flashrom.8 14.8 KB
Newer Older
1
.TH FLASHROM 8 "Apr 29, 2010"
2
.SH NAME
3
flashrom \- detect, read, write, verify and erase flash chips
4
.SH SYNOPSIS
5 6 7 8 9 10
.B flashrom \fR[\fB\-n\fR] [\fB\-V\fR] [\fB\-f\fR] [\fB\-h\fR|\fB\-R\fR|\
\fB\-L\fR|\fB\-z\fR|\fB\-E\fR|\fB\-r\fR <file>|\fB\-w\fR <file>|\
\fB\-v\fR <file>]
         [\fB\-c\fR <chipname>] [\fB\-m\fR [<vendor>:]<part>] \
[\fB\-l\fR <file>]
         [\fB\-i\fR <image>] [\fB\-p\fR <programmername>[:<parameters>]]
11 12
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B flashrom
13
is a utility for detecting, reading, writing, verifying and erasing flash
14 15 16 17
chips. It's often used to flash BIOS/EFI/coreboot/firmware images in-system
using a supported mainboard, but it also supports flashing of network cards
(NICs), SATA controller cards, and other external devices which can program
flash chips.
Uwe Hermann's avatar
Uwe Hermann committed
18
.PP
19 20 21
It supports a wide range of DIP32, PLCC32, DIP8, SO8/SOIC8, TSOP32, and
TSOP40 chips, which use various protocols such as LPC, FWH, parallel flash,
or SPI.
22
.SH OPTIONS
23 24
Please note that the command line interface for flashrom will change before
flashrom 1.0. Do not use flashrom in scripts or other automated tools without
25
checking that your flashrom version won't interpret options in a different way.
26
.PP
27 28
You can specify one of \-h, \-R, \-L, \-z, \-E, \-r, \-w, \-v or no operation.
If no operation is specified, flashrom will only probe for flash chips. It is
29 30 31 32
recommended that if you try flashrom the first time on a system, you run it
in probe only mode and check the output. Also you are advised to make a
backup of your current ROM contents with \-r before you try to write a new
image.
33
.TP
Uwe Hermann's avatar
Uwe Hermann committed
34 35 36
.B "\-r, \-\-read <file>"
Read flash ROM contents and save them into the given
.BR <file> .
37
.TP
Uwe Hermann's avatar
Uwe Hermann committed
38
.B "\-w, \-\-write <file>"
39 40 41
Write
.B <file>
into flash ROM.
42
.TP
43
.B "\-n, \-\-noverify"
44
Skip the automatic verification of flash ROM contents after writing. Using this
45 46
option is
.B not
47
recommended, you should only use it if you know what you are doing and if you
48 49 50
feel that the time for verification takes too long.
.sp
Typical usage is:
51
.B "flashrom -n -w file"
52 53 54 55
.sp
This option is only useful in combination with
.BR \-\-write .
.TP
Uwe Hermann's avatar
Uwe Hermann committed
56 57 58
.B "\-v, \-\-verify <file>"
Verify the flash ROM contents against the given
.BR <file> .
59
.TP
60
.B "\-E, \-\-erase"
Uwe Hermann's avatar
Uwe Hermann committed
61
Erase the flash ROM chip.
62
.TP
63 64
.B "\-V, \-\-verbose"
More verbose output.
65
.TP
66
.B "\-c, \-\-chip" <chipname>
67 68 69 70
Probe only for specified flash ROM chip. This option takes the chip name as
printed by
.B "flashrom \-L"
without the vendor name. Please note that the chip name is case sensitive.
71
.TP
72
.B "\-m, \-\-mainboard" [<vendor>:]<part>
73 74 75 76 77 78
Override mainboard settings.
.sp
flashrom reads the coreboot table to determine the current mainboard. If no
coreboot table could be read or if you want to override these values, you can
specify \-m, e.g.:
.sp
79
.B "  flashrom --mainboard AGAMI:ARUMA -w agami_aruma.rom"
80 81 82 83 84 85
.sp
See the 'Supported mainboards' section in the output of 'flashrom \-L' for
a list of boards which require the specification of the board name, if no
coreboot table is found.
.TP
.B "\-f, \-\-force"
86
Force one or more of the following actions:
87
.sp
88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95
* Force chip read and pretend the chip is there.
.sp
* Force chip access even if the chip is bigger than max decode size for\
 the flash bus.
.sp
* Force erase even if erase is known bad.
.sp
* Force write even if write is known bad.
