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jock

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  1. Like
    jock got a reaction from SteeMan in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    @Wester_Minskno, you misread the datasheet.
    Each chip is 2gbit, you have 8, then it's 16gbit / 8 = 2 gbyte, no way out. The specs given by the manufacturer are fake.
  2. Like
    jock got a reaction from fabiobassa in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    @Wester_Minskno, you misread the datasheet.
    Each chip is 2gbit, you have 8, then it's 16gbit / 8 = 2 gbyte, no way out. The specs given by the manufacturer are fake.
  3. Like
    jock got a reaction from fabiobassa in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    Are you sure it is 4gb? If it detects 2Gb probably it is 2gb, and 4gb is a faking spec from the vendor.
    It's hard to tell how much memory you have, you have look into the datasheet for the memory chip and multiply for the number of chips.
  4. Like
    jock got a reaction from Jason Duhamell in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    it could be interesting to know what did you change to make it work
  5. Like
    jock got a reaction from Ben N Voutour in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    @curse
    Sorry for the late answer, but I just spot the post edit right now.
     
    wlan and bluetooth, despite being on the same chip, are connected to the SoC in different ways: wlan is connected via high-speed sdio bus, bluetooth via common UART; also they are physically different chip parts that just share some things (the radio part), so it may happen that one work and the other does not.
     
    Since rk3318-config correctly reports the right chip, it is attached to the right sdio bus.
    Now there there may be some board peculiarities that does not make it work.
     
    In the first post of this thread there are some good things that help in debugging, in particular if you can provide photos of the board and the original firmware or the original dtb I can inspect it and try solve the issue.
    If you can spot some marking/signatures on the board, you can see if there is a match in rk3318-conf when it asks for "led/gpio configuration".
     
    At the moment there are just two supported boards: YK_RK3328 (found on my HK1 Max) and X88_PRO_B ( @lucky62's box); maybe yours is a different one that require some minor adjustment to make wifi work.
  6. Like
    jock got a reaction from Ben N Voutour in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    Yeah, you're right: the thread title is a bit misleading, because rk3318 and rk3328 are fundamentally the same chip.
    It is so because I have no rk3328 to work on, so can't guarantee and test anything on that. People reported that the images works as well on rk3328 boards, so you're invited to try and report if it works for you.
    There are good chances that the images works fine, and ap6330 is well supported in mainline kernel, including bluetooth!
  7. Like
    jock got a reaction from Ben N Voutour in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    AFAIK there is no such tool for rk3188
  8. Like
    jock got a reaction from Ben N Voutour in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    In the previous post you stated your box is an rk3188 box, this is the thread for rk3318.
    If your box is an rk3318, please provide as many as possible of the things described in the first post (logs, photos, original dtb), otherwise it is impossible to help.
    HDMI issues are common if cable is cheap, or the monitor less non usual resolution (like 1920x1200, for example)
     
  9. Like
    jock got a reaction from Ben N Voutour in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    Hello. At the bottom of the first post there are some useful things you can share to help you.
    In particular, serial logs and photos of the board are important, because H96 Max is just the market name, but the board hardware often differs.
  10. Like
    jock got a reaction from Ben N Voutour in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    In the previous pages I posted some instructions on how to let it work.
    The driver for various led drivers is available on github and needs to be manually compiled. I did not include it yet because it has some limitations I would like to fix before integrating into.
    Overclock: bad idea on rk3318, but your mileage may vary
     
    Why do you want to remove the metal can? It is a very bad idea, it shields the wifi from interferences and if you remove it, probably your wifi/bt will have troubles.
     
    There are various instructions over the internet, but what are you expecting from the dts?
  11. Like
    jock got a reaction from fabiobassa in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    In the previous pages I posted some instructions on how to let it work.
    The driver for various led drivers is available on github and needs to be manually compiled. I did not include it yet because it has some limitations I would like to fix before integrating into.
    Overclock: bad idea on rk3318, but your mileage may vary
     
    Why do you want to remove the metal can? It is a very bad idea, it shields the wifi from interferences and if you remove it, probably your wifi/bt will have troubles.
     
    There are various instructions over the internet, but what are you expecting from the dts?
  12. Like
    jock got a reaction from Ben N Voutour in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    From the dts you posted, the wifi chip is attached to the "alternate" sdio bus.
    From the dts also there is no evidence that your wifi chip is sv6051p, that is anyway not supported in mainline kernel. To understand why your box is hanging on reboot if you select the alternate sdio bus there is the need for a detailed log from the serial.
     
    edit: photos of the board and chips are welcome and interesting
  13. Like
    jock got a reaction from Ben N Voutour in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    Well, installing the wrong firmware on the wrong box is usually the best recipe to brick the box, as you experienced by yourself.
    Just in case someone else reads and wants to do that, it is something that I absolutely DO NOT recommend to do unless you exactly know what are you doing. It's not your case, I see you're fine because you got the eMMC clk pin to put the board in maskrom mode, but not all rk3318/rk3328 have accessible eMMC clock pin.
     
    Anyway thanks for the large list of rk3318 firmwares, it will be interesting to scavenge for firmwares and blobs
  14. Like
    jock got a reaction from Ben N Voutour in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    @RetroFan90
    Thanks for the photos, firmwares and all the details!
     
    The HK1 Max (aka YX_RK3328 board) is already very well supported since it is the board I got here and it is the main developing asset I got.
     
    The H96 Max looks quite ordinary box, I took a look to the dtb and it seems pretty standard to me, should work fine out of the box.
    Do you have issues with some peripherals with the H96 Max?
  15. Like
    jock got a reaction from Jason Duhamell in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    @RetroFan90
    Thanks for the photos, firmwares and all the details!
     
    The HK1 Max (aka YX_RK3328 board) is already very well supported since it is the board I got here and it is the main developing asset I got.
     
