|
|
Line 1,031: |
Line 1,031: |
| * Laptops often use flash translation circuits which need extra drivers in flashrom. | | * Laptops often use flash translation circuits which need extra drivers in flashrom. |
|
| |
|
| At this point we recommend to '''not''' use flashrom on untested laptops unless you have a means to recover from a flashing that goes wrong (a working backup flash chip and/or good soldering skills). | | <div style="margin-top:0.5em; padding:0.5em 0.5em 0.5em 0.5em; background-color:#ff9f9f; align:right; border:1px solid #aabbcc;"> |
| | '''IMPORTANT:''' At this point we recommend to '''not''' use flashrom on untested laptops unless you have a means to recover from a flashing that goes wrong (a working backup flash chip and/or good soldering skills). |
| | </div> |
|
| |
|
| {| border="0" valign="top" | | {| border="0" valign="top" |
Line 1,066: |
Line 1,068: |
| | [http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Category:T40p Thinkpad T40p] | | | [http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Category:T40p Thinkpad T40p] |
| | {{No}} | | | {{No}} |
| | |
| | |- bgcolor="#eeeeee" valign="top" |
| | | Acer |
| | | Aspire One |
| | | {{No}}<sup>1</sup> |
|
| |
|
| |} | | |} |
| | |
| | <small> |
| | <sup>1</sup> http://www.coreboot.org/pipermail/coreboot/2009-May/048041.html |
| | </small> |
|
| |
|
| = Installation = | | = Installation = |
Revision as of 15:55, 28 May 2009
flashrom is a utility for identifying, reading, writing, verifying and erasing flash chips. It's often used to flash BIOS/EFI/coreboot/firmware images.
- Supports more than 160 flash chips, 75 chipsets, 100 mainboards, and 10 PCI devices which can be used as external programmers.
- Supports parallel, LPC, FWH and SPI flash interfaces and various chip packages (DIP32, PLCC32, DIP8, SO8/SOIC8, TSOP32, TSOP40 and more)
- No physical access needed, root access is sufficient.
- No bootable floppy disk, bootable CD-ROM or other media needed.
- No keyboard or monitor needed. Simply reflash remotely via SSH.
- No instant reboot needed. Reflash your chip in a running system, verify it, be happy. The new firmware will be present next time you boot.
- Crossflashing and hotflashing is possible as long as the flash chips are electrically and logically compatible (same protocol). Great for recovery.
- Scriptability. Reflash a whole pool of identical machines at the same time from the command line. It is recommended to check flashrom output and error codes.
- Speed. flashrom is often much faster than most vendor flash tools.
- Portability. Supports Linux, FreeBSD, DragonFly BSD, Solaris, Mac OS X, and other Unix-like OSes.
Supported devices
Supported chips
Total amount of supported chips: 169
Vendor
|
Flash part
|
Status
|
|
Probe
|
Read
|
Write
|
Erase
|
AMD |
Am29F002(N)BB |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
AMD |
Am29F002(N)BT |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
AMD |
Am29F016D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
AMD |
Am29F040B |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
AMD |
Am29F080B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
AMD |
Am29LV040B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
AMD |
Am29LV081B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ASD |
AE49F2008 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT25DF021 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT25DF041A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT25DF081 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT25DF161 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT25DF321 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Atmel |
AT25DF321A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT25DF641 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT25F512B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT25FS010 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT25FS040 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT26DF041 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT26DF081A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT26DF161 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT26DF161A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT26F004 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT29C010A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
?
|
Atmel |
AT29C020 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Atmel |
AT29C040A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT45CS1282 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT45DB011D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT45DB021D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT45DB041D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT45DB081D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT45DB161D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT45DB321C |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT45DB321D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT45DB642D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT49BV512 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Atmel |
AT49F002(N) |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Atmel |
AT49F002(N)T |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
AMIC |
A25L40P |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
AMIC |
A29002B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
AMIC |
A29002T |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
AMIC |
A29040B |
OK |
OK |
? |
?
