Don't buy from Netgear. Ever. 

So, after a long string of bad decisions, I ended up buying a pair of PLP1000 PLC (powerline communication) adapters from Netgear.

And Netgear support is just shit, these adapters have been known for having issues waking up from sleep mode for years, with many users complaining about it on the support forum, and absolutely no solution offered by Netgear.

Fortunately for me, they use Broadcom BCM60333 chips, and they're not the only ones. And, after a few hours of digging around and a few assumptions, I managed to find 2 devices that seemed close enough of the one I was trying to fix: one from D-Link and one from TP-Link.

From D-Link, I took DHP-P701AV_PLC_Utility_5.00_WIN.ZIP, which is kind enough not to have a whitelist of products it is willing to upgrade.

From TP-Link, I took the firmware of the TL-PA7010P v2, as it is using the same chip, and its release notes explicitly mentions fixing the power saving mode related issue.

Also, using an utility from Zyxel, another PLC adapter manufacturer, the PLP1000 firmware version showed up as 3.2.2, while TP-Link's firmware filename contained 3.2.4, so I was pretty confident they were only slight variations of Broadcom's reference design using the same SDK.

And that's it. Using D-Link's utility, I flashed PA7010P v2's firmware onto my adapters in a matter of minutes (and a bit of relief after seeing that the first one I flashed was not bricked ;) ).
They are now fully functional, including their LEDs an push button (which confirms they are based on the same reference design), are properly recognized and configurable by TP-Link utility as their own, I'm guessing they won't exhibit the issue any longer, and it seems they even synchronize at a higher rate than with the years old Netgear firmware they shipped with.

And that was the story of the last piece of equipment I ever bought from Netgear.
Fuck you very much, Netgear.
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Flashing a BenQ Z-series for free(dom) 

DISCLAIMER: If you attempt to reflash your screen's firmware, there is always a chance that something goes wrong, and that you end up with a very expensive brick. As always, I cannot be held responsible in this case.

Note: for support, please head to the Blur Busters forum topic at http://forums.blurbusters.com/viewtopic ... &t=779

Important Note: as you can see by reading the above forum topic, people have had mixed results, depending on the hardware they used. So if the update fails the first time you attempt it, don't panic, and simply retry it using a different desktop or laptop.

Update (2014-05-04): A new version of the patch is available, that removes the hardcoded path and address, and has better error messages. The article has been updated.

Update (2014-05-07): A new version of the patch is available, that adds a "noreset" option. When set, the reset command will not be sent at the end of the read/write operation. Furthermore, the reset command will also be skipped in the event an error occurred during the process. This aims to prevent bricking the screen, since the reset command seems to do more than just exit the ISP mode. Simply run flashrom in chip identification mode, without the reset option, after a successful flash, to exit the ISP mode.

I recently bought a XL2411Z screen, but it turned out that Blur Reduction, its "key selling feature", wasn't working properly.

BenQ then released a V2 firmware, but no instruction or tool allowing to reflash the firmware. The only available options were to buy a 50$ USB flasher, or to build a parallel port one, and use some proprietary and windows-only tool by MSTAR, the company that provides the chip used in these screens.

MSTAR offers no datasheet for their products, so buying a one-time use flasher wasn't really interesting, and building yet another parallel port adapter to use a completely obscure utility wasn't really challenging (even if I had the possibility to borrow a computer with a parallel port, this isn't necessarily everyone's case nowadays).

After a dozen of hours spent googlingduckduckgoing, during which I could only find service manuals for MSTAR-equipped TVs and screens that consisted of "plug the flasher, use our windows tool", I finally found some useful information on github, thanks to the Linux kernel being GPL: two different drivers for completely unrelated chips by MSTAR, but which seemed to use the same protocol for flashing a SPI flash through I2C: https://github.com/varunchitre15/MT6589_kernel_source/blob/master/mediatek/kernel/drivers/nfc/msr3110.c and https://github.com/Nikopol2013/canvas2-4.2.2/blob/master/mediatek/custom/common/kernel/touchpanel/msg2133_ps/msg2133_driver.c.

I then read a bit more about DDC, the I2C based protocol allowing to exchange information between screens and computers, and I guessed that since it uses I2C, and since MSTAR seem to provide a way to flash SPI flash chips through I2C for many of their products, there were good chances that the same protocol would also be exposed through the I2C bus used by DDC on my screen.

