The 88F6560 has a built in PHY if I recall correctly. On the MI424WR rev I and the Google GFRG110 the switch in the 88F6560 uses the Marvell 88E1545 PHY. The SG200 has only 1 Ethernet port, so uses the internal PHY. The Aruba AP-134 has 2 Ethernet ports and uses the 88E1540 PHY.by rayknight - Debian
As an FYI the Google Fiber Network Box (GFRG110) also uses the same SoC (88F6560). Source code is available at https://storage.googleapis.com/google-code-archive-source/v2/code.google.com/gfiber-gfrg100/source-archive.zip. I don't currently have any time to look at it, but would be interested in helping in the future, I have the mentioned Google Fiber Network Box, an Actiontec MI424WR Revby rayknight - Debian
Christiaan Wrote: > > I'm having a hard time disassembling the device > and the pictures that are referenced are not > available anymore since Google+ is down. > > Could you provide me with some pointers on how to > get the device open to connect to the serial > console? You must pry the white plastic right side of the device from the aluminum. I startedby rayknight - Debian
I've seen pictures of the board inside the rPi 400 that clearly show a Bourns SM51625EL PoE++ Transformer on the board, but there is no mention of PoE support in anything documentation I have seen. Can't figure out why they would have a PoE Transformer but not advertise support for PoE! Rayby rayknight - Off-Topic
There is what is purported to be a u-boot for Silverstore NAS on github at https://github.com/TeXniKK/silverstore-uboot. It appears to be u-boot 1.1.4 based. You could build that and see if it will boot properly with kwboot. WikiDevi has the following statement about this device: Stock bootloader is locked to boot only Stock OS by checking signature. Rayby rayknight - Debian
Please restart and stop the autoboot process by hitting a key. Then at the uboot prompt run 'printenv' and post the output. Rayby rayknight - Debian
From a quick look it appears you forgot the step to label the USB ext3 partition as rootfs. On another Linux system insert the USB stick and run the following commands as root user (these assume your Linux system assigns sdc to the USB device): # e2label /dev/sdc1 rootfs # e2label /dev/sdc1 The second command should return the "rootfs" value. If so labeling was successful. Nowby rayknight - Debian
Can't recall the syntax off the top of my head, but you need to add a conditional statement to your bootcmd. Essentially you want to check if there is a bootable device in USB and if so boot from USB, otherwise boot from NAND. If you check the uboot environment that bodhi publishes there are examples of using conditional elements in his environment variables. See the uenv_read_disk for onby rayknight - Rescue System
Realtek RTL SOC support has recently been added to the kernel. There are a few DTS files in arch/arm64/boot/dts/realtek. One is for a Synology NAS DiskStation DS418 so might be a good start if the SOC is the same. You did not post anything that indicates which of the various Realtek SOCs in the RTD series is being used here.by rayknight - uBoot
I have an NSA320 with stock firmware and backup as I'm working on an OpenWrt patch as the other Kirkwood ZyXel NAS devices are already supported. What exactly would you like to have from the original firmware? Rayby rayknight - Debian
Christian, Take care that you determine exactly which NSA310 you have. There are at least 3 different NSA310 models each with their own DTB file (NSA310 - kirkwood-nsa310.dts, NSA310A - kirkwood-nsa310a.dts and NSA310S - kirkwood-nsa310s.dts). I have both the NSA310 and NSA310S models which already have serial port header installed. The NSA310 appears to be what is in your photo, the NSA31by rayknight - Debian
I believe there is support in the mainline Linux kernel for this device. See kirkwood-ds212.dts which supports the following Synology devices: model = "Synology DS212, DS212p v10, v20, DS213air v10, DS213 v10" There are also other kirkwood-ds*.dts files that support other Synology models. Rayby rayknight - uBoot
LeggoMyEggo Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > bodhi Wrote: > ------------------------------------------------------- > > I remember that mod and at one point was going to > implement it in all my plugs. Had the parts list > and everything. But as I am fickle, found new > plug devices to tinker with so the serial 3.5mm > mod went tby rayknight - Debian