|
AMIC |
A49LF040A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
EMST |
F49B002UA |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
EON |
EN29F002(A)(N)B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
EON |
EN29F002(A)(N)T |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Fujitsu |
MBM29F004BC |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Fujitsu |
MBM29F004TC |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Fujitsu |
MBM29F400BC |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Fujitsu |
MBM29F400TC |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Intel |
82802AB |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Intel |
82802AC |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Macronix |
MX25L512 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Macronix |
MX25L1005 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Macronix |
MX25L2005 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Macronix |
MX25L4005 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Macronix |
MX25L8005 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Macronix |
MX25L1605 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
|
Vendor
|
Flash part
|
Status
|
|
Probe
|
Read
|
Write
|
Erase
|
Macronix |
MX25L1635D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Macronix |
MX25L3205 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Macronix |
MX25L3235D |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Macronix |
MX25L6405 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Macronix |
MX25L12805 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Macronix |
MX29F002B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Macronix |
MX29F002T |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Macronix |
MX29LV040C |
OK |
OK |
? |
?
|
Numonyx |
M25PE10 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Numonyx |
M25PE20 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Numonyx |
M25PE40 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Numonyx |
M25PE80 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Numonyx |
M25PE16 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
PMC |
Pm25LV010 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
PMC |
Pm25LV016B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
PMC |
Pm25LV020 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
PMC |
Pm25LV040 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
PMC |
Pm25LV080B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
PMC |
Pm25LV512 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
PMC |
Pm39LV010 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
PMC |
Pm49FL002 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
PMC |
Pm49FL004 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Sharp |
LHF00L04 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Spansion |
S25FL016A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST25VF016B |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST25VF032B |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST25VF040B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST25VF040.REMS |
OK |
OK |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST25VF040B.REMS |
OK |
OK |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST25VF080B |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST28SF040A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST29EE010 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST29LE010 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST29EE020A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST29LE020 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST39SF010A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST39SF020A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST39SF040 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST39VF512 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST39VF010 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST39VF020 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST39VF040 |
OK |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST39VF080 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST49LF002A/B |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST49LF003A/B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST49LF004A/B |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST49LF004C |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST49LF008A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST49LF008C |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST49LF016C |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST49LF020 |
OK |
OK |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST49LF020A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SST |
SST49LF040 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST49LF040B |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST49LF080A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SST |
SST49LF160C |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
ST |
M25P05-A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
|
Vendor
|
Flash part
|
Status
|
|
Probe
|
Read
|
Write
|
Erase
|
ST |
M25P10-A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M25P20 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M25P40 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M25P40-old |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M25P80 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M25P16 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
ST |
M25P32 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
ST |
M25P64 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M25P128 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M29F002B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M29F002T/NT |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
ST |
M29F040B |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
ST |
M29F400BT |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M29W010B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M29W040B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M50FLW040A |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M50FLW040B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M50FLW080A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
ST |
M50FLW080B |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M50FW002 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M50FW016 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
ST |
M50FW040 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
ST |
M50FW080 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
ST |
M50LPW116 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SyncMOS |
S29C31004T |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SyncMOS |
S29C51001T |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
SyncMOS |
S29C51002T |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
SyncMOS |
S29C51004T |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
TI |
TMS29F002RB |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
TI |
TMS29F002RT |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Winbond |
W25x10 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Winbond |
W25x20 |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Winbond |
W25x40 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W25x80 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W29C011 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W29C020C |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W29C040P |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Winbond |
W29EE011 |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W39V040A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W39V040B |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W39V040C |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W39V040FA |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W39V080A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W49F002U |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W49V002A |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W49V002FA |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
Winbond |
W39V080FA |
OK |
OK |
OK |
OK
|
Winbond |
W39V080FA (dual mode) |
? |
? |
? |
?
|
|
Supported chipsets
Total amount of supported chipsets: 76
Vendor
|
Southbridge
|
PCI IDs
|
Status
|
ALi |
M1533 |
10b9:1533 |
OK
|
AMD |
AMD-768 |
1022:7440 |
OK
|
AMD |
AMD8111 |
1022:7468 |
OK
|
AMD |
CS5530(A) |
1078:0100 |
OK
|
AMD |
CS5536 |
1022:2080 |
OK
|
AMD |
Elan SC520 |
1022:3000 |
OK
|
AMD |
SB600 |
1002:438d |
OK
|
AMD |
SB700 |
1002:439d |
OK
|
AMD |
SC1100 |
100b:0510 |
?