    The H96 Max looks quite ordinary box, I took a look to the dtb and it seems pretty standard to me, should work fine out of the box.
    Do you have issues with some peripherals with the H96 Max?
  16. Like
    jock reacted to knish in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    Hello,
    just a few words to thank You. I have a HK1-MAX and was sitting in a drawer for a couple of years after worked as TV box until I upgraded with another one.
    So... I followed all the steps and worked like a charm. Just the rk3318-config is missing but I don't know if is necessary.
    I installed PI-hole and works fine.
    Thank You a lot
  17. Like
    jock reacted to jernej in Mainline VPU   
    Yeah, LE currently uses 5.10 kernel because we are preparing stable release (no ETA, but hopefully soon). Only after that Linux will be updated to whatever current stable release will be at the time. However, v4l2 request api ffmpeg patches for Linux 5.13 can be found here. Note that they are untested and you still need corresponding kernel patches too.
  18. Like
    jock got a reaction from LFPoulain in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    ­DISCLAIMER (PLEASE READ): everything you can find in this thread (binaries, texts, code snippets, etc...) are provided AS-IS and are not part of official Armbian project. For this reason not people from Armbian project nor myself are responsible for misuse or loss of functionality of hardware.

    Please don't ask about support or assistance in other non-community forums nor in the official Armbian github repository, instead post your questions in this thread, in the TV Boxes forum section (hardware related) or in the Peer-to-peer support section (general linux/software related).

    Thank you!
     
    This thread is to give stable and mature long-term range support to rk3318/rk3328 found in many tv boxes in Armbian project as Community Supported Configuration (CSC).
    The current work is mainlined into Armbian project, but your mileage may vary; most recent developments live on my personal fork on github -> here <-
     
    Important notes: is just a personal opinion, but apparently widely supported, that rk3318 chip is not an official rockchip part. They probably are scrap rk3328 parts which have not passed conformance tests but are sold anyway to tv boxes manufacturers. They don’t reach the same operating frequency of the rk3328, have much higher leakage currents (and thus higher temperatures) and often the boards they are installed on are low quality with low quality components, in fact a very very common issue is the eMMC failure due to bad parts and bad soldering. So said, I personally suggest not to buy any rk3318 tv box, but instead find a properly supported SBC (Single Board Computer) if you need a reliable product. In the unfortunate case you already have such product, this thread may help you have some fun with them.
     
    What works:
        • Works on RK3318 and RK3328 TV boxes with DDR3 memories
        • Mainline u-boot
        • Mainline ATF provided as Trusted Execution Environment
        • All 4 cores are working
        • Ethernet
        • Serial UART (configured at stock 1.5Mbps)
        • Thermals and frequency scaling
        • OTG USB 2.0 port (also as boot device!)
        • EHCI/OHCI USB 2.0 ports and XHCI USB 3.0 ports
        • MMC subsystem (including , SD and sdio devices)
        • Hardware video acceleration (fully supported via RKMPP on legacy kernel, support via hantro and rkvdec kernel driver on mainline)
        • Various WIFI over SDIO are supported
        • Full acceleration on legacy kernel and mainline kernel
        • U-boot boot order priority: first the sdcard, then the USB OTG port and eventually the internal ; you can install u-boot (and the whole system) in the internal and u-boot will always check for images on external sdcard/USB first.
     
    Unbrick:
    Technically, rockchip devices cannot be bricked. If the internal flash does not contain a bootable system, they will always boot from the sdcard. If, for a reason, the bootable system on the internal flash is corrupted or is unable to boot correctly, you can always force the maskrom mode shorting the clock pin on the PCB. The procedure is explained here for rk322x, but for rk3318/28 is the same.

    In most of the rk3318/28 boards, shorting the clock pin is difficult or impossible because eMMC are BGA chips with no exposed pins. Pay double attention when burning something on the internal flash memory and always test first the image booting from the sdcard to be sure it works before burning anything in internal flash.
     
    This is a list of posts where forum users have been able to spot the eMMC clock pin to trigger the maskrom mode:
    H96 Max+ (board signature: RK3318_V1.4) by @Gausus X88 PRO 10 (board signature: X88_PRO_B) by @mathgaming Ninkbox N1 Max RK3318 by @enigmasphinx  
     
    Partecipation and debugging:
    If you want to partecipate or need help debugging issues, do not hesitate to share your experience with the installation procedure of the boxes.
    In case of issues and missed support, provide as many as possible of these things is very useful to try and bring support for an unsupported board:
     
    some photos of both sides of the board. Details of the eMMC, DDR and Wifi chips are very useful! upload the device tree binary (dtb) of your device. We can understand a lot of things of the hardware from that small piece of data; and alternative is a link to the original firmware (you can do a full backup with the Multitool); dmesg and other logs (use armbianmonitor -u that automatically collects and uploads the logs online) attach a serial converter to the device and provide the output of the serial port;  
    Multimedia:
    Mainline kernel: 3D acceleration is provided by Lima driver and is already enabled. Hardware video decoding: https://forum.armbian.com/topic/19258-testing-hardware-video-decoding-rockchip-allwinner/ Legacy kernel: If you need multimedia features, like OpenGL/OpenGL ES acceleration, hardware accelerated Kodi, ffmpeg and mpv you can take a look to this post  
    Installation (via SD card):
    Building:
    You can build your own image follow the common steps to build armbian for other tv boxes devices: when you are in the moment to choose the target board, switch to /TVB/ boards and select "rk3318-box" from the list.
       
