FreeCalypso > hg > freecalypso-tools
diff doc/TFC139-breakin @ 0:e7502631a0f9
initial import from freecalypso-sw rev 1033:5ab737ac3ad7
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
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date | Sat, 11 Jun 2016 00:13:35 +0000 |
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--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/doc/TFC139-breakin Sat Jun 11 00:13:35 2016 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,120 @@ +Maliciously locked bootloader +============================= + +When Compal (Motorola's ODM who designed and built their C1xx phones for them) +designed the firmware architecture and flash memory layout for their phones, +they made a bad design decision by putting the boundary between their bootloader +and the main fw image at 0x2000, even though the flash erase block boundary +doesn't come until 0x10000 - thus every time the main fw needs to be reflashed +to a different version, the dangerous boot sector has to be reflashed too. + +But then they made things even worse in the newer versions of their fw by +introducing a bootloader lock malfeature whereby the ability to interrupt boot +and load code serially may be artificially disabled. This malfeature is +implemented as follows: + +* In the original firmware layout (before the addition of the malfeature in + question) the boot code occupies the flash range from 0 through 0x1FFF, then + there are some ID strings at 0x2000, 0x2020 and 0x2040, and then the part of + the firmware that used to be at 0x10000 in TI's reference fw starts at 0x20A0, + with the entry point at 0x20F8 (corresponding to TI's 0x10058). + + With the addition of the bootloader lock malfeature the 32-bit word at 0x2060 + (previously unused and filled with 0xFFFFFFFF) became a control word telling + the bootloader whether diversion of the boot path to serial code download + should be allowed or not. + +* When firmware images with this malfeature present are first built, the word + at 0x2060 contains 0xDDDDDDDD. (Does D stand for debug or development, or + was the developer who implemented this malfeature fascinated by large bra + cups? We may never know.) This word MUST read as 0xDDDDDDDD in order for + the boot code to allow serial download: if it reads as any other value (e.g., + if it contains 0xFFFFFFFF because only the 8192 byte boot code has been + programmed into flash sector 0, with blank flash from 0x2000 onward), no + serial download opportunity will ever be offered and the phone is effectively + bricked! + +* For as long as the word at 0x2060 still contained 0xDDDDDDDD, Compal's + developers could continue gaining access through the bootloader and reflashing + their firmware. But when phones were to be shipped to customers with the + malicious bootloader lock activated, they probably sent some Test Mode command + (see RVTMUX write-up) to their running fw that caused it to write 0x00000000 + into the flash word at 0x2060. (Remember that any bit in a NOR flash memory + can be programmed from 1 to 0 at any time in any combination, but changing + bits from 0 back to 1 is only possible with full sector erasure.) + +* Once the word at 0x2060 has been programmed (in the flash memory sense) from + 0xDDDDDDDD down to 0x00000000, the phone is irreversibly locked and has lost + its ability to ever run a different firmware version, like a kamikaze pilot's + plane that has discarded its landing gear and can only crash now. + +Recovery procedure +================== + +While it probably was Compal's, Motorola's and various carriers' intent that the +bootloader lock on their phones be truly irreversible, the unlocking community +has now developed a method for recovering these phones (restoring their ability +to run any firmware of the user's choice) which (we hope) will work with all of +the existing locked-down firmware versions. It works as follows: + +* Even though the bootloader is locked down, if one boots the full fw regularly, + one can still access the RVTMUX interface which the TI-based fw implements + for debug trace and factory programming functions. One needs to key in the + magic sequence **16379# into the running fw, and a hidden menu will appear, + giving the operator the option to enable trace. Selecting this option will + cause the fw to switch the headset jack to the UART carrying RVTMUX. + +* Mot/Compal's firmware is based on a quite old version of TI's chipset + reference fw (relative to late TCS211 from the Openmoko/Pirelli era), and it + does not feature the Enhanced Test Mode (ETM) component with which we are + most familiar. However, it does implement the older set of non-enhanced + Test Mode commands, and these TM commands just happen to include raw memory + read and write operations at an arbitrary address. (For a while we were + under a mistaken belief that these commands were Compal's inventions, until + we discovered TI's original TM predating ETM.) + +* The ability to write arbitrary bytes into arbitrary RAM locations while the + phone firmware is running means that we can inject a piece of shellcode into + an unused RAM location and then cause this shellcode to gain execution by + overwriting a function return address on the stack. + +* Once you can execute your own code on the Calypso, everything becomes possible + once again. At that point one can trivially reverse the bootloader lock by + erasing flash sector 0 and rewriting it with 0xDDDDDDDD in the 0x2060 word, + or even better, rewriting this boot sector with an older version of the boot + code that lacks the locking malfeature altogether. + +Procedure variations: old mot931c.exe vs. new tfc139 +==================================================== + +We first became aware of the possibility of recovering locked-down phones as +described above in the spring of 2014 when FreeCalypso developer Space Falcon +became aware of the existence of Windows utility mot931c.exe (binary w/o source) +that performs a variant of this unlocking procedure specific to one particular +locked-down firmware version: C139 phones with TracFone branding, fw version +8.8.17. At first we had replicated the operation of this Windows tool verbatim +in our own Unix/Linux-based tfc139 libre tool; this variant of the shellcode- +based unlocking procedure worked well on TFC139 units, but could not crack other +locked-down fw versions, e.g., Cingular-branded C139 phones with fw version +1.9.24. + +Subsequent investigation revealed that whoever wrote that mot931c.exe Windows +tool had not studied the operation of Motorola/Compal's TI-based firmware deeply +enough, and implemented their shellcode injection quite suboptimally: the stack +smashing process is hitting the wrong stack (not the stack of the L1A task in +whose context the Test Mode commands sent over the UART are executing), and it +is only through dumb luck that this version of the break-in procedure worked +at all. The limitation of working only with one specific fw version results +from this poor method of shellcode injection (mindless choice of the wrong stack +for smashing), and instead of adapting it in a version-specific manner to other +particular locked-down fw versions at hand, I (Space Falcon) reimplemented our +tfc139 utility to smash the right stack (that of the L1A task), and thereby +made it generic to all Mot C1xx firmware versions. + +Our Compal firmware break-in utility is still called tfc139, but it is no longer +specific to TFC139 phones; instead it should work with all Mot C1xx firmwares. +The shellcode injected by tfc139 re-enables the Calypso chip's own boot ROM and +jumps to it; this boot ROM will endlessly wait for a serial download because +the word at 0x2000 contains neither 0 nor 1 (it is part of an identifying ASCII +string in Mot/Compal's fw), and the operator can then run fc-loadtool to +perform arbitrary flash operations.