|
ATI |
SB400 |
1002:4377 |
OK
|
Broadcom |
HT-1000 |
1166:0205 |
OK
|
Intel |
440MX |
8086:7198 |
OK
|
Intel |
6300ESB |
8086:25a1 |
OK
|
Intel |
631xESB/632xESB/3100 |
8086:2670 |
OK
|
Intel |
EP80579 |
8086:5031 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH0 |
8086:2420 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH10 |
8086:3a18 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH10D |
8086:3a1a |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH10DO |
8086:3a14 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH10R |
8086:3a16 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH2 |
8086:2440 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH2-M |
8086:244c |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH3-M |
8086:248c |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH3-S |
8086:2480 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH4/ICH4-L |
8086:24c0 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH4-M |
8086:24cc |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH5/ICH5R |
8086:24d0 |
OK
|
|
Vendor
|
Southbridge
|
PCI IDs
|
Status
|
Intel |
ICH6/ICH6R |
8086:2640 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH6-M |
8086:2641 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH7DH |
8086:27b0 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH7/ICH7R |
8086:27b8 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH7M |
8086:27b9 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH7MDH |
8086:27bd |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH |
8086:2410 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH8DH |
8086:2812 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH8DO |
8086:2814 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH8/ICH8R |
8086:2810 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH8M |
8086:2815 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH8M-E |
8086:2811 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH9 |
8086:2918 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH9DH |
8086:2912 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH9DO |
8086:2914 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH9M |
8086:2919 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH9M-E |
8086:2917 |
OK
|
Intel |
ICH9R |
8086:2916 |
OK
|
Intel |
MPIIX |
8086:1234 |
?
|
Intel |
PIIX3 |
8086:7000 |
OK
|
Intel |
PIIX4/4E/4M |
8086:7110 |
OK
|
Intel |
PIIX |
8086:122e |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
CK804 |
10de:0050 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
CK804 |
10de:0051 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
NForce2 |
10de:0060 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
CK804 |
10de:00d3 |
OK
|
|
Vendor
|
Southbridge
|
PCI IDs
|
Status
|
NVIDIA |
MCP51 |
10de:0260 |
?
|
NVIDIA |
MCP51 |
10de:0261 |
?
|
NVIDIA |
MCP51 |
10de:0262 |
?
|
NVIDIA |
MCP51 |
10de:0263 |
?
|
NVIDIA |
MCP55 |
10de:0360 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
MCP55 |
10de:0361 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
MCP55 |
10de:0362 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
MCP55 |
10de:0363 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
MCP55 |
10de:0364 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
MCP55 |
10de:0365 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
MCP55 |
10de:0366 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
MCP55 |
10de:0367 |
OK
|
NVIDIA |
MCP67 |
10de:0548 |
OK
|
SiS |
SiS5595 |
1039:0008 |
OK
|
SiS |
SiS630 |
1039:0630 |
?
|
VIA |
CX700 |
1106:8324 |
OK
|
VIA |
VT8231 |
1106:8231 |
?
|
VIA |
VT8235 |
1106:3177 |
OK
|
VIA |
VT8237 |
1106:3227 |
OK
|
VIA |
VT8237A |
1106:3337 |
OK
|
VIA |
VT8237S |
1106:3372 |
OK
|
VIA |
VT82C586A/B |
1106:0586 |
OK
|
VIA |
VT82C686A/B |
1106:0686 |
?
|
|
Supported mainboards
In general, it is very likely that flashrom works out of the box even if your mainboard is not listed below.
This is a list of mainboards where we have verified that they either do or do not need any special initialization to make flashrom work (given flashrom supports the respective chipset and flash chip), or that they do not yet work at all. If they do not work, support may or may not be added later.
Mainboards which don't appear in the list may or may not work (we don't know, someone has to give it a try). Please report any further verified mainboards on the mailing list.