So, I decided to scan the I2C bus. I plugged the screen to my laptop using a VGA cable (so yeah, by the way, you'll need a PC or laptop running GNU/Linux, probably also a second screen (or remote shell) in the case it's a PC, since the one you'll be flashing has to be in standby mode during the operation, and the driver of your graphics card or chipset must register the DDC channel as an I2C bus to the Linux kernel. Intel and ATI hardware using the open source driver are OK, ATI proprietary driver is not as it doesn't expose I2C, I don't know about Nvidia open source or proprietary drivers), and ran the following commands:
alex@hadaly:~$ sudo modprobe i2c-dev
alex@hadaly:~$ sudo i2cdetect -l
i2c-0 i2c i915 gmbus ssc I2C adapter
i2c-1 i2c i915 gmbus vga I2C adapter
i2c-2 i2c i915 gmbus panel I2C adapter
i2c-3 i2c i915 gmbus dpc I2C adapter
i2c-4 i2c i915 gmbus dpb I2C adapter
i2c-5 i2c i915 gmbus dpd I2C adapter
i2c-6 i2c DPDDC-B I2C adapter
alex@hadaly:~$ sudo i2cdetect 1
WARNING! This program can confuse your I2C bus, cause data loss and worse!
I will probe file /dev/i2c-1.
I will probe address range 0x03-0x77.
Continue? [Y/n]
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f
00: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
10: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
20: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
30: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 37 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
40: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 49 -- -- -- -- -- --
50: 50 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 59 -- -- -- -- -- --
60: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
70: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --

Bingo! There were 4 I2C addresses responding. 0x37 and 0x50 are the "well known addresses" for DDC/CI and the EDID EEPROM, and as for 0x49 and 0x59, they are 7bit I2C addresses, which, when shifted for the R/W bit can also be represented as 0x92 and 0xb2, which appear in various service manuals of TV sets and monitors based on MSTAR chips (as well as in screenshots of the MSTAR ISP utility), and are described as 0x49/0x92 being the ISP (in-system programming) port, and 0x59/0xb2 being a debug port.

I then analyzed the two drivers that I mentioned earlier, and realized that the MSTAR ISP protocol is composed of 5 I2C commands (enable ISP, read/write, end r/w command, and reset) that merely encapsulate the SPI commands that can be found in the SPI flash chips' datasheets.

I then simply had to write a SPI programmer for the flashrom tool following the MSTAR I2C ISP protocol, and voilà!, moments later, I was flashing my screen's firmware.



The patch containing this SPI driver is available here: /static/benq/0001-Add-programmer-for-the-MSTAR-I2C-ISP-protocol.patch.

Also, please note that I2C works at 100kb/s, and thus, reading and writing the firmware takes a long time. Reading the 2MB takes 3 and a half minutes (and 8192 commands), and writing, which includes verifying afterwards, takes almost 10 minutes (and 32768 commands).

TL;DR:
# build
svn co svn://flashrom.org/flashrom/trunk@1846 flashrom
cd flashrom
wget -O- http://boeglin.org/static/benq/0001-Add-programmer-for-the-MSTAR-I2C-ISP-protocol.patch | patch -p1
make -j

# load i2c-dev driver
sudo modprobe i2c-dev

# list all i2c buses
sudo i2cdetect -l
# list i2c devices on bus 1
sudo i2cdetect 1
# get EDID (0x50) from bus 1
sudo i2cdump -r 0-127 1 0x50

# identify flash chip, on bus 1 (/dev/i2c-1) at address 0x49
sudo ./flashrom -p mstarddc_spi:dev=/dev/i2c-1:49

# dump current firmware
sudo ./flashrom -p mstarddc_spi:dev=/dev/i2c-1:49 -c "MX25L1605A/MX25L1606E" -r backup.bin

# extend firmware to 2MB, to match the flash chip size
tr '\000' '\377' < /dev/zero | dd of=firmware.bin bs=1k count=2k
dd if=XL2411Z_V2_20131209_8B72.BIN of=firmware.bin conv=notrunc

# write firmware
sudo ./flashrom -p mstarddc_spi:dev=/dev/i2c-1:49 -c "MX25L1605A/MX25L1606E" -w firmware.bin

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Yet Another TV-B-Gone 

Here's my quick and dirty version of the TV-B-Gone kit form Adafruit Industries, The open source version of Mitch Altman's TV-B-Gone.



This version is:
* derived from Firmware v1.2 sources
* ported MSP430 architecture
* tested on msp430g2452 and msp430g2211
* built from scrap parts

Following are a hand-drawn schematic and the accompanying "routing" diagram (note that there are a pull-up resistor and a pull-down capacitor missing on ¬RST, but the one on P1.3 is handled by P1REN):


You can have a look at the repository for my changes, its origin is the v1.2 sources.

