flash
LEDE image in these devices is to use tftp recovery mode in U-Boot:
1. Configure PC with static IP 192.168.0.66/24 and tftp server.
2. Rename "lede-ramips-mt7628-tl-wr84...-squashfs-tftp-recovery.bin"
to "tp_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 for around 6-7 seconds, until
device starts downloading the file.
4. Router will download file from server, write it to flash and reboot.
To access U-Boot CLI, keep pressed "4" key during boot.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
There are already two targets (lantiq, ramips) which use mktplinkfw2
tool for creating images. This de-duplicates code, introduces two new
build commands: tplink-v2-header, tplink-v2-image and makes use of
them in place of old, (sub)target specific ones.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
This patch adds support for the Ubiquiti EdgeRouter X-SFP and
improves support for the EdgeRouter X (PoE-passthrough).
Specification:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7621AT
- Flash: 256 MiB
- RAM: 265 MiB
- Ethernet: 5 x LAN (1000 Mbps)
- UART: 1 x UART on PCB (3.3V, RX, TX, GND) - 57600 8N1
- EdgeRouter X:
- 1 x PoE-Passtrough (Eth4)
- powered by Wallwart or passive PoE
- EdgeRouter X-SFP:
- 5 x PoE-Out (24V, passive)
- 1 x SFP (unknown status)
- powered by Wallwart (24V)
Doesn't work:
* SoC has crypto engine but no open driver.
* SoC has nat acceleration, but no open driver.
* This router has 2MB spi flash soldered in but MT
nand/spi drivers do not support pin sharing,
so it is not accessable and disabled. Stock
firmware could read it and it was empty.
Installation
via vendor firmware:
- build an Initrd-image (> 3MiB) and upload the factory-image
- initrd can have luci-mod-failsafe
- flash final firmware via LuCI / sysupgrade on rebooted system
via TFTP:
- stop uboot into tftp-load into option "1"
- upload factory.bin image
Signed-off-by: Sven Roederer <devel-sven@geroedel.de>
This patch adds supports for the GL-inet GL-MT300N-V2.
Specification:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7628AN
- Flash: 16 MiB (W25Q128FVSG)
- RAM: 128 MiB DDR
- Ethernet: 1 x WAN (100 Mbps) and 1 x LAN (100 Mbps)
- USB: 1 x USB 2.0 port
- Button: 1 x switch button, 1 x reset button
- LED: 3 x LEDS (system power led is not GPIO controller)
- UART: 1 x UART on PCB (JP1: 3.3V, RX, TX, GND)
Installation through Luci:
- The original firmware is LEDE, so both LuCI or sysupgrade can be used.
- Do not keep settings, for sysupgrade please use the -n option.
Installation through bootloader webserver:
- Plug power and hold reset button until red LED blink to bright.
- Install sysupgrade image using web interface on 192.168.1.1.
Signed-off-by: Kyson Lok <kysonlok@gmail.com>
[match maximum image size with firmware partition]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
This PR allow the 3G modem embedded in the DWR-512 to be managed
by the wwan-ncm scripts. The modem will use the usb-option and
usb-cdc-ether drivers.
The DWR-512 DT is updated accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Lippolis <giu.lippolis@gmail.com>
Specification:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7620A (580 MHz)
- RAM: 64 MiB (Winbond W9751G6JB-25)
- Flash: 16 MiB (Spansion S25FL128SAIF00)
- LAN: x4 100M
- WAN: x1 100M
- Others: USB 2.0, reset button, wps button and 9 LEDs
Issues:
- 5 GHz band is not functional (missing driver support)
Installation:
Asus windows recovery tool:
- install the Asus firmware restoration utility
- unplug the router, hold the reset button while powering it on
- release when the power LED flashes slowly
- specify a static IP on your computer:
IP address: 192.168.1.75;
Subnet mask 255.255.255.0
- Start the Asus firmware restoration utility, specify the sysupgrade
image, and press upload
TFTP Recovery method:
- set computer to a static ip, 192.168.1.75
- connect computer to the LAN 1 port of the router
- hold the reset button while powering on the router for a few seconds
- send firmware image using a tftp client; i.e from linux:
$ tftp
tftp> binary
tftp> connect 192.168.1.1
tftp> put lede-ramips-mt7620-rt-ac51u-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
tftp> quit
Signed-off-by: Ørjan Malde <foxyred333@gmail.com>
This device exactly same as NBG-419N but with USB port and USB Led.