bodhi Wrote: > UPDATE: > > Ping failed to connect to that site: > > PING update.readynas.com (206.16.42.180): 56 data > bytes > Request timeout for icmp_seq 0 > Request timeout for icmp_seq 1 > Request timeout for icmp_seq 2 > Request timeout for icmp_seq 3 > Request timeout for icmp_seq 4 > Request timeout for icmp_seq 5 > Request timeout forby rayknight - uBoot
That is an Allwinner H6 based device and you should be able to modify the Armbian support for the Pine-H64 to boot on this box. Rayby rayknight - Off-Topic
AkkJaa, There is extensive documentation regarding this device at http://natisbad.org/NAS3/index.html. This includes information regarding serial access. The RN102 is similar and his page for that device gives a better visual of connecting the serial dongle. Rayby rayknight - uBoot
Bodhi, Can you explain what it is that requires a separate kernel for the Netgear RN102 and GTI Mirabox? I thought that using DTS was supposed to cover the differences for hardware using the same architecture/SOC. Rayby rayknight - Debian
If you still require stock u-boot for the NSA310 I have attached a compressed tar file containing mtd0.img and mtd1.img from a recently acquired NSA310 with 1.2 GHz Marvell 88F6281 processor and the Realtek Ethernet. I have successfully tested restoring from the mtd0.img after using uboot.2017.07-tld-1.nsa310.mtd0.kwb Rayby rayknight - uBoot
For your locale issue have you tried running the below command? dpkg-reconfigure localesby rayknight - Debian
This is enough information for me to determine that you have a different version of the NSA310 than I. Mine is a NSA310S which has the 88F6702 processor and Marvell Ethernet, so my u-boot backup likely won't be helpful. Rayby rayknight - uBoot
See https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B081NDDTHC/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&th=1 for an example of a Baseboard that takes one of these modules. There are many others. Rayby rayknight - Off-Topic
Are you sure it's powering off? Or does it just hang at that point? Do you have another SATA drive you can try? Is the drive accessible on another machine? Rayby rayknight - uBoot
habibie, Here's the link to Zyxel NSA326. Picked mine up today, just need to determine which existing NAS will sacrifice its drives for the new one! Rayby rayknight - Debian
My local Fry's Electronics. Total of 86.19 with tax! Rayby rayknight - Debian
A local retailer is clearing out some Zyxel NAS326 units for $79.99. Could anyone who has this device comment on performance compared to the Zyxel NSA320? If performance is substantially better than the older NSA320 $80 would be worth the upgrade cost to me. Rayby rayknight - Debian
Got the L-50 unit today and the mPCIe is not populated, so the L-50W or L-50WD are more practical. Rayby rayknight - Debian
A patch was recently submitted to the OpenWrt project adding support for another Marvell device (Check Point L-50W). I was able to acquire a NOS device from ebay for $35 plus shipping. Specs are as follows: CPU: Marvell Kirkwood 88F6281 @ 1.2GHz RAM: 512MB Flash: 512MB NAND USB: 2x USB 2.0 SD Card Slot ExpressCard/34 slot LAN: 9 Gigabit Ports (2x Marvell 88E6171) WAN: 1 Gbe (Marvellby rayknight - Debian
There are multiple versions of the NSA310, so it would be helpful if you describe the device you have. Can you identify which processor it contains? Also can you identify the Ethernet chip? This would help identify exactly which NSA310 you have and which u-boot version is required.by rayknight - uBoot
You are missing the rootfs volume label on the drive. Take the disk to another Linux system and plug it in and then run: lsblk -f This should help you to identify which device is the disk you just plugged in. You then need to run the following command based on what your disk was identified as. My example assumes it was identified as sdb and your file system is the first partition sdb1.by rayknight - Debian
Just an FYI that OpenWrt is now pointing all WikiDevi URL tags in their TechData to links at Wireless CAT WikiDevi Rayby rayknight - Debian