Skip to content

Generic recovery and reflashing tool for embedded platforms

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

bootlin/snagboot

Repository files navigation

Snagboot

Snagboot intends to be an open-source and generic replacement to the vendor-specific, sometimes proprietary, tools used to recover and/or reflash embedded platforms. Examples of such tools include STM32CubeProgrammer, SAM-BA ISP, UUU, and sunxi-fel. Snagboot is made of two separate parts:

  • snagrecover uses vendor-specific ROM code mechanisms to initialize external RAM and run U-Boot, without modifying any non-volatile memories.
  • snagflash communicates with U-Boot to flash system images to non-volatile memories, using either DFU, UMS or Fastboot.

animated

The currently supported SoC families are ST STM32MP1/2, Microchip SAMA5, NXP i.MX6/7/8/93, TI AM335x, Allwinner SUNXI, TI AM62x, TI AM64x and Xilinx ZynqMP. Please check supported_socs.yaml or run snagrecover --list-socs for a more precise list of supported SoCs.

Installation on Linux

System requirements:

  • libusb 1.x, libusb 0.1.x or OpenUSB
  • The ensurepip Python package. On Debian, you can install the python[your python version]-venv package
  • Swig is required to build pylibfdt. You can simply install the swig package on most distros.

Snagboot is available on pip: python3 -m pip install --user snagboot.

This package provides two CLI tools:

$ snagrecover -h
$ snagflash -h

You also need to install udev rules so that snagrecover has read and write access to the USB devices exposed by the SoCs.

$ snagrecover --udev > 50-snagboot.rules
$ sudo cp 50-snagboot.rules /etc/udev/rules.d/
$ sudo udevadm control --reload-rules
$ sudo udevadm trigger

These rules work by adding the "uaccess" tag to the relevant USB devices. Systemd will then add an ACL to give access to currently logged in users. More info here.

Warning: If your distro does not use systemd, the "uaccess" method could possibly not work. In this case, make sure to customize the provided udev rules for your specific system.

Alternatively, Snagboot can be installed as a local Python wheel. An installation script is provided to automatically build and install the package.

$ cd snagboot
$ ./install.sh

There is also an AUR package available.

Installation on Windows 10 or 11

Note: Am335x devices are not supported on Windows!

Please install the following software:

Powershell is also required but it should already be installed.

After installing Python, Swig and libusb, you should add them to your PATH environment variable:

  • Open the start menu and type « environment variable » into the search bar
  • click on « Edit environment variables for your account »
  • In « User variables », click on « Path » then « Edit »
  • In the edit window, add four new paths:
C:\Users\path\to\swigwin-4.2.1\swigwin-4.2.1
C:\users\yourusername\appdata\roaming\python\python312\site-packages\libusb\_platform\_windows\x64
C:\users\yourusername\appdata\roaming\python\python312\site-packages\libusb\_platform\_windows\x32
C:\Users\yourusername\AppData\Roaming\Python\Python312\Scripts

setuptools: Run pip install setuptools then pip install snagboot in powershell

Snagboot requires the "libusb-win32" driver to be bound to any device it processes apart from i.MX and SAMA5 devices, which already have their own system drivers. This can be done using the Zadig tool which you previously installed.

After opening Zadig, select the device entry corresponding to your board's VID:PID pair.

Then, make sure the "libusb-win32" driver is selected and click on "Install driver". You should only have to do this once for a given VID:PID pair.

Usage guide

Note: On Linux, running snagboot as root is not recommended and will typically not work, since it is probably installed for the current user only

To recover and reflash a board using snagboot:

  1. Check that your SoC is supported in snagrecover by running: snagrecover --list-socs
  2. Setup your board for recovery
  3. Build or download the firmware binaries necessary for recovering and reflashing the board.
  4. Run snagrecover and check that the recovery was a success i.e. that U-Boot is running properly.
  5. Run snagflash to reflash the board

For recovering and flashing large batches of boards efficiently, you may use the Snagfactory application which is included in Snagboot. Usage instructions for Snagfactory are available at snagfactory.md. The configuration file syntax for Snagfactory is documented at snagfactory_config.md.

If you encounter issues, please take a look at the troubleshooting section.

You can play the snagrecover tutorial in your terminal!

sudo apt install asciinema
asciinema play -s=2 docs/tutorial_snagrecover.cast

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Since Snagboot includes many different recovery techniques and protocols, we try to keep the code base as structured as possible. Please consult the contribution guidelines.

License

Snagboot is released under the GNU General Public License version 2