    Prebuilt images:
    Archived images - built by Armbian servers and GPG-signed: https://imola.armbian.com/dl/rk3318-box/archive/ Nightly stables - built from trunk by Armbian servers and GPG-signed: https://github.com/armbian/community Stables provided by me (unsigned): https://users.armbian.com/jock/rk3318/  
    Multitool:
    Multitool - A small but powerful image for RK3318/RK3328 TV Box maintenance. Download it from here  
    Quick installation instructions on eMMC:
    Build or download your preferred Armbian image and a copy of the Multitool; Burn the Multitool on an SD card; once done, place the Armbian image in images folder of the SD card NTFS partition; Plug the SD card in the TV box and plug in the power cord. After some seconds the blue led starts blinking and the Multitool appears; OPTIONAL: you can do a backup of the existing firmware with "Backup flash" menu option; Choose "Burn image to flash" from the menu, then select the destination device (usually mmcblk2) and the image to burn; Wait for the process to complete, then choose "Shutdown" from main menu; Unplug the power cord and the SD card, then replug the power cord; Wait for 10 seconds, then the led should start blinking and HDMI will turn on. The first time the boot process will take a couple of minutes or more because the filesystem is going to be resized, so be patient and wait for the login prompt. On first boot you will be asked for entering a password for root user of your choice and the name and password for a regular user Run rk3318-config to configure the board specific options Run armbian-config to configure timezone, locales and other personal options Congratulations, Armbian is now installed!  
    Despite the procedure above is simple and reliable, I always recommend to first test that your device boots Armbian images from SD Card.
    Due to the really large hardware variety, there is the rare chance that the images proposed here may not boot. If a bad image is burned in , the box may not boot anymore forcing you to follow the unbrick section at the top of this post.
     
    Quick installation instructions to boot from SD Card:
    If you are already running Armbian from eMMC, skip to the next step. Instead if you are running the original firmware you need to first erase the internal flash; to do so download the Multitool, burn it on an SD Card, plug the SD Card and power the TV Box. Use "Backup flash" if you want to do a backup of the existing firmware, then choose "Erase flash" menu option. Build or download your preferred Armbian image; Uncompress and burn the Armbian image on the SD Card; Plug the SD Card in the TV Box and power it on; Wait for 10 seconds, then the led should start blinking and HDMI will turn on. The first time the boot process will take a couple of minutes or more because the filesystem is going to be resized, so be patient and wait for the login prompt; On first boot you will be asked for entering a password for root user of your choice and the name and password for a regular user Run rk3318-config to configure the board specific options Run armbian-config to configure timezone, locales and other personal options, or also to transfer the SD Card installation to internal ; Congratulations, Armbian is running from SD Card!  
    Tutorial - How to install Armbian on your TV Box (by @awawa) :
    https://www.hyperhdr.eu/2022/01/tv-box-mania-i-part-x88-pro-10.html
    A note about boot device order:
    With Armbian also comes mainline U-boot. If you install Armbian, the bootloader will look for valid bootable images in this order:
    External SD Card External USB Stick in OTG Port Internal  
    The Multitool does not boot / How to burn image directly on eMMC:
     
    Some boards have the sdcard attached to an auxiliary (called also sdmmc_ext or external) controller which is not the common one.
    Forum findings declare that those boards are not able to boot from sdcard with stock firmware and they neither do in maskrom mode: the stock firmware always boots even if you put the multitool on sdcard.
     
    In such case, burning images directly on eMMC is the only way to have a working Armbian installation.
    You can follow these instructions by @fabiobassa to burn images directly on eMMC:
     
    https://forum.armbian.com/topic/17597-csc-armbian-for-rk3318rk3328-tv-box-boards/?do=findComment&comment=130453
     
    Notes and special hardware:
    Script to change DDR memory frequency here Wireless chip AP2734, SP2734, HY2734C and similars: they are clones of AmPAK AP6334 which is combo wifi + bluetooth of broadcom BCM4334/B0 chips. You may need a special nvram file, instructions by @paradigman are here  
    Critics, suggestions and contributions are welcome!
     
    Credits:
    @fabiobassa for his ideas, inspiration, great generosity in giving the boards for development and testing. The project of bringing rk3318 into armbian would not have begun without his support! @hexdump for his precious support in early testing, ideas and suggestions
    @MX10.AC2Nfor his patience in testing mxq-rk3328-d4 board support
    All the rockhip64 maintainers at Armbian project who have done and do most of the work to support the platform
     
     
  19. Like
    jock got a reaction from fabiobassa in CSC Armbian for RK322x TV box boards   
    @Charles Bauer
    Apparently you did not read the first page carefully:
     
    Unbricking may be complicated, because neither me nor @fabiobassahad the chance to tinker with a board with eMCP.
     
    The problem is most probably related to memory initialization. A serial log is required for confirmation, but we already have seen a situation like that and I don't think this is different.
    Memory initialization is the first thing that is going to be done during bootstrap and thus, when it goes bad, the board is knocked down and requires manual intervention to get into maskrom mode. Doing this job require some skills in electronic and some non-common equipment because you need to find and ground the eMMC (eMCP in this case) clock pin.
     
    What you can do to help development is send the bricked board to @fabiobassa for him to analyze
  20. Like
    jock reacted to RaptorSDS in CSC Armbian for RK322x TV box boards   
    please look at page 33 @jock and a @gnusmag45 have this topic about the JWA60 memory its a eMCP Memory
     
     
    https://forum.armbian.com/topic/12656-csc-armbian-for-rk322x-tv-boxes/?do=findComment&comment=124401
  21. Like
    jock got a reaction from MigueLusho in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    ­DISCLAIMER (PLEASE READ): everything you can find in this thread (binaries, texts, code snippets, etc...) are provided AS-IS and are not part of official Armbian project. For this reason not people from Armbian project nor myself are responsible for misuse or loss of functionality of hardware.

    Please don't ask about support or assistance in other non-community forums nor in the official Armbian github repository, instead post your questions in this thread, in the TV Boxes forum section (hardware related) or in the Peer-to-peer support section (general linux/software related).

    Thank you!
     
    This thread is to give stable and mature long-term range support to rk3318/rk3328 found in many tv boxes in Armbian project as Community Supported Configuration (CSC).
    The current work is mainlined into Armbian project, but your mileage may vary; most recent developments live on my personal fork on github -> here <-
     
    Important notes: is just a personal opinion, but apparently widely supported, that rk3318 chip is not an official rockchip part. They probably are scrap rk3328 parts which have not passed conformance tests but are sold anyway to tv boxes manufacturers. They don’t reach the same operating frequency of the rk3328, have much higher leakage currents (and thus higher temperatures) and often the boards they are installed on are low quality with low quality components, in fact a very very common issue is the eMMC failure due to bad parts and bad soldering. So said, I personally suggest not to buy any rk3318 tv box, but instead find a properly supported SBC (Single Board Computer) if you need a reliable product. In the unfortunate case you already have such product, this thread may help you have some fun with them.
     