96 97 98 99
.TP
.B "\-l, \-\-layout <file>"
Read ROM layout from
.BR <file> .
100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113
.sp
flashrom supports ROM layouts. This allows you to flash certain parts of
the flash chip only. A ROM layout file looks like follows:
.sp
  00000000:00008fff gfxrom
  00009000:0003ffff normal
  00040000:0007ffff fallback
.sp
  i.e.:
  startaddr:endaddr name
.sp
All addresses are offsets within the file, not absolute addresses!
If you only want to update the normal image in a ROM you can say:
.sp
114
.B "  flashrom --layout rom.layout --image normal -w agami_aruma.rom"
115 116 117
.sp
To update normal and fallback but leave the VGA BIOS alone, say:
.sp
118
.B "  flashrom -l rom.layout -i normal \"
119
.br
120
.B "           -i fallback -w agami_aruma.rom"
121 122
.sp
Currently overlapping sections are not supported.
123
.TP
Uwe Hermann's avatar
Uwe Hermann committed
124
.B "\-i, \-\-image <name>"
Uwe Hermann's avatar
Uwe Hermann committed
125 126 127
Only flash image
.B <name>
from flash layout.
128
.TP
129
.B "\-L, \-\-list\-supported"
130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137
List the flash chips, chipsets, mainboards, and PCI card "programmers"
supported by flashrom.
.sp
There are many unlisted boards which will work out of the box, without
special support in flashrom. Please let us know if you can verify that
other boards work or do not work out of the box. For verification you have
to test an ERASE and/or WRITE operation, so make sure you only do that
if you have proper means to recover from failure!
138
.TP
139 140 141 142
.B "\-z, \-\-list\-supported-wiki"
Same as
.BR \-\-list\-supported ,
but outputs the supported hardware in MediaWiki syntax, so that it can be
143 144
easily pasted into the wiki page at http://www.flashrom.org/. Please note
that MediaWiki output is not compiled in by default.
145
.TP
146
.B "\-p, \-\-programmer <name>[:parameter[,parameter[,parameter]]]"
147 148
Specify the programmer device. Currently supported are:
.sp
149 150
.BR "* internal" " (default, for in-system flashing in the mainboard)"
.sp
151 152
.BR "* dummy" " (just prints all operations and accesses)"
.sp
153 154
.BR "* nic3com" " (for flash ROMs on 3COM network cards)"
.sp
155 156
.BR "* gfxnvidia" " (for flash ROMs on NVIDIA graphics cards)"
.sp
157 158
.BR "* drkaiser" " (for flash ROMs on Dr. Kaiser PC-Waechter PCI cards)"
.sp
159 160
.BR "* satasii" " (for flash ROMs on Silicon Image SATA/IDE controllers)"
.sp
161 162
.BR "* atahpt" " (for flash ROMs on Highpoint ATA/RAID controllers)"
.sp
163
.BR "* it87spi" " (for flash ROMs behind an ITE IT87xx Super I/O LPC/SPI translation unit)"
164
.sp
165 166
.BR "* ft2232spi" " (for flash ROMs attached to a FT2232H/FT4232H based USB SPI programmer)"
.sp
167 168
.BR "* serprog" " (for flash ROMs attached to Urja's AVR programmer)"
.sp
169 170
.BR "* buspiratespi" " (for flash ROMs attached to a Bus Pirate)"
.sp
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184
Some programmers have optional or mandatory parameters which are described
in detail in the
.B PROGRAMMER SPECIFIC INFO
section. Support for some programmers can be disabled at compile time.
.B "flashrom -h"
lists all supported programmers.
.TP
.B "\-h, \-\-help"
Show a help text and exit.
.TP
.B "\-R, \-\-version"
Show version information and exit.
.SH PROGRAMMER SPECIFIC INFO
Some programmer drivers accept further parameters to set programmer-specific
185
parameters. These parameters are separated from the programmer name by a
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
186 187 188 189
colon. While some programmers take arguments at fixed positions, other
programmers use a key/value interface in which the key and value is separated
by an equal sign and different pairs are separated by a comma or a colon.
.TP
190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230
.BR "internal " programmer
Some mainboards require to run mainboard specific code to enable flash erase
and write support (and probe support on old systems with parallel flash).
The mainboard brand and model (if it requires specific code) is usually
autodetected using one of the following mechanisms: If your system is
running coreboot, the mainboard type is determined from the coreboot table,
otherwise, the mainboard is detected by examining the onboard PCI devices
and possibly DMI info. If PCI and DMI do not contain information to uniquely
identify the mainboard (which is the exception), it might be necessary to
specify the mainboard using the \-m switch (see above).