Specification:
- SoC: Ralink RT3052 (MIPS24Kc) @384MHz
- RAM: 32 MiB
- Flash: 8 MiB
- WLAN: WiSoC 2T2R/300Mbps (2.4GHz)
- LAN: 4x100M
- WAN: 1x100M
- USB: 1x2.0
Installation via serial console (57600 8N1) from TFTP server
- rename the firmware to something shorter, for example
"sysupgrade.bin" (max. 32 chars)
- copy firmware TFTP server's directory
- when you power on device, and see U-Boot log, immediatly push "2"
once.
- You will see this message:
2: System Load Linux Kernel then write to Flash via TFTP.
Warning!! Erase Linux in Flash then burn new one. Are you sure?
- Push "y", and enter: device IP, then TFTP server's IP, and then
image firmware file name.
The firmware will be downloaded within ~30 seconds and flashed to the
device (It will take about 2 minutes).
Signed-off-by: Alexey Belyaev <spider@spider.vc>
[squash commits, compact commit message, fix compatible string, remove
superfluous pinmuxes]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
In order to have a smaller initramfs image remove all packages not
needed on all devices and add them explicitely for those actually
needing them. Also remove wpad-mini from ramips default package set
and add it to all sub-targets except for MT7621.
While at it reorder packages alphabetically and replace kmod-mt76 with
kmod-mt7603 and/or kmod-mt76x2 depending on the chip actually used on
a specific board.
Hopefully fixes FS#758
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The ZBT-WG826 is available with 16 or 32 MByte of flash. Split the
device tree source file, rename the currently supported 16 MByte
version and add the 32 MByte variant.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The Digineo AC1200 Pro is the 32MB flash variant of the ZBT-WG3526 with
unpopulated/exposed sdhci slot. Rename to board to the OEM/ODM name and
add the sdhci kernel module to use it for multiple clones.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The ZBT-WG3526 is available with 16 or 32 MByte of flash. Rename the
current supported 16MByte version to indicate which flash size variant
is supported.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Specification:
- SoC: MT7621AT, MT7603EN and MT7612EN
- Flash: 16 MiB (W25Q128FVSG)
- RAM: 512 MiB (EM6GE16EWXD-12H)
- Ethernet: 1 x WAN (10/100/1000Mbps) and 4 x LAN (10/100/1000 Mbps)
- Others: USB 2.0, micro SD slot, reset button and 8 x LEDs
Issues:
- Two LEDs for 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi do not work, can't find GPIOs.
- The pwr LED is not GPIO controllable
How to install:
- The original firmware is OpenWrt, so both LuCI or sysupgrade can be used.
- Do not keep settings, for sysupgrade please use the -n option.
Signed-off-by: Jiawei Wang <buaawjw@gmail.com>
We need to keep the former used (unmodified) boardname in the metadata.
Otherwise an upgrade from an board using the old boardname will be
refused.
Fixes: a75ce960ac ("ramips: use different board names for variants")
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
PSG1218 got only 4 Ethernet ports and WAN on port 3 while
PSG1218K2C got 5 Ethernet ports and WAN on port 4
Switch to use kmod-kt76x2 instead of kmod-mt76 for both devices while
at it.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The Netgear R6220 requires the kmod-usb3 package and misses
kmod-usb-ledtrig-usbport package to setup the configured usb led
trigger.
Drop the already target selected kmod-mt76.
Fixes: FS#686
Fixes: 38bee61dab ("ramips: add support for Netgear R6220")
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The factory image has an uImage header covering the entire image and
not only the kernel. The original uImage header which covers only the
kernel is appended to the end of the image.
During LEDE boot the uImage rootfs splitter skips the whole filesystem,
can't find a valid filesystem magic and panics.
The last known working version was OpenWrt 14.07, which simply kept on
searching for an uImage header if the first found didn't resulted into
a working rootfs. This behaviour is kind of error prone since it could
produce false positives.
Since the sysupgrade image works fine in combination with the tftp
recovery for doing the initial installation of LEDE, simply drop the
factory image.
