This commit adds support for the Watchguard Firebox models
T10-W, T15 and T15-W.
CPU: Freescale P1010
RAM: 512MB (T10) / 1024MB (T15)
Flash: 1MB SPI-NOR, 512MB NAND (T10) / 1024MB NAND (T15)
WiFi: 802.11abgn 2T2R AR9582 based Mini-PCIe card (-W models only)
Ethernet: 3x GBE (via AR8033 PHY)
LEDs: 7x hard-wired (6x LAN, 1x Power)
4x GPIO single-colored (Attn/Status/Mode/Failover)
1x GPIO dual-colored (2.4/5G WiFi, -W models only)
Serial: RJ45, Cisco pinout, 115200/8N1
Other: Battery backed RTC
Atmel TPM 1.2 chip (unsupported)
Based on 35f6d79, which introduced Watchguard Firebox T10 support.
The T10 and T15 are identical hardware, with the exception of the T15
having twice the flash and RAM size.
The T10-W and T15-W models have their Mini-PCIe slot populated with an ath9
(AR9582) based WiFi card. The slot is either unpopulated or empty for
non-WiFi models. All required drivers are present by default on the mpc85xx
target, so T10/T10-W resp. T15/T15-W can use the same OpenWrt image.
This commit also introduces the zImage loader from 7d768a9 to boot the
kernel. This is required, since the U-Boot version used in these devices
appears to have a hard limit of 16MB for the kernel size it can handle. The
current kernel size is around 17MB, though, due to kernel page alignment
required for memory protection.
Installation (replaces previous instructions for T10):
1. If the U-Boot password is known, proceed with step 2.
If the U-Boot password is unknown, dump the NOR flash using a SPI
programmer and patch the unknown password to a known one. You can use
blocktrron's Python script:
https://github.com/blocktrron/t10-uboot-patcher/
This script will patch the password to '1234' (without quotes).
Alternatively, you can search for the hashed password in the NOR dump
yourself and overwrite it with a known one. The SHA1 hash is:
E597301A1D89FF3F6D318DBF4DBA0A5ABC5ECBEA
Write the patched NOR dump back to the device.
2. Connect the device via serial cable, power it on and interrupt
the boot process by pressing Ctrl+C. Enter the U-Boot password to access
the CLI.
3. (Optional) Populate the uboot-env partition by entering:
saveenv
This will allow you to use uboot-envtools from within OpenWrt later,
e.g. to increase the loadable kernel size.
The default loadable kernel size is 5MB, the compressed kernel size at
the time of this commit is 3.1MB.
4. Serve the initramfs OpenWrt image from a TFTP server at 10.0.1.13/24,
connected to eth0 (WAN) of the device. File name must be 'uImage'. Boot
with:
tftpboot; bootm;
Make sure to use the correct image for your device (T10 resp. T15)!
5. After booting, connect to OpenWrt on eth1 (LAN) via SSH. Verify
that the UBI partiton is mtd7, format it and install the sysupgrade
image.
$ cat /proc/mtd
$ ubiformat /dev/mtd7 -y
$ sysupgrade -n <path to sysupgrade.bin>
6. The device should now boot OpenWrt from NAND flash. Enjoy.
Back to stock:
Use the vendor recovery procedure.
Stock recovery might also be necessary in case you have accidentally used
the fw_setenv command from within OpenWrt without using saveenv in U-Boot
first.
In order to use the vendor firmware recovery procedure, the NAND partitions
mtd3 to mtd6 must remain intact. Make sure not to overwrite them, or keep
dumps of them for later recovery.
Signed-off-by: Shine <4c.fce2@proton.me>
Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/16776
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
(cherry picked from commit be7aa5bda40ee05b1dd0b4f4a1bf88e653ef875a)
OpenWrt Project is a Linux operating system targeting embedded devices. Instead of trying to create a single, static firmware, OpenWrt provides a fully writable filesystem with package management. This frees you from the application selection and configuration provided by the vendor and allows you to customize the device through the use of packages to suit any application. For developers, OpenWrt is the framework to build an application without having to build a complete firmware around it; for users this means the ability for full customization, to use the device in ways never envisioned.
Sunshine!
Download
Built firmware images are available for many architectures and come with a package selection to be used as WiFi home router. To quickly find a factory image usable to migrate from a vendor stock firmware to OpenWrt, try the Firmware Selector.
If your device is supported, please follow the Info link to see install instructions or consult the support resources listed below.
An advanced user may require additional or specific package. (Toolchain, SDK, ...) For everything else than simple firmware download, try the wiki download page:
Development
To build your own firmware you need a GNU/Linux, BSD or macOS system (case sensitive filesystem required). Cygwin is unsupported because of the lack of a case sensitive file system.
Requirements
You need the following tools to compile OpenWrt, the package names vary between distributions. A complete list with distribution specific packages is found in the Build System Setup documentation.
binutils bzip2 diff find flex gawk gcc-6+ getopt grep install libc-dev libz-dev
make4.1+ perl python3.7+ rsync subversion unzip which
Quickstart
-
Run
./scripts/feeds update -ato obtain all the latest package definitions defined in feeds.conf / feeds.conf.default -
Run
./scripts/feeds install -ato install symlinks for all obtained packages into package/feeds/ -
Run
make menuconfigto select your preferred configuration for the toolchain, target system & firmware packages. -
Run
maketo build your firmware. This will download all sources, build the cross-compile toolchain and then cross-compile the GNU/Linux kernel & all chosen applications for your target system.
Related Repositories
The main repository uses multiple sub-repositories to manage packages of
different categories. All packages are installed via the OpenWrt package
manager called opkg. If you're looking to develop the web interface or port
packages to OpenWrt, please find the fitting repository below.
-
LuCI Web Interface: Modern and modular interface to control the device via a web browser.
-
OpenWrt Packages: Community repository of ported packages.
-
OpenWrt Routing: Packages specifically focused on (mesh) routing.
-
OpenWrt Video: Packages specifically focused on display servers and clients (Xorg and Wayland).
Support Information
For a list of supported devices see the OpenWrt Hardware Database
Documentation
Support Community
- Forum: For usage, projects, discussions and hardware advise.
- Support Chat: Channel
#openwrton oftc.net.
Developer Community
- Bug Reports: Report bugs in OpenWrt
- Dev Mailing List: Send patches
- Dev Chat: Channel
#openwrt-develon oftc.net.
License
OpenWrt is licensed under GPL-2.0