There are currently three different branches:
* with_crystal_sync uses an external 32 KHz Xtal for clock calibration
* master uses the factory-calibrated values instead, eliminating the need for the external Xtal, and saving a few dozen bytes
* 8k_fill removes the debugging code to fill the 8 KB of ROM of the MSP430G2452 with as many TV codes as possible

Most of the changes are hardware related, and can be found in the following functions of main.c:
* main: clock setup, hardware configuration, main loop providing low power mode switching
* blast_code: timer setup for the carrier
* xmitCodeElement: output pin function selection depending on carrier usage

Note that I initially tried to use an interrupt to handle the carrier manually, instead of relying on the Capture/Compare Control Register, which turned out to not work so great, due to the delay function not accounting for the time spent in the interrupt handler.
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Flashing a 2006 Mac Pro with a 2007 Mac Pro SMC Firmware 

Disclaimer: This is totally unsupported! I won't be responsible if you Mac Pro catches fire or simply refuses to boot afterwards. I did the update on a 2006 Mac Pro, running the MP21.007F.B06 EFI firmware and 1.7f10 SMC firmware. Anything else, I can't guarantee.

Following MacEFIRom's work on his Mac Pro 2006-2007 Firmware Tool (you need to be registered to see the download link), here is a way to update the SMC, to complete the 2006-2007 conversion.

First, get the firmware update tool from Apple, at http://support.apple.com/kb/DL222 (md5 sum: 40c5e766f5b59c56501240f6cb732112).

Next, get the required resources from the included package/app:
- SmcFlasher.efi (md5 sum: 16d3c5337c0bfeb8549a034490617737);
- m43a.smc (md5 sum: 79aa57d97697860f70dbb37a1a6f7ee8).

SmcFlasher.efi is the EFI update tool, m43a.smc is the SMC firmware.

Then, using a hex editor, you'll have to modify the EFI updater, in order to bypass the hardware check (which prevents from flashing anything that doesn't follow the approved path).

Here's how a diff should look like. Sorry, but I won't host proprietary licensed binaries here.



Here is the list of modifications you have to make:
- at 0x1797, replace 5 bytes with "33 C0 90 90 90";
- at 0x17AC, replace 9 bytes with "90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90";
- at 0x1805, replace 5 bytes with "33 C0 40 90 90".

The first 5 bytes replace the call to the function that checks whether the upgrade path is approved by Apple (isValidConfig) by xor eax, eax; nop; nop; nop.
The next 9 bytes replace a comparison and a conditional jump (related to a global variable set by isValidConfig) by 9 nops.
And the last 5 bytes replace the call to the function that prevents from downgrading the SMC firmware by xor eax, eax; inc eax; nop; nop.

If you edited the file properly, its md5 sum should now be 84dbe9708eafc0c29653414b06292f8e.

In order to use it, copy the two files to a EFI accessible partition (FAT or HFS), boot to the EFI Shell, and simply issue the command:
SmcFlasher.efi -LoadApp m43a.smc

To boot the EFI Shell, simply install rEFIt. you can also take a shell.efi binary (for instance, from rEFIt's tools), rename it to boot.efi and copy it at the root of a FAT formatted USB key. You can then boot the key using the Mac Pro built-in boot selector (holding Alt before the chime).



And voilà, you're set. Simply turn off your Mac Pro, reset the SMC, restart it, and start partying like it's 2007!


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Handling magnet URIs with w3m 

Since The Pirate Bay moved from distributing torrent files to providing magnet links only, it became impractical to browse using w3m.
Here's a fix.

First, you'll need the following lines in your ~/.w3m/config file:
urimethodmap ~/.w3m/urimethodmap
cgi_bin ~/.w3m/cgi-bin

1st one points to a file that describes how to handle particular URI schemes.
2nd one points to a folder that will contain cgi scripts that w3m can handle on its own, acting as a HTTP server.

Then, you'll need to add a handler for magnet URIs in ~/.w3m/urimethodmap:
magnet: file:/cgi-bin/magnet.py?%s

And finally, a script that will handle the URIs, named ~/.w3m/cgi-bin/magnet.py:
#!/usr/bin/python
# coding=utf-8

import sys
import os
import subprocess

uri = os.environ.get('QUERY_STRING')
referer = os.environ.get('HTTP_REFERER')

if not uri:
print
print "Error: No URI"
sys.exit()

cmd_list = ("transmission-remote", "-a", uri)

subprocess.call(cmd_list)

if referer:
print "HTTP/1.1 303 See Other"
print "Location: %s" % referer

Don't forget to chmod +x ~/.w3m/cgi-bin/magnet.py, modify the cmd_list tuple to match your host, port, and authentication parameters, and you should be set. Hitting "Enter" on a magnet link should now add it to your queue.
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