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The Bus Pirate firmware (at least v6.1 and earlier) can't handle UART input buffer overflow in BBIO mode, and sending a sequence of 0x00 too fast apparently triggers such an UART input buffer overflow. Wait 10 ms after sending each 0x00 byte during init to give the Bus Pirate enough time to handle the input. This fixes a Bus Pirate hang if the previous flashrom run was aborted by the user. The Bus Pirate firmware v6.1 and earlier use the wrong (too slow) SPI speed if more than 2 MHz are requested. Automatically downgrade SPI speed to 2 MHz for affected firmware versions. Detect Bus Pirate hardware and firmware versions to allow quirk handling. The Bus Pirate init sequence has lots of open-coded sequences which wait for a given string on the serial line. Refactor them into buspirate_wait_for_string(). Corresponding to flashrom svn r1576. Signed-off-by: Carl-Daniel Hailfinger <c-d.hailfinger.devel.2006@gmx.net> Acked-by: Carl-Daniel Hailfinger <c-d.hailfinger.devel.2006@gmx.net>
------------------------------------------------------------------------------- flashrom README ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- flashrom is a utility for detecting, reading, writing, verifying and erasing flash chips. It is often used to flash BIOS/EFI/coreboot/firmware images in-system using a supported mainboard, but it also supports flashing of network cards (NICs), SATA controller cards, and other external devices which can program flash chips. It supports a wide range of DIP32, PLCC32, DIP8, SO8/SOIC8, TSOP32, and TSOP40 chips, which use various protocols such as LPC, FWH, parallel flash, or SPI. Do not use flashrom on laptops! The embedded controller (EC) present in many laptops interacts badly with any flash attempts and can brick your laptop permanently. Please make a backup of your flash chip before writing to it. Please see the flashrom(8) manpage. Packaging --------- To package flashrom and remove dependencies on subversion, either use make export or make tarball make export will export all flashrom files from the subversion repository at revision BASE into a directory named $EXPORTDIR/flashrom-$VERSION-r$SVNREVISION and will additionally modify the Makefile in that directory to contain the svn revision of the exported tree. make tarball will simply tar up the result of make export and gzip compress it. The snapshot tarballs are the result of make tarball and require no further processing. Build Instructions ------------------ To build flashrom you need to install the following software: * pciutils+libpci (if you want support for mainboard or PCI device flashing) * libusb (if you want FT2232 or Dediprog support) * libftdi (if you want FT2232 support) Linux et al: * pciutils / libpci * pciutils-devel / pciutils-dev / libpci-dev * zlib-devel / zlib1g-dev (needed if libpci was compiled with libz support) On FreeBSD, you need the following ports: * devel/gmake * devel/libpci On OpenBSD, you need the following ports: * devel/gmake * sysutils/pciutils To compile on Linux, use: make To compile on FreeBSD, use: gmake To compile on Nexenta, use: make To compile on Solaris, use: gmake LDFLAGS="-L$pathtolibpci" CC="gcc -I$pathtopciheaders" CFLAGS=-O2 To compile on NetBSD or DragonFly BSD, use: ln -s /usr/pkg/include/pciutils pci gmake CPPFLAGS="-I. -I/usr/pkg/include" \ LDFLAGS="-L/usr/pkg/lib -Wl,-rpath-link,/usr/pkg/lib" To compile on OpenBSD, use: gmake To compile and run on Darwin/Mac OS X: Install DirectHW from coresystems GmbH. DirectHW is available at http://www.coreboot.org/DirectHW . To cross-compile on Linux for DOS: Get packages of the DJGPP cross compiler and install them: djgpp-filesystem djgpp-gcc djgpp-cpp djgpp-runtime djgpp-binutils As an alternative, the DJGPP web site offers packages for download as well: djcross-binutils-2.19.1-10ap.i386.rpm djcross-gcc-4.3.2-8ap.i686.rpm djcrx-2.04pre_20090725-13ap.i386.rpm The cross toolchain packages for your distribution may have slightly different names (look for packages named *djgpp*). Download pciutils 3.1.5 and apply http://assembler.cz/flashrom/pciutils.patch Download and compile http://assembler.cz/flashrom/libgetopt/ Compile pciutils, see README.DJGPP for instructions. Enter the flashrom directory. ../libpci should contain pciutils source and binaries. ../libgetopt should contain getopt.a from libgetopt. Run either (change settings where appropriate) make CC=i586-pc-msdosdjgpp-gcc STRIP=i586-pc-msdosdjgpp-strip or (above settings hardcoded) make djgpp-dos You might have to add WARNERROR=no to the make command line. To run flashrom.exe, download and unpack http://homer.rice.edu/~sandmann/cwsdpmi/csdpmi7b.zip and make sure CWSDPMI.EXE is in the current directory. To cross-compile on Linux for Windows: Get packages of the MinGW cross compiler and install them: mingw32-filesystem mingw32-cross-cpp mingw32-cross-binutils mingw32-cross-gcc mingw32-runtime mingw32-headers The cross toolchain packages for your distribution may have slightly different names (look for packages named *mingw*). PCI-based programmers (internal etc.) are not supported on Windows. Run (change CC= and STRIP= settings where appropriate) make CC=i686-w64-mingw32-gcc STRIP=i686-w64-mingw32-strip Processor architecture dependent features: On non-x86 architectures a few programmers don't work (yet) because they use port-based I/O which is not directly available on non-x86. Those programmers will be disabled automatically if you run "make". Installation ------------ In order to install flashrom and the manpage into /usr/local, type: make install For installation in a different directory use DESTDIR, e.g. like this: make DESTDIR=/usr install If you have insufficient permissions for the destination directory, use sudo by adding sudo in front of the commands above. Contact ------- The official flashrom website is: http://www.flashrom.org/ The IRC channel is #flashrom at irc.freenode.net The mailing list address is flashrom@flashrom.org
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