Known good (worked out of the box)
Total amount of boards: 68
Known good (with write-enable code in flashrom)
Total amount of boards: 33
Vendor
|
Mainboard
|
Required option
|
Status
|
Acorp |
6A815EPD |
-m acorp:6a815epd |
OK
|
agami |
Aruma |
-m AGAMI:ARUMA |
OK
|
Artec Group |
DBE61 |
-m artecgroup:dbe61 |
OK
|
Artec Group |
DBE62 |
-m artecgroup:dbe62 |
OK
|
ASUS |
A7V8-MX SE |
— |
OK
|
ASUS |
P4B266 |
— |
OK
|
ASUS |
P5A |
-m asus:p5a |
OK
|
BioStar |
P4M80-M4 |
— |
OK
|
EPoX |
EP-8K5A2 |
— |
OK
|
EPoX |
EP-BX3 |
-m epox:ep-bx3 |
OK
|
GIGABYTE |
GA-2761GXDK |
-m gigabyte:2761gxdk |
OK
|
GIGABYTE |
GA-7VT600 |
— |
OK
|
GIGABYTE |
GA-M57SLI-S4 |
-m gigabyte:m57sli |
OK
|
|
Vendor
|
Mainboard
|
Required option
|
Status
|
GIGABYTE |
GA-M61P-S3 |
-m gigabyte:m61p |
OK
|
GIGABYTE |
GA-MA78G-DS3H |
— |
OK
|
GIGABYTE |
GA-MA78GM-S2H |
— |
OK
|
GIGABYTE |
GA-MA790FX-DQ6 |
-m gigabyte:ma790fx-dq6 |
OK
|
HP |
DL145 G3 |
-m hp:dl145_g3 |
OK
|
IBM |
x3455 |
-m ibm:x3455 |
OK
|
Intel |
D201GLY |
— |
OK
|
IWILL |
DK8-HTX |
-m iwill:dk8_htx |
OK
|
Kontron |
986LCD-M |
-m kontron:986lcd-m |
OK
|
Kontron |
986LCD-M |
-m kontron:986lcd-m |
OK
|
MSI |
MS-7135 (K8N Neo3) |
-m msi:k8n-neo3 |
OK
|
MSI |
MS-6702E (K8T Neo2-F) |
— |
OK
|
|
Vendor
|
Mainboard
|
Required option
|
Status
|
MSI |
MS-6712 (KT4V) |
-m msi:kt4v |
OK
|
MSI |
MS-6590 (KT4 Ultra) |
-m msi:kt4ultra |
OK
|
MSI |
MS-7046 |
— |
OK
|
Tyan |
S2498 (Tomcat K7M) |
— |
OK
|
VIA |
EPIA-CN |
— |
OK
|
VIA |
EPIA M/MII/... |
— |
OK
|
VIA |
EPIA SP |
— |
OK
|
VIA |
PC3500G |
-m via:pc3500g |
OK
|
|
Not supported (yet)
Total amount of boards: 20
Supported programmers
This is a list of supported PCI devices flashrom can use as programmer:
Vendor
|
Device
|
PCI IDs
|
Status
|
3COM |
3C90xB: PCI 10/100 Mbps; shared 10BASE-T/100BASE-TX |
10b7:9055 |
OK
|
3COM |
3C90xB: PCI 10/100 Mbps; shared 10BASE-T/100BASE-T4 |
10b7:9001 |
?
|
3COM |
3C90xB: PCI 10BASE-T (TPO) |
10b7:9004 |
?
|
3COM |
3C90xB: PCI 10BASE-T/10BASE2/AUI (COMBO) |
10b7:9005 |
?
|
3COM |
3C90xB: PCI 10BASE-T/10BASE2 (TPC) |
10b7:9006 |
?
|
3COM |
3C90xB: PCI 10BASE-FL |
10b7:900a |
?
|
3COM |
3C90xB: PCI 10BASE-FX |
10b7:905a |
?
|
3COM |
3C905C: EtherLink 10/100 PCI (TX) |
10b7:9200 |
OK
|
3COM |
3C980C: EtherLink Server 10/100 PCI (TX) |
10b7:9805 |
?
|
Silicon Image |
PCI0680 Ultra ATA-133 Host Ctrl |
1095:0680 |
OK
|
Silicon Image |
SiI 3114 [SATALink/SATARaid] SATA Ctrl |
1095:3114 |
OK
|
Silicon Image |
SiI 3124 PCI-X SATA Ctrl |
1095:3124 |
?
|
Silicon Image |
SiI 3132 SATA Raid II Ctrl |
1095:3132 |
OK
|
Silicon Image |
SiI 3512 [SATALink/SATARaid] SATA Ctrl |
1095:3512 |
?
|
Board notes
Supported laptops/notebooks
In general, flashing laptops is more difficult because
- Laptops often use the flash chip for stuff besides the BIOS.