.sp
Some of these board-specific flash enabling functions (called board enables)
in flashrom have not yet been tested. If your mainboard is detected needing
an untested board enable function, a warning message is printed and the
board enable is not executed, because a wrong board enable function might
cause the system to behave erratically, as board enable functions touch the
low-level internals of a mainboard. Not executing a board enable function
(if one is needed) might cause detection or erasing failure. If your board
protects only part of the flash (commonly the top end, called boot block),
flashrom might encounter an error only after erasing the unprotected part,
so running without the board-enable function might be dangerous for erase
and write (which includes erase).
.sp
The suggested procedure for a mainboard with untested board specific code is
to first try to probe the ROM (just invoke flashrom and check that it
detects your flash chip type) without running the board enable code (i.e.
without any parameters). If it finds your chip, fine, otherwise, retry
probing your chip with the board-enable code running, using
.sp
.B "flashrom -p internal:boardenable=force"
.sp
If your chip is still not detected, the board enable code seems to be broken
or the flash chip unsupported. Otherwise, make a backup of your current ROM
contents (using \-r) and store it to a medium outside of your computer, like
an USB drive or a network share. If you needed to run the board enable code
already for probing, use it for reading too. Now you can try to write the
new image. You should enable the board enable code in any case now, as it
has been written because it is known that writing/erasing without the board
enable is going to fail. In any case (success or failure), please report to
the flashrom mailing list, see below.
.sp
231 232 233 234 235 236 237
On systems running coreboot, flashrom checks whether the desired image matches
your mainboard. This needs some special board ID to be present in the image.
If flashrom detects that the image you want to write and the current board
do not match, it will refuse to write the image unless you specify
.sp
.B "flashrom -p internal:boardmismatch=force"
.sp
238 239
If your mainboard uses an ITE IT87 series Super I/O for LPC<->SPI flash bus
translation, flashrom should autodetect that configuration. You can use
240
.sp
241 242 243 244 245 246
.B "flashrom -p internal:it87spiport=portnum"
syntax as explained in the
.B it87spi
programmer section to use a non-default port for controlling the IT87 series
Super I/O. In the unlikely case flashrom doesn't detect an active IT87 LPC<->SPI
bridge, you can try to force recognition by using the it87spi programmer.
247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264
.sp
Using flashrom on laptops is dangerous and may easily make your hardware
unusable (see also the BUGS section).  The embedded controller (EC) in these
machines often interacts badly with flashing. http://www.flashrom.org/Laptops
has more information. If flash is shared with the EC, erase is guaranteed to
brick your laptop and write is very likely to brick your laptop.
Chip read and probe may irritate your EC and cause fan failure, backlight
failure, sudden poweroff, and other nasty effects.
flashrom will attempt to detect laptops and abort immediately for safety
reasons.
If you want to proceed anyway at your own risk, use
.sp
.B "flashrom -p internal:laptop=force_I_want_a_brick"
.sp
You have been warned.
.sp
We will not help you if you force flashing on a laptop because this is a really
dumb idea.
265
.TP
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
266 267
.BR "dummy " programmer
An optional parameter specifies the bus types it
268
should support. For that you have to use the
269
.B "flashrom -p dummy:type"
270 271 272 273 274 275 276
syntax where
.B type
can be any comma-separated combination of
.B parallel lpc fwh spi all
in any order.
.sp
Example:
277
.B "flashrom -p dummy:lpc,fwh"
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
278
.TP
279
.BR "nic3com" , " gfxnvidia" , " satasii " and " atahpt " programmers
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
280 281 282
These programmers have an option to specify the PCI address of the card
your want to use, which must be specified if more than one card supported
by the selected programmer is installed in your system. The syntax is
283
.B "flashrom -p xxxx:bb:dd.f"
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
284
, where
285 286
.B xxxx
is the name of the programmer
287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294
.B bb
is the PCI bus number,
.B dd
is the PCI device number, and
.B f
is the PCI function number of the desired NIC.
.sp
Example:
295
.B "flashrom -p nic3com:05:04.0"
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
296 297 298 299 300
.TP
.BR "it87spi " programmer
An optional parameter sets the I/O base port of the IT87* SPI controller
interface to the port specified in the parameter instead of using the port
address set by the BIOS. For that you have to use the
301
.B "flashrom -p it87spi:it87spiport=portnum"
302 303 304
syntax where
.B portnum
is an I/O port number which must be a multiple of 8.