    What works:
        • Works on RK3318 and RK3328 TV boxes with DDR3 memories
        • Mainline u-boot
        • Mainline ATF provided as Trusted Execution Environment
        • All 4 cores are working
        • Ethernet
        • Serial UART (configured at stock 1.5Mbps)
        • Thermals and frequency scaling
        • OTG USB 2.0 port (also as boot device!)
        • EHCI/OHCI USB 2.0 ports and XHCI USB 3.0 ports
        • MMC subsystem (including , SD and sdio devices)
        • Hardware video acceleration (fully supported via RKMPP on legacy kernel, support via hantro and rkvdec kernel driver on mainline)
        • Various WIFI over SDIO are supported
        • Full acceleration on legacy kernel and mainline kernel
        • U-boot boot order priority: first the sdcard, then the USB OTG port and eventually the internal ; you can install u-boot (and the whole system) in the internal and u-boot will always check for images on external sdcard/USB first.
     
    Unbrick:
    Technically, rockchip devices cannot be bricked. If the internal flash does not contain a bootable system, they will always boot from the sdcard. If, for a reason, the bootable system on the internal flash is corrupted or is unable to boot correctly, you can always force the maskrom mode shorting the clock pin on the PCB. The procedure is explained here for rk322x, but for rk3318/28 is the same.

    In most of the rk3318/28 boards, shorting the clock pin is difficult or impossible because eMMC are BGA chips with no exposed pins. Pay double attention when burning something on the internal flash memory and always test first the image booting from the sdcard to be sure it works before burning anything in internal flash.
     
    This is a list of posts where forum users have been able to spot the eMMC clock pin to trigger the maskrom mode:
    H96 Max+ (board signature: RK3318_V1.4) by @Gausus X88 PRO 10 (board signature: X88_PRO_B) by @mathgaming Ninkbox N1 Max RK3318 by @enigmasphinx  
     
    Partecipation and debugging:
    If you want to partecipate or need help debugging issues, do not hesitate to share your experience with the installation procedure of the boxes.
    In case of issues and missed support, provide as many as possible of these things is very useful to try and bring support for an unsupported board:
     
    some photos of both sides of the board. Details of the eMMC, DDR and Wifi chips are very useful! upload the device tree binary (dtb) of your device. We can understand a lot of things of the hardware from that small piece of data; and alternative is a link to the original firmware (you can do a full backup with the Multitool); dmesg and other logs (use armbianmonitor -u that automatically collects and uploads the logs online) attach a serial converter to the device and provide the output of the serial port;  
    Multimedia:
    Mainline kernel: 3D acceleration is provided by Lima driver and is already enabled. Hardware video decoding: https://forum.armbian.com/topic/19258-testing-hardware-video-decoding-rockchip-allwinner/ Legacy kernel: If you need multimedia features, like OpenGL/OpenGL ES acceleration, hardware accelerated Kodi, ffmpeg and mpv you can take a look to this post  
    Installation (via SD card):
    Building:
    You can build your own image follow the common steps to build armbian for other tv boxes devices: when you are in the moment to choose the target board, switch to /TVB/ boards and select "rk3318-box" from the list.
       
    Prebuilt images:
    Archived images - built by Armbian servers and GPG-signed: https://imola.armbian.com/dl/rk3318-box/archive/ Nightly stables - built from trunk by Armbian servers and GPG-signed: https://github.com/armbian/community Stables provided by me (unsigned): https://users.armbian.com/jock/rk3318/  
    Multitool:
    Multitool - A small but powerful image for RK3318/RK3328 TV Box maintenance. Download it from here  
    Quick installation instructions on eMMC:
    Build or download your preferred Armbian image and a copy of the Multitool; Burn the Multitool on an SD card; once done, place the Armbian image in images folder of the SD card NTFS partition; Plug the SD card in the TV box and plug in the power cord. After some seconds the blue led starts blinking and the Multitool appears; OPTIONAL: you can do a backup of the existing firmware with "Backup flash" menu option; Choose "Burn image to flash" from the menu, then select the destination device (usually mmcblk2) and the image to burn; Wait for the process to complete, then choose "Shutdown" from main menu; Unplug the power cord and the SD card, then replug the power cord; Wait for 10 seconds, then the led should start blinking and HDMI will turn on. The first time the boot process will take a couple of minutes or more because the filesystem is going to be resized, so be patient and wait for the login prompt. On first boot you will be asked for entering a password for root user of your choice and the name and password for a regular user Run rk3318-config to configure the board specific options Run armbian-config to configure timezone, locales and other personal options Congratulations, Armbian is now installed!  
    Despite the procedure above is simple and reliable, I always recommend to first test that your device boots Armbian images from SD Card.
    Due to the really large hardware variety, there is the rare chance that the images proposed here may not boot. If a bad image is burned in , the box may not boot anymore forcing you to follow the unbrick section at the top of this post.
     
    Quick installation instructions to boot from SD Card:
    If you are already running Armbian from eMMC, skip to the next step. Instead if you are running the original firmware you need to first erase the internal flash; to do so download the Multitool, burn it on an SD Card, plug the SD Card and power the TV Box. Use "Backup flash" if you want to do a backup of the existing firmware, then choose "Erase flash" menu option. Build or download your preferred Armbian image; Uncompress and burn the Armbian image on the SD Card; Plug the SD Card in the TV Box and power it on; Wait for 10 seconds, then the led should start blinking and HDMI will turn on. The first time the boot process will take a couple of minutes or more because the filesystem is going to be resized, so be patient and wait for the login prompt; On first boot you will be asked for entering a password for root user of your choice and the name and password for a regular user Run rk3318-config to configure the board specific options Run armbian-config to configure timezone, locales and other personal options, or also to transfer the SD Card installation to internal ; Congratulations, Armbian is running from SD Card!  
    Tutorial - How to install Armbian on your TV Box (by @awawa) :
    https://www.hyperhdr.eu/2022/01/tv-box-mania-i-part-x88-pro-10.html
    A note about boot device order:
    With Armbian also comes mainline U-boot. If you install Armbian, the bootloader will look for valid bootable images in this order:
    External SD Card External USB Stick in OTG Port Internal  
    The Multitool does not boot / How to burn image directly on eMMC:
     
    Some boards have the sdcard attached to an auxiliary (called also sdmmc_ext or external) controller which is not the common one.
    Forum findings declare that those boards are not able to boot from sdcard with stock firmware and they neither do in maskrom mode: the stock firmware always boots even if you put the multitool on sdcard.
     