- Laptops often have special protection stuff which has to be handled by flashrom.
- Laptops often use flash translation circuits which need extra drivers in flashrom.
IMPORTANT: At this point we recommend to not use flashrom on untested laptops unless you have a means to recover from a flashing that goes wrong (a working backup flash chip and/or good soldering skills).
Known-good
Known-bad
Vendor
|
Model
|
Status
|
IBM/Lenovo
|
Thinkpad T40p
|
No
|
Acer
|
Aspire One
|
No1
|
1 http://www.coreboot.org/pipermail/coreboot/2009-May/048041.html
Installation
Requirements:
- pciutils development package (pciutils-dev/libpci-dev/pciutils-devel, depending on OS/distribution)
- zlib development package (zlib1g-dev/zlib-devel, depending on OS/distribution)
- subversion (if you checkout the source and build manually)
Manual Installation From Source:
$ svn co svn://coreboot.org/flashrom/trunk flashrom
$ cd flashrom
$ make
$ sudo make install
Binary Packages:
- Debian: sudo aptitude install flashrom
- Fedora: sudo yum install flashrom
- Gentoo: emerge flashrom
- Mandriva: urpmi flashrom
- openSUSE: yast -i coreboot-utils
- T2 SDE
- Installation from source: Emerge-Pkg flashrom
- Installation of binaries: mine -i flashrom-0.9.0.tar.bz2
- FreeBSD: cd /usr/ports/sysutils/flashrom && make install clean
- Windows: There is a Windows port of the flashrom utility. Download the latest version: DarmawanMappatutu_Salihun.tar.gz.
Usage
Please see the flashrom(8) manpage.
Fully testing flashrom chip/southbridge/mainboard support
See this page for instructions on how to test flashrom properly (this may be risky, make sure you have a working backup flash chip).
Flashrom Live CD
Flashrom Live CD
Flash chip overview
Modern mainboards store the BIOS in a reprogrammable flash chip. There are hundreds of different flash (EEPROM) chips, with variables such as memory size, speed, communication bus (LPC vs. ISA/PCI) and packaging to name just a few. The three most common packages are called DIP, PLCC and TSOP. The BIOS copyright holders often place a fancy sticker on the BIOS chip showing a name or logotype, BIOS version, serial number and copyright notice.
DIP32: Dual In-line Package, 32 pins
A rectangular black plastic block with lots of pins along the two longer sides of the package. DIP chips can be socketed which means they are detachable from the mainboard using physical force. Since they haven't been moved in and out of the socket very much (yet, hehe) they can appear to be quite difficult to release from the socket. One way to remove a DIP from a socket is by prying a thin screwdriver in between the plastic package and the socket, along the shorter sides where there are no pins, and then gently bending the screwdriver to push the DIP upwards, away from the mainboard. Alternate between the two sides to avoid bending the pins, and don't touch any of the pins with the screwdriver, see FAQ about ESD, electro-static discharge. If the DIP is soldered directly to the mainboard, it has to be desoldered in order to be reprogrammed outside the mainboard. If you do this, it's a good idea to solder a socket to the mainboard instead, to ease any future experiments.
PLCC32: Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier, 32 pins
Black plastic block again, but this one is much more square. PLCC is becoming the standard for mainboards because of it's smaller physical size. PLCC can also be socketed or soldered directly to the mainboard. Socketed PLCC chips can be removed using a special PLCC removal tool, or using a piece of nylon line tied in a loop around the chip and pulled swiftly straight up, or bending/prying using small screwdrivers if one is careful. PLCC sockets are often fragile so the screwdriver approach is not recommended. While the nylon line method sounds onorthodox it works well. Desoldering PLCC can be painful without specialized desoldering equipment particularly because PLCC chips have leads on all four sides of the package.
DIP8: Dual In-line Package, 8 pins
SO8/SOIC8: Small-Outline Integrated Circuit, 8 pins
TSOP: Thin Small-Outline Package
TSOPs are often used in embedded systems where size is important and there is no need for replacement in the field. It is possible to (de)solder TSOPs by hand, but it comes close to wizardry.
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