FreeCalypso > hg > freecalypso-sw
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author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@ivan.Harhan.ORG> |
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date | Mon, 21 Mar 2016 06:05:57 +0000 |
parents | 0b7abc72e49e |
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FreeCalypso host tools suite features the following tools that are potentially useful to end users: fc-loadtool This is the tool used to read and write the non-volatile flash memory of supported GSM devices. It can be used to reflash these devices with new firmware (whether pre-existing or new firmwares developed within our project), and to save and restore flash backups. This tool operates on the target device (phone or modem) while its regular firmware is shut down. fc-fsio This tool connects to GSM devices running one of the supported firmware versions while the fw is running (unlike fc-loadtool which operates on a device while its regular fw is shut down) and allows you to manipulate (read and write) the device's flash file system. It is thus a higher-level tool than fc-loadtool. It is intended primarily for working with our own firmwares, but it also works with Pirelli's original fw. fc-shell FreeCalypso firmwares have a feature of our own invention (not present in any pre-existing ones) to accept AT commands over the RVTMUX interface. It is useful when no second UART is available for a dedicated standard AT command interface. fc-shell is the tool that allows you to send AT commands to the firmware in this manner; it also allows a few other kinds of asynchronous commands to be sent. tfc139 This tool breaks into Mot C1xx phones via shellcode injection, a method that works despite any bootloader locks, allowing you to reflash locked phones with new firmware with fc-loadtool. The name of the utility is historical: previously it was specific to TFC139 phones (C139s sold with TracFone branding), but the current version is expected to work with all Mot C1xx firmware versions. imei-luhn A simple utility for computing or verifying the Luhn check digit of an IMEI number. The following host tools are primarily for developers, but may be useful to end users as well: rvtdump This tool produces a human-readable dump of all output emitted by a TI-based GSM fw on the RVTMUX binary packet interface. It can also log this dump to a file. rvinterf This tool is a superset of rvtdump: it not only dumps and/or logs all output from the GSM fw, but also provides a mechanism for sending command packets to it. Rvinterf is the engine behind fc-fsio, fc-shell and fc-tmsh. tiffs, These tools perform "in vitro" analysis of flash file system mokoffs, (FFS) images read out of GSM devices with TI-based firmwares. pirffs You can list and extract the FFS content captured as a raw flash image, and even perform a few "forensic" operations along the lines of reading deleted files and seeing the history of FFS modifications. tiffs is the main program, whereas mokoffs and pirffs are convenience wrappers for the common FFS configurations from Openmoko and Pirelli. fc-getpirimei This utility retrieves the factory-programmed IMEI of a Pirelli DP-L10 phone by quering its running firmware over the RVTMUX interface. fc-serterm This tool is a trivial serial terminal program. Its special feature is that any output coming the serial port that isn't printable ASCII is displayed as by cat -v. It is useful for talking to serially-interfaced devices that mix ASCII with binary in their serial talk. The following tools are really just for developers: ctracedec GSM firmwares built in TI's Windows environment (official ones as well as our own hacks based on the TCS211 semi-src) have a "compressed trace" misfeature whereby many of the ASCII strings in debug trace messages get replaced with numeric indices at build time, and these numeric indices are all that gets emitted on the RVTMUX serial channel. This numeric trace output can be turned back into ASCII strings if you have the str2ind.tab file corresponding to the fw version that emitted the output in question; this ctracedec utility performs that decoding. fc-iram, Reprogramming the non-volatile flash memory is not the only way fc-xram, to run your own code on a Calypso GSM device. If your code is fc-compalram small enough to fit entirely into the available RAM on the device, and you would like to just run it without flashing it permanently, these tools do the job of loading code images into different kinds of RAM through different download protocols. fc-tmsh TI had a tool called TMSH that stood for "test mode shell". We don't know exactly how it worked, hence we make no claim of our own test mode shell being anything like TI's original, but we do have a test mode shell of our own. It sends command packets to the ETM (Enhanced Test Mode) component in the GSM firmware and displays its responses in a purely asynchronous manner, i.e., our tool has no knowledge of any correspondence between the commands it sends and the responses they elicit. (In contrast, fc-fsio described above also talks to ETM, but it does so synchronously.) fc-olddump This tool captures a memory dump from a GSM device whose firmware implements the old non-enhanced Test Mode memory read command. It works with Mot C1xx original firmwares. fc-rgbconv A simple aid for phone UI development that converts RGB color values between human-intuitive 8:8:8 format and the 5:6:5 format used by the color LCDs in the phones targeted by FreeCalypso. The following tools are really just special-purpose hacks: fc-dspapidump This utility uses ETM in synchronous mode to read and dump the contents of the DSP API RAM in a target Calypso GSM device while the firmware is running. fc-lcdemu We have TI's TCS211 firmware semi-src that includes TI's demo/prototype phone UI targeting the 176x220 pixel LCD on TI's D-Sample development kit, but no suitable hardware on which we could run this fw with this UI and see it in action. We built a hacked-up version of the fw that emits all raster blits intended for the big LCD on the RVTMUX serial interface, and this fc-lcdemu utility is a plug-in for rvinterf that actually displays these LCD blits in an X11 window. fc-pirhackinit This fc-pirhackinit utility is highly specific to the TCS211-on-Pirelli exercise. DO NOT run it against Pirelli's stock firmware, nor is it needed when using our full-source FreeCalypso firmware.