    In such case, burning images directly on eMMC is the only way to have a working Armbian installation.
    You can follow these instructions by @fabiobassa to burn images directly on eMMC:
     
    https://forum.armbian.com/topic/17597-csc-armbian-for-rk3318rk3328-tv-box-boards/?do=findComment&comment=130453
     
    Notes and special hardware:
    Script to change DDR memory frequency here Wireless chip AP2734, SP2734, HY2734C and similars: they are clones of AmPAK AP6334 which is combo wifi + bluetooth of broadcom BCM4334/B0 chips. You may need a special nvram file, instructions by @paradigman are here  
    Critics, suggestions and contributions are welcome!
     
    Credits:
    @fabiobassa for his ideas, inspiration, great generosity in giving the boards for development and testing. The project of bringing rk3318 into armbian would not have begun without his support! @hexdump for his precious support in early testing, ideas and suggestions
    @MX10.AC2Nfor his patience in testing mxq-rk3328-d4 board support
    All the rockhip64 maintainers at Armbian project who have done and do most of the work to support the platform
     
     
  22. Like
    jock reacted to RaptorSDS in CSC Armbian for RK322x TV box boards   
    i have a backup of my android 6 (multiboot) but i do not had  extract the dtb from Android -> some amazon reseller are als sold this box with android 8 ( but i have not found any update rom from android 6 to android 8 )
     
    thats the one from me android 6
    https://www.amazon.de/Neueste-Leelbox-Q2-Android-unterstützt-Schwarz/dp/B074PX2T9R
     
    same box with android 8
    https://www.amazon.de/Leelbox-Android-Volles-H-265-Version/dp/B07PHK9N31
     
    last website from leelbox(i do not now if this original leelbox website , leelbox-tech is close )
    https://www.leelbox.blog/tag/firmware-update/
     
    some android 7.1
    https://www.leelbox.blog/2018/05/23/prime-video-not-working-try-to-update-firmware-for-leelbox-rk-chip-android-7-1-tv-box-via-pc/
  23. Like
    jock got a reaction from Vasily Petrovich in CSC Armbian for RK322x TV box boards   
    DISCLAIMERS (PLEASE READ):
    Everything you can find in this thread (binaries, texts, code snippets, etc...) are provided AS-IS and are not part of official Armbian project. For this reason not people from Armbian project nor myself are responsible for misuse or loss of functionality of hardware. THIS POST explains very well the troubles with TV Boxes and why they are not suitable for everyone Please don't ask about support or assistance in other non-community forums nor in the official Armbian github repository, instead post your questions in this thread, in the TV Boxes forum section (hardware related) or in the Peer-to-peer support section (general linux/software related).  
    Following the recent thread on LibreElec forum about an unofficial image for rk3229 devices, I would like to make public the work made by me and @fabiobassa about bringing rk322x support to armbian.
    The project is now in -> mainline Armbian <- development fork -> here <-
     
    This first page and the last 3 or 4 pages of the thread are enough to get up to date with recent developments.
    Many useful experiences are scattered through the thread, but the most important things are collected here in the first page, so please read it carefully!
     
    Mainline kernel is fully supported and will receive most support in the future. Legacy kernel 4.4 is deprecated, but is kept around only for special purposes.
     
    What works:
    Should boot and work flawlessy on all boards with RK3228a, RK3228b and RK3229, with either DDR2 and DDR3 memories. Mainline u-boot Proprietary OPTEE provided as Trusted Execution Environment (needed for DRAM frequency scaling) All 4 cores are working Ethernet Serial UART (configured at 115200 bps, not 1.5Mbps!) Thermals, CPU and DRAM frequency scaling OTG USB 2.0 port (also as boot device!) EHCI/OHCI USB 2.0 ports MMC subsystem (including eMMC, SD and sdio devices) Hardware video acceleration NAND is available only on legacy kernel. To fully boot from NAND, use the Multitool and its steP-nand installation (instructions are below) Various WIFI over SDIO are supported (SSV6051P, SSV6256P, ESP8089, Realtek chips, etc...), ssv6256p driver is available only on legacy kernel Full GPU acceleration U-boot boot order priority: first the sdcard, then the USB OTG port and eventually the internal eMMC; you can install u-boot (and the whole system) in the internal eMMC and u-boot will always check for images on external sdcard/USB first.  
    Unbrick:
    Technically, rockchip devices cannot be bricked. If the internal flash does not contain a bootable system, they will always boot from the sdcard. If, for a reason, the bootable system on the internal flash is corrupted or is unable to boot correctly, you can always force the maskrom mode shorting the eMMC clock pin on the PCB. Here there is the procedure, but you can also google around if you get stuck on a faulty bootloader, the technique is pretty simple and requires a simple screwdriver.
     
    There are however some unfortunate cases (expecially newer boards) where shorting the eMMC clock pin is difficult or impossibile, like eMMC or eMCP BGA chips with no exposed pins. In those cases pay double attention when burning something on the internal eMMC/eMCP and always test first the image from the sdcard to be sure it works before burning anything on eMMC/eMCP.
     
    Some useful links with pins, pads or procedures for some boards:
    Generic procedure for boards with non-BGA eMMC MXQPRO_V71 - eMCP H20 - eMCP ZQ01 - eMCP  
    NAND vs eMMC vs eMCP difference:
    RK3228 and RK3229 tv boxes comes with three different flash memory chips: eMMC, NAND and eMCP.
    It does not depend upon the market name of the tv box and neither the internal board; manufacturers put whatever they find cheaper when they buy the components.
     
