03-08-2012, 01:30 PM | #136 | |
Carpe diem, c'est la vie.
Posts: 6,433
Karma: 10773668
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Multiverse 6627A
Device: K1 to PW3
|
Quote:
If you boot to diags, you can export the USB drive from a menu item and access it as a USB drive from a host PC. If it runs, there will be a new RUNME.done file. There is a sample RUNME.done in the "SelectBoot" thread that displays stuff on the eInk display so you know immediately if it ran. You can also run it with no ENABLE_DIAGS file, in which case it boots to main before running, instead of diags. Or instead of using a RUNME.sh script, you can use fastboot to flash a diags partition that enables SSH, then mount the main partition and repair it from an SSH shell from the diags menu. When restoring partitions to a /dev/mmc* device, you should always boot from the OTHER partition. Do no write to the raw device that you booted from. At this time, this is probably the easier and simplest method: https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...d.php?t=170929 Last edited by geekmaster; 03-08-2012 at 01:46 PM. |
|
03-08-2012, 01:46 PM | #137 |
Junior Member
Posts: 9
Karma: 10
Join Date: Mar 2012
Device: Kindle Touch
|
One more thing Geekmaster. When I'm in diags mode, I tried the Exit, Reboot or Disable Diags option. When I was in that, I used the Check Pass/Fail Status. It says "DIAGS FAILED" at the top, and "SEND THIS UNIT TO REWORK" in the body. Any ideas?
|
03-08-2012, 02:10 PM | #138 |
Carpe diem, c'est la vie.
Posts: 6,433
Karma: 10773668
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Multiverse 6627A
Device: K1 to PW3
|
DIAGS FAILED can mean many things. It can even mean that the battery is charged more than 70% and needs to be partially discharged before shipping. You can safely ignore it.
|
03-08-2012, 03:24 PM | #139 |
Junior Member
Posts: 9
Karma: 10
Join Date: Mar 2012
Device: Kindle Touch
|
Oh, this time, I can't get the other bricked Kindle in main mode to load. It just keeps rebooting itself, without me even touching it.
|
03-08-2012, 04:08 PM | #140 |
Carpe diem, c'est la vie.
Posts: 6,433
Karma: 10773668
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Multiverse 6627A
Device: K1 to PW3
|
That could be a damaged startup script. You should be able to get it into diags mode with MfgTool and fix it from there, especially if you write a diags partition with SSH installed on it (see the debricking threads).
|
03-08-2012, 06:18 PM | #141 |
Junior Member
Posts: 9
Karma: 10
Join Date: Mar 2012
Device: Kindle Touch
|
Now I can't get RUNME.sh to run after a magic reboot. I check the Kindle for files, and the only things that show up are RUNME.sh and data.tar.gz. No RUNME.done or anything. Besides that, it's still just rebooting itself.
|
03-08-2012, 07:00 PM | #142 |
Carpe diem, c'est la vie.
Posts: 6,433
Karma: 10773668
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Multiverse 6627A
Device: K1 to PW3
|
From MfgTool, set it to fastboot mode. In fastboot, do:
sudo ./fastboot setvar bootmode diags Then it will always boot to diags even without using MfgTool. In diags, try copying your mmcblk0p1.img file to /dev/mmcblk0p1 again. Do not mount mmcblk0p1 first. If that fails, perhaps your mmcblk0p1.img file is bad. Download it again and try again. I know that file was good -- I used it myself. If you can get into diags and see the contents of your USB drive, the kindle hardware appears to be working. One possibility is that the main kernel is damaged, and that can be flashed with fastboot. You need to get a clean image of that file. |
03-08-2012, 07:50 PM | #143 |
Junior Member
Posts: 9
Karma: 10
Join Date: Mar 2012
Device: Kindle Touch
|
Any idea how to do that on Windows? I have cygwin installed, but when I try sudo, it says no such command, or something similar. When I try su, it says user root does not exist. So, any idea how to do it on Windows since sudo is a linux command?
|
03-08-2012, 08:00 PM | #144 |
Carpe diem, c'est la vie.
Posts: 6,433
Karma: 10773668
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Multiverse 6627A
Device: K1 to PW3
|
I think in cygwin you are root.
But did you get fastboot working in cygwin? Try: ./fastboot getvar bootmode and it should report the current value saved in mmc. ./fastboot setvar bootmode diags will change the value to diags. |
03-12-2012, 04:29 PM | #145 |
Carpe diem, c'est la vie.