Related: FS#462
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
This patch adds support for the Zbtlink ZBT-WE2026.
Specification:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7620N (580MHz)
- RAM: 64 MiB
- Flash: 8 MiB SPI
- LAN: 4x100M
- WAN: 1x100M
Installation through bootloader webserver:
- With the power unplugged press and hold reset button.
- Plug power and hold reset button until LED starts to blink.
- Install sysupgrade image using web interface on 192.168.1.1.
Signed-off-by: Vaclav Svoboda <svoboda@neng.cz>
Specifications:
* SoC: MT7620A
* RAM: 64 MB DDR
* Flash: 8MB NOR SPI flash
* WiFi: MT7612E (5Ghz) and builtin MT7620A (2.4GHz)
* LAN: 1x100M
The -factory images can be flashed from the device's web
interface or via nmrpflash.
Co-authored-by: Paul Oranje <por@xs4all.nl>
Signed-off-by: Paul Oranje <por@xs4all.nl>
Signed-off-by: Joseph C. Lehner <joseph.c.lehner@gmail.com>
This patch adds support for the Netgear R6220, aka Netgear AC1200 and
R6220-100NAS.
Specification:
- SoC: MediaTek MT7621ST (880 MHz)
- Falsh: 128 MiB (Macronix MX30LF1G08AA-TI)
- RAM: 128 MiB (Nanya NT5CB64M16FP-DH)
- Wireless: MediaTek MT7603EN b/g/n , MediaTek MT7612EN an+ac
- LAN speed: 10/100/1000
- LAN ports: 4
- WAN speed: 10/100/1000
- WAN ports: 1
- Serial baud rate of Bootloader and factory firmware: 57600
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
nmrpflash can be used to recover to the netgear firmware if a broken
image was flashed.
Signed-off-by: Hanqing Wong <hquu@outlook.com>
* The left most mini-PCIe slot (the one attached to SIM2) can be
power-cycled by setting GPIO 0 to high/low.
* The D240 only needs the MT76x2 module, so update makefile to reflect this.
Note that until the default mt7620 target is updated, then kmod-mt76 (and thus
kmod-mt7603) will be selected by default.
v2->v3:
* Indentation error.
v1->v2:
* Rename gpio and remove redundant comment (thanks Piotr Dymacz)
Signed-off-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
mtk-mmc/mtk_sd.ko only depends on mmc_core and mmc_block.
And, we remove kmod-sdhci dependence assignment from all related target devices.
Signed-off-by: Furong Xu <xfr@outlook.com>
These modules are not needed by the EX2700, since it does not
have an external wifi chip (MT7620A is covered by rt2x00).
Signed-off-by: Joseph C. Lehner <joseph.c.lehner@gmail.com>
This device features both a 2.4 and 5Ghz radio, and supports
802.11a/b/g/n/ac modes.
It has 5 Gb-Ethernet ports and a USB 3.0 host port.
It is powered by the Mediatek MT7621 SoC, and the MT7602E and MT7612E wifi
chipsets, together with 128MB of RAM and 16 MB of SPI Flash.
The stock firmware is in fact based on some openwrt barrier breaker, with a
mediatek SDK kernel, and an afoundry custom made web interface (not LuCI
based).
Firmware update page on the stock web interface can not accept sysupgrade
images, it bricks the device.
At this point, the only working solution I found was to connect to the
serial console port (available on J4 header) and to use opkg to install
dropbear.
Then scp the sysupgrade file in the device's /tmp and run sysupgrade from
console without preserving configuration files.
Signed-off-by: Francois Goudal <francois@goudal.net>
This patch adds supports for the HiWiFi HC5962(gee4) http://www.hiwifi.com
Short specification:
- MT7621AT + MT7612EN + 7603EN
- 256MB DDR3 RAM
- 128MB NAND flash
- 1+3 x 1000M Ethernet
- 1x USB 2.0 port. 1x USB 3.0 port.
- reset button
- UART pad on PCB (JP3: TX, RX, GND, 3.3V)
Flash instruction:
1, Download lede-ramips-mt7621-hc5962-squashfs-factory.bin
2, Login as root via SSH on 192.168.199.1 and then copy factory.bin(using wget or nc or...) to /tmp/
3, use the following commands:
$ mtd write /tmp/lede-ramips-mt7621-hc5962-squashfs-factory.bin firmware
$ mtd erase firmware_backup && reboot
After reboot you should be able to login as root via SSH on 192.168.1.1
Signed-off-by: ZengFei Zhang <zhangzengfei@kunteng.org>
HC5661A is almost the same as HC5661 but MT7628AN is used instead of MT7620A.