    NAND chip is just the non-volatile memory eMMC chip contains both the non-volatile memory plus a controller. eMCP chip contains the non-volatile memory, a controller for the non-volatile memory (like eMMC), but also contains a bank of DDR SDRAM memory on the same physical chip.  
    The difference is very important, because eMMC and eMCP are far easier to support at various levels: the controller deals with the physical characteristics of the non-volatile memory, so the software has no to deal with.
    NAND chips instead are harder to support, because the software is required to deal with the physical characteristics and non-standard things that depends upon the NAND manufacturer.
     
    If you have a NAND chips you're unlucky because mainline kernel currently cannot access it, but also because you need special care and instructions explained later.
     
    You can discover if you have a NAND, eMMC or eMCP chip looking on the board are reading the signature on the flash memory chip.
    The Multitool (see later) also can detect which chip you have onboard: the program will warn you at startup if you have a NAND chip.
     
    NAND bootloader upgrade:
    IMPORTANT: don't do this is you have an eMMC or eMCP; skip this paragraph if you are unsure too!
    For very expert people who are having issues when (re)booting images, there is the chance to upgrade the bootloader on NAND.
    The NAND bootloader is nothing else than a regular idbloader (see official rockchip documentation) but contains some bits to correctly access the data on your flash memory.
    Upgrading requires to erase the existing flash content, in the worst case will require you to follow the Unbrick procedure above or restore an older but more compatible bootloader.
    If you are not mentally ready to overcome possible further issues, don't do this!
     
    The detailed instructions and the binaries are available at this post
     
    Multimedia:
    Mainline kernel: 3D acceleration is provided by Lima driver and is already enabled. Hardware video decoding: https://forum.armbian.com/topic/19258-testing-hardware-video-decoding-rockchip-allwinner/ Deprecated legacy kernel: multimedia features, like OpenGL/OpenGL ES acceleration, hardware accelerated Kodi, ffmpeg and mpv you can take a look to this post An effective tutorial from @Hai Nguyen on how to configure a box as a hi-quality music player using an USB audio card, and controlling it via remote control is available in this post  
    Brief explanation about kernel naming:
    current kernel is the mainline LTS kernel version, most maintained and tested. This is the suggested version for production devices. If you don't know what to pick, pick this. legacy kernel (version 4.4) is provided by manufacturer; it is deprecated, unmaintained and not suggested. edge kernel is the development mainline kernel version, with experimental features and drivers; usually stable but perhaps suitable for production devices.  
    You can switch from one kernel flavour to another using armbian-config or manually via apt.
     
    Installation (via SD card):
    Building:
    You can build your own image follow the common steps to build armbian for other tv boxes devices: when you are in the moment to choose the target board, switch to CSC/TVB/EOL boards and select "rk322x-box" from the list.
     
    Download prebuilt images from the following links:
    Archive builds (GPG-signed) - https://imola.armbian.com/dl/rk322x-box/archive/ SUGGESTED - Nightly built from trunk each week by Armbian servers (GPG-signed) - https://github.com/armbian/community Old images provided by me (unsigned and outdated) - https://users.armbian.com/jock/rk322x/armbian/stable  
    Archived/older images:
    https://armbian.hosthatch.com/archive/rk322x-box/archive/
     
    Multitool:
    The Multitool is a small but powerful tool to do quick backup/restore of internal flash, but also burn images and general system rescue and maintenance via terminal or SSH.
    Compressed images will be uncompressed on fly.
    Multitool - A small but powerful image for RK322x TV Box maintenance (instructions to access via network here)  
    Quick installation instructions on eMMC:
    Build or download your preferred Armbian image and a copy of the Multitool; Burn the Multitool on an SD card; once done, place the Armbian image in images folder of the SD card NTFS partition; Plug the SD card in the TV box and plug in the power cord. After some seconds the blue led starts blinking and the Multitool appears; OPTIONAL: you can do a backup of the existing firmware with "Backup flash" menu option; Choose "Burn image to flash" from the menu, then select the destination device (usually mmcblk2) and the image to burn; Wait for the process to complete, then choose "Shutdown" from main menu; Unplug the power cord and the SD card, then replug the power cord; Wait for 10 seconds, then the led should start blinking and HDMI will turn on. The first time the boot process will take a couple of minutes or more because the filesystem is going to be resized, so be patient and wait for the login prompt. On first boot you will be asked for entering a password for root user of your choice and the name and password for a regular user Run sudo rk322x-config and select your board characteristics to enable leds, wifi chips, high-speed eMMC, etc... Run sudo armbian-config to configure timezone, locales and other personal options Congratulations, Armbian is now installed and configured!  
    Despite the procedure above is simple and reliable, I always recommend to first test that your device boots Armbian images from SD Card.
    Due to the really large hardware variety, there is the rare chance that the images proposed here may not boot. If a bad image is burned in eMMC, the box may not boot anymore forcing you to follow the unbrick section at the top of this post.
     