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
305 306 307
.TP
.BR "ft2232spi " programmer
An optional parameter species the controller
308
type and interface/port it should support. For that you have to use the
309
.B "flashrom -p ft2232spi:model,port=interface"
310 311 312 313 314 315 316
syntax where
.B model
can be any of
.B 2232H 4232H
and
.B interface
can be any of
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
317
.BR "A B" .
318 319 320 321
The default model is
.B 4232H
and the default interface is
.BR B .
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
322 323 324
.TP
.BR "serprog " programmer
A mandatory parameter specifies either a serial
325
device/baud combination or an IP/port combination for communication with the
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
326 327
programmer. In the device/baud combination, the device has to start with a
slash. For serial, you have to use the
328
.B "flashrom -p serprog:/dev/device:baud"
329
syntax and for IP, you have to use
330
.B "flashrom -p serprog:ip:port"
331 332
instead. More information about serprog is available in serprog-protocol.txt in
the source distribution.
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
333 334
.TP
.BR "buspiratespi " programmer
335 336
A required dev parameter specifies the Bus Pirate device node and an optional
spispeed parameter specifies the frequency of the SPI bus. The parameter
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
337
delimiter is a comma. Syntax is
338
.sp
339
.B "flashrom -p buspiratespi:dev=/dev/device,spispeed=frequency"
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
340
.sp
341 342 343 344
where
.B frequency
can be any of
.B 30k 125k 250k 1M 2M 2.6M 4M 8M
Michael Karcher's avatar
Michael Karcher committed
345
(in Hz). The default is the maximum frequency of 8 MHz.
346 347 348
.SH EXIT STATUS
flashrom exits with 0 on success, 1 on most failures but with 2 if /dev/mem
(/dev/xsvc on Solaris) can not be opened and with 3 if a call to mmap() fails.
349
.SH BUGS
350
Please report any bugs at
351
.BR http://www.flashrom.org/trac/flashrom/newticket ","
352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359
or on the flashrom mailing list at
.BR http://www.flashrom.org/mailman/listinfo/flashrom "."
.sp
Using flashrom on laptops is dangerous and may easily make your hardware
unusable unless you can desolder the flash chip and have a full flash chip
backup. This is caused by the embedded controller (EC) present in many laptops,
which interacts badly with any flash attempts. This is a hardware limitation
and flashrom will attempt to detect it and abort immediately for safety reasons.
360 361
.SH LICENCE
.B flashrom
362 363
is covered by the GNU General Public License (GPL), version 2. Some files are
additionally available under the GPL (version 2, or any later version).
364 365
.SH COPYRIGHT
.br
366 367 368
Please see the individual files.
.SH AUTHORS
Carl-Daniel Hailfinger
369
.br
370
Claus Gindhart <claus.gindhart@kontron.com>
371
.br
372 373
Dominik Geyer <dominik.geyer@kontron.com>
.br
374
Eric Biederman
375 376 377 378 379 380 381
.br
Giampiero Giancipoli <gianci@email.it>
.br
Joe Bao <Zheng.Bao@amd.com>
.br
Luc Verhaegen <libv@skynet.be>
.br
382 383
Li-Ta Lo
.br
384 385
Markus Boas <ryven@ryven.de>
.br
386 387
Michael Karcher <flashrom@mkarcher.dialup.fu-berlin.de>
.br
388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396
Nikolay Petukhov <nikolay.petukhov@gmail.com>
.br
Peter Stuge <peter@stuge.se>
.br
Reinder E.N. de Haan <lb_reha@mveas.com>
.br
Ronald G. Minnich <rminnich@gmail.com>
.br
Ronald Hoogenboom <ronald@zonnet.nl>
397
.br
398 399
Sean Nelson <audiohacked@gmail.com>
.br
400 401
Stefan Reinauer <stepan@coresystems.de>
.br
402 403 404 405 406 407
Stefan Wildemann <stefan.wildemann@kontron.com>
.br
Steven James <pyro@linuxlabs.com>
.br
Uwe Hermann <uwe@hermann-uwe.de>
.br
408
Wang Qingpei
409
.br
410
Yinghai Lu
411 412
.br
some others 
413
.PP
414 415
This manual page was written by Uwe Hermann <uwe@hermann-uwe.de> and Carl-Daniel
Hailfinger.
416
It is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL (version 2 or later).