- MT7628AN
- 128 MiB DDR2 RAM (W971GG6KB-25)
- 16 MiB SPI NOR flash (W25Q128)
- SD slot (not work yet)
- 1+4 x 100M Ethernet
- 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi
- 3 x LED
- 1 x button
- UART pad on PCB (JP1: TX, RX, GND, 3.3V)
The factory flash layout seems different from HC5661.
"hwf_config" is renamed to "oem" and its size changes to 0x20000.
It is modified accordingly in the dts file.
0x000000000000-0x000000030000 : "u-boot"
0x000000030000-0x000000040000 : "hw_panic"
0x000000040000-0x000000050000 : "Factory"
0x000000050000-0x000000160000 : "kernel"
0x000000160000-0x000000fc0000 : "rootfs"
0x000000bb0000-0x000000fc0000 : "rootfs_data"
0x000000fc0000-0x000000fe0000 : "oem"
0x000000fe0000-0x000000ff0000 : "bdinfo"
0x000000ff0000-0x000001000000 : "backup"
0x000000050000-0x000000fc0000 : "firmware"
To install LEDE, enabled the "developer mode",
which will *void your warranty* and open the SSH server at port 1022.
sysupgrade -n -F lede-ramips-mt7628-hc5661a-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
SD slot:
- Tried to add modules kmod-sdhci kmod-sdhci-mt7620, and corresponding dts block.
- It will block WAN + 3xLAN ports, only one LAN works.
- I'm not sure why, everything else works fine.
Signed-off-by: Wang JiaWei <buaawjw@gmail.com>
This patch frees up flash space on the EX2700, by
removing unused mt76 drivers and firmware.
Signed-off-by: Joseph C. Lehner <joseph.c.lehner@gmail.com>
mtdsplit_lzma requires that the rootfs be aligned to a block boundary.
Pad the kernel partition to make this so.
Signed-off-by: Claudio Leite <leitec@gmail.com>
The Sanlinking Technologies D240
(http://www.sanlinking.com/en/29-dual-4g-wifi-router.html) is basically the same
device as the ZBT WE826, so adding support for it in LEDE is straight forward.
The differences is that the D240 has two mini-PCIe slots (instead of one), blue
LEDs and supports PoE.
Specification:
* CPU: MT7620A
* 1x 10/100Mbps POE (802.3af/802.3at) Ethernet, 4x 10/100Mbps.
* 16 MB Flash.
* 128 MB RAM.
* 1x USB 2.0 port.
* 2x mini-PCIe slots.
* 2x SIM slots.
* 1x 2.4Ghz WIFI.
* 1x button.
Wifi, USB, switch and both mini-PCIe slots are working. I have not been able to
test the SD card reader.
The device comes pre-installed with an older version of OpenWRT, including Luci.
In order to install LEDE, you need to follow the existing procedure for updating
OpenWRT/LEDE using Luci. I.e., you need to access the UI and update the firmware
using the sysupgrade-image. Remember to select that you do not want to keep
existing settings. The default router address is 192.168.10.1 and
username/password admin/root (at least on my devices).
If you brick the device, the procedure for recovery is the same as for the
WE826. Please see the wiki page for that device for instructions.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
This patch moves the fakeroot code required by some devices to
`image-commands.mk`.
Create the fakeroot on the fly by using the undocumented -s (skip copy)
parameter of mkimage.
Signed-off-by: Joseph C. Lehner <joseph.c.lehner@gmail.com>
[remove unused NETGEAR_KERNEL_MAGIC, remove workarounds to have a dummy
rootfs for mkimage]
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The factory image can't be bigger than 3328 KByte. If the image is
bigger than that, the gemtek-header tool throws an error and breaks
the build.
Make sure the output file to which the gemtek header should be added
exists and wasn't removed during the check-size step because of it
size. This will prevent hard errors in case the factory image is to big
similar to what is done for sysupgrade images.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>