    Quick installation instructions on NAND:
    Build or download your preferred Armbian image and a copy of the Multitool; Burn the Multitool on an SD card; once done, place the Armbian legacy kernel image in images folder of the SD card NTFS partition; Plug the SD card in the TV box and plug in the power cord. After some seconds the blue led starts blinking and the Multitool appears; OPTIONAL: you can do a backup of the existing firmware with "Backup flash" menu option; Choose "Burn Armbian image via steP-nand" from the menu, then select the destination device (usually rknand0) and the image to burn; Wait for the process to complete, then choose "Shutdown" from main menu; Unplug the power cord and the SD card, then replug the power cord; Wait for 10 seconds, then the led should start blinking and HDMI will turn on. The first time the boot process will take a couple of minutes or more because the filesystem is going to be resized, so be patient and wait for the login prompt. On first boot you will be asked for entering a password for root user of your choice and the name and password for a regular user Run sudo rk322x-config and select your board characteristics to enable leds, wifi chips, etc... Run armbian-config to configure timezone, locales and other personal options Congratulations, Armbian is now installed!  
    Alternative: you can install the bootloader in NAND and let it boot from SD Card or USB:
    Download a copy of the Multitool and burn it on an SD card; Plug the SD card in the TV box and plug in the power cord. After some seconds the blue led starts blinking and the Multitool appears; RECOMMENDED: make a backup of the existing firmware with "Backup flash" menu option; Choose "Install Jump Start for Armbian" menu option: the Jump Start uses the internal NAND to boot from external SD Card or external USB Stick; Follow the general instructions to boot from SD Card below, skip the first erase eMMC step.  
    Quick installation instructions to boot from SD Card:
    If you are already running Armbian from eMMC, skip to the next step. Instead if you are running the original firmware you need to first erase the internal eMMC; to do so download the Multitool, burn it on an SD Card, plug the SD Card and power the TV Box. Use "Backup flash" if you want to do a backup of the existing firmware, then choose "Erase flash" menu option. Build or download your preferred Armbian image; Uncompress and burn the Armbian image on the SD Card; Plug the SD Card in the TV Box and power it on; Wait for 10 seconds, then the led should start blinking and HDMI will turn on. The first time the boot process will take a couple of minutes or more because the filesystem is going to be resized, so be patient and wait for the login prompt; On first boot you will be asked for entering a password for root user of your choice and the name and password for a regular user Run sudo rk322x-config and select your board characteristics to enable leds, wifi chips, high-speed eMMC or NAND, etc... Run armbian-config to configure timezone, locales and other personal options, or also to transfer the SD Card installation to internal eMMC; Congratulations, Armbian is running from SD Card!  
    A note about boot device order:
    With Armbian also comes mainline U-boot. If you install Armbian or just the bootloader in the eMMC or the Jump Start on internal NAND, the bootloader will look for valid bootable images in this order:
    External SD Card External USB Stick in OTG Port Internal eMMC  
    Installation (without SD card, board with eMMC)
    If you have no sd card slot and your board has an eMMC, you can burn the armbian image directly on the internal eMMC using rkdeveloptool and a male-to-male USB cable:
     
    Download your preferred Armbian image from Armbian download page and decompress it. Download the rk322x bootloader: rk322x_loader_v1.10.238_256.bin Download a copy of rkdeveloptool: a compiled binary is available in the official rockchip-linux rkbin github repository. Unplug the power cord from the tv box Plug an end of an USB Male-to-male cable into the OTG port (normally it is the lone USB port on the same side of the Ethernet, HDMI, analog AV connectors) while pressing the reset microbutton with a toothpick. You can find the reset microbutton in a hole in the back of the box, but sometimes it is hidden into the AV analog jack Plug the other end of the USB Male-to-male cable into an USB port of your computer If everything went well, run lsusb: you should see a device with ID 2207:320b Run sudo rkdeveloptool rd 3 (if this fails don't worry and proceed to next step) Run sudo rkdeveloptool db rk322x_loader_v1.10.238_256.bin Run sudo rkdeveloptool wl 0x0 image.img (change image.img this with the real Armbian image filename) Unplug the power cord Done!  
    Installation (without SD card, board with NAND)
    If you are in the unfortunate case you can't use an SD card for installation and your board has a NAND chip, you still have an option to use the quick Multitool installation steps via USB.
     
    Obtain a copy of rkdeveloptool: a compiled binary is available in the official rockchip-linux rkbin github repository. Unplug the power cord from the tv box Plug an end of an USB Male-to-male cable into the OTG port (normally it is the lone USB port on the same side of the Ethernet, HDMI, analog AV connectors) while pressing the reset microbutton with a toothpick. You can find the reset microbutton in a hole in the back of the box, but sometimes it is hidden into the AV analog jack Plug the other end of the USB Male-to-male cable into an USB port of your computer If everyting went well, using lsusb you should see a device with ID 2207:320b Run sudo rkdeveloptool wl 0x4000 u-boot-main.img (download u-boot-main.img.xz , don't forget to decompress it!) Unplug the power cord  
    Now you can follow the instructions on how to install on eMMC/NAND via SD card, just use instead an USB stick to do all the operations and plug it into the USB OTG port. Once you reboot, USB OTG port will be used as a boot device.
     
    NOTE: NAND users without SD slot may be unhappy to know that it will be difficult to do extra maintenance with Multitool in case something breaks in the installed Armbian system: installing u-boot-main.img makes the installed system unbootable because it is missing the NAND driver.
     
     
    Alternative backup, restore and erase flash for EXPERTS:
    These backup, restore and erase flash procedures are for experts only. They are kept here mostly for reference, since the Multitool is perfectly able to do same from a very comfy interface and is the suggested way to do maintenance.
     
    Backup:
    Obtain a copy of rkdeveloptool: a compiled binary is available in the official rockchip-linux rkbin github repository. If you prefer, you can compile it yourself from the sources available at official rockchip repository Unplug the power cord from the tv box Plug an end of an USB Male-to-male cable into the OTG port (normally it is the lone USB port on the same side of the Ethernet, HDMI, analog AV connectors) while pressing the reset microbutton with a toothpick. You can find the reset microbutton in a hole in the back of the box, but sometimes it is hidden into the AV analog jack Plug the other end of the USB Male-to-male cable into an USB port of your computer If everyting went well, using lsusb you should see a device with ID 2207:320b change directory and move into rkbin/tools directory, run ./rkdeveloptool rfi then take note of the FLASH SIZE megabytes (my eMMC is 8Gb, rkdeveloptool reports 7393 megabytes) run ./rkdeveloptool rl 0x0 $((FLASH_SIZE * 2048)) backup.data (change FLASH_SIZE with the value you obtained the step before) once done, the internal eMMC is backed up to backup.data file  
    Restore: first we have to restore the original bootloader, then restore the original firmware.
    Running rkdeveloptool with these switches will accomplish both the jobs:
    ./rkdeveloptool db rk322x_loader_v1.10.238_256.bin Downloading bootloader succeeded. ./rkdeveloptool ul rk322x_loader_v1.10.238_256.bin Upgrading loader succeeded. ./rkdeveloptool wl 0x0 backup.data Write LBA from file (100%) Download here:
     
    Erase the flash memory: clearing the internal eMMC/NAND memory makes the SoC look for external SD Card as first boot option.
    If there isn't any suitable SD Card, the SoC enters maskrom mode, which can then be used for full eMMC/NAND access using rkdeveloptool. This is perfectly fine if your box has an eMMC flash memory.
    NOTE: In case you have a NAND flash memory this option is however discouraged. The original bootloader contains some special parameters to correctly access the data. Clearing the flash memory will probably garbage the NAND data and restoring the bootloader may require some special instructions.
     
    Obtain a copy of rkdeveloptool: a compiled binary is available in the official rockchip-linux rkbin github repository. If you prefer, you can compile it yourself from the sources available at official rockchip repository Unplug the power cord from the board Plug an end of an USB Male-to-male cable into the OTG port (normally it is the lone USB port on the same side of the Ethernet, HDMI, analog AV connectors) while pressing the reset microbutton with a toothpick. You can find the reset microbutton in a hole in the back of the box, but sometimes it is hidden into the AV analog jack Plug the other end of the USB Male-to-male cable into an USB port of your computer If everyting went well, using lsusb you should see a device with ID 2207:320b run ./rkdeveloptool ef and wait a few seconds once done, the internal eMMC is erased and the device will boot from the sdcard from now on  
    Partecipation and debugging:
    If you want to partecipate or need help debugging issues, do not hesitate to share your experience with the installation procedure of the boxes.
    In case of issues and missed support, provide as many as possible of these things is very useful to try and bring support for an unsupported board:
     
    some photos of both sides of the board. Details of the eMMC, DDR and Wifi chips are very useful! upload the device tree binary (dtb) of your device. We can understand a lot of things of the hardware from that small piece of data; and alternative is a link to the original firmware (you can do a full backup with the Multitool); dmesg and other logs (use armbianmonitor -u that automatically collects and uploads the logs online) attach a serial converter to the device and provide the output of the serial port;  
    Critics, suggestions and contributions are welcome!
     
    Credits:
    @fabiobassa for his ideas, inspiration, great generosity in giving the boards for development and testing. The project of bringing rk322x into armbian would not have begun without his support! Justin Swartz, for his work and research to bring mainline linux on rk3229 (repository here) @knaerzche for his great contribution to libreelec support and mainline patches @Alex83 for his patience in testing the NAND bootloader upgrade procedure on his board @Jason Duhamell for his generous donation that allowed researching eMCP boards and esp8089 wifi chip
  24. Like
    jock got a reaction from dale in CSC Armbian for RK3318/RK3328 TV box boards   
    @lucky62
    Here it is the linux kernel + dtb + headers for latest 5.10.37: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1OOpjb3L-bFcabKkQKO4GS-hTVzIvKeXo?usp=sharing
    Install all the three packages via dpgk -i and then reboot.
    Backup your dtb/dtbo changed files because the directory may be wiped out during the process!
     
    This is the kernel module source code modified by me: vfd.tgz
    And this is the OpenVFDService executable compiled as-is by me from Arthur's original source code: OpenVFDService
     
    I modified the kernel module to compile both manually and as a kernel-tree module, but also fixed some dtb nomenclature.
    To compile, first run this command to create a symlink that may be missing (just run this once):
    sudo ln -sf /boot/System.map-$(uname -r) /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/build/System.map  
    Then to compile and install:
    make -j4 sudo make install make install will complain about missing signature, but don't worry, the module will load anyway.
     
    Then your dtbo should look like this:
    /dts-v1/; /plugin/; / { fragment@0 { target-path = "/"; __overlay__ { openvfd { compatible = "openvfd,tm1628"; gpio-clk = <&gpio2 0x13 0x00>; gpio-dat = <&gpio2 0x16 0x00>; gpio-stb = <&gpio2 0x12 0x00>; openvfd,chars = [00 04 03 02 01]; openvfd,dot-bits = [00 01 03 02 04 05 06]; openvfd,display-type = <0x00>; status = "okay"; }; }; }; }; Now I took the gpios from the dtb of the X88 you posted some time ago. I hope they are right.
     
    The openvfd,* properties are described on Arthur's page and documentation. Those are those which I'm using, but most probably you will need to change them to fit the led configuration of your box. The most evident problem is that the segments turn on wrong displaying unreadable numbers or maybe the indicators (usb/wifi/ethernet/...) are wrongly associated.
     
    Each character is controller by a byte, so each led of the 7 segment character is turned on and off by a bit of this byte.
    openvfd,chars is a map: the first byte is the indicators byte, then comes the first, second, third and fourth characters. On my configuration the indicator byte is the 00, then the first character is mapped to byte 04, second character to byte 03, and so on...
    openvfd,dot-bits is the map of the indicators: every bit in the indicator byte controls an indicator, there you map which bit is usb, which one is wifi, and so on...
    openvfd,display-type usually is 00 (normal) or 01 if your display translate by 180 degrees (ie: characters are flipped down and specular)
     
    Once you set up the dtbo and activate it in armbianEnv.txt, you can run the OpenVFDService executable:
    ./OpenVFDService &  
    that will hopefully turn on the display and show you the current time
  25. Like
    jock got a reaction from jaum20 in CSC Armbian for RK322x TV box boards   
    @ArkhanLK Glad you're finding the box useful and thanks for reporting!
    Netflix and friends usually have other issues related to Digital Rights Management, but never really dig into. I know that on LibreELEC you need to download the Widevine plugin.
     
    @jaum20 It should be already enabled, but honestly I never checked the coaxial SPDIF output. Will check right now
    edit: just checked on both mainline and legacy kernel and it is working fine up to 192khz! Maybe you need to tell pulseaudio to use SPDIF (IEC958) from the speaker icon in the upper right corner
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