Posts: 6,433
Karma: 10773668
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Multiverse 6627A
Device: K1 to PW3
|
fastboot for native win32 (cygwin not needed)
You can download it here, and run it at a DOS prompt:
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho....php?p=2000997 Each kindle needs its own set of libusb-win32 device drivers installed, to work with fastboot for windows. There are multiple ways to do this, and multiple versions of libusb drivers for windows. You can read some details about how *I* installed them for my K4 and Touch here: https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho....php?p=2001621 You still need to know which libusb-win32 version, and what installers to use, and more (that you can learn from the libusb websites). More information will be provided later (perhaps in a wiki page). Hopefully there is enough information at the above links for you to figure out how to use it now if you need it. This eliminates the problem of needed Windows for MfgTool and linux for fastboot, and the problem of the kindle dropping out of fastboot mode when the USB connections is disconnected or reset (by rebooting the host PC or VM). But it has the added complication of needed Windows device drivers. At least there are alternative methods of using MfgTool and fastboot now, so you can use whichever method works best for you. |
03-17-2012, 10:23 PM | #146 | |
Junior Member
Posts: 2
Karma: 10
Join Date: Feb 2012
Device: kt
|
Quote:
|
|
03-17-2012, 10:58 PM | #147 | |
Carpe diem, c'est la vie.
Posts: 6,433
Karma: 10773668
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Multiverse 6627A
Device: K1 to PW3
|
Quote:
When downloading the MfgTool package from Freescale, it also includes USB/HID drivers for windows in its folders, but when I tried installing those drivers (for testing purposes), windows reported that they did not match my hardware... Linux should not need any extra device drivers installed for USB/HID, and I do not think that a Mac needs extra drivers installed either. Last edited by geekmaster; 03-19-2012 at 12:33 AM. |
|
03-30-2012, 08:17 PM | #148 |
Member
Posts: 14
Karma: 12366
Join Date: Mar 2012
Device: Kindle 4GNT
|
Hello,
sorry for necroposting this thread but I believe that this thread is more suitable for the problem than the generic unbricking one. I think my Kindle (4NT) is broken very thoroughly. When it was still a little better, I could access diags mode before it froze and even then I could boot fastboot with the mfgtool and try some stuff there, too. This method seems to have gone, too. MfgTool still can "see" the kindle after magic-booting, yet none of the three options work in any way. Fastboot cannot find the device and it also disappears from windows device manager after starting the profile. So it seems like I'm in the "even if everything else fails, we can still flash with mfgtool"-mode. I tried to learn how to work in it but unfortunately, I don't know how to work in it. I downloaded this "Document.zip" with instructions on how to use the mfgtool, even help for writing simple UCL.XMLs but I just fail at writing them so they do anything. I don't know which CMDs the Kindle will accept and testing some of the stuff from the docs resulted in error messages or even mfgtool crashing. I was hoping I'd be done with a simple cmd type=load file=mmc0.bin address=0x0 but things seem far more complicated. "Push"ing write-commands to the Kindle also gave no success and I'm doubting that trying every other example from the docs will yield any additional results. Has anyone ever flashed a larger file with mfgtool instead of booting to fastboot and flashing from there? Could he share the right cmd? From what I gather, the "boot"-command downloads to RAM and starts from there - and the supplied images don't do more than pointing to a point in flash. Would something like this be possible with a complete fastboot-image (extracted from mmcblk)? I've read that I could compile custom uboots from the amazon-source? Are those bootloaders that should be called via "boot" or do they have to be flashed to MMC, too? Regards, TCC |
03-30-2012, 10:30 PM | #149 |
Carpe diem, c'est la vie.
Posts: 6,433
Karma: 10773668
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Multiverse 6627A
Device: K1 to PW3
|
It would be easier to flash with fastboot than writing a custom MfgTool profile.
Now there is a windows version of fastboot, but you need to install the libusb-win32 device drivers to use it. You can start fastboot mode in windows with MfgTool, then use the windows fastboot, with no risk of dropping out of fastboot mode when the USB port resets or drops when switching operating systems from windows to linux. The "simple debricking" thread now has a downloadable linux kernel for the main partition, in the event that yours got damaged in the mmc. You can flash the main and diags linux kernels and the diags partition from fastboot, but you need to boot diags and use dd to flash the main partition. If you *really* want to learn to use MfgTool to do new stuff, you should connect to the kindle serial port so you can see the status messages that result from commands sent to it by MfgTool. I suggest that you first go back to the fastboot flashing method and try that, using the windows fastboot. There are posts that show how to install and configure windows libusb-win32 drivers. If you need any kernel or partition images not posted in the "simple debricking" first post, you can request them here or in that thread. And do not worry about thread necromancy -- please use this thread for relevant content such as yours, and keep us posted about your progress (and MfgTool investigation). Good luck, and good learning! |
03-31-2012, 06:32 AM | #150 | ||||
Member
Posts: 14
Karma: 12366
Join Date: Mar 2012
Device: Kindle 4GNT
|
Quote:
Problem is: I can't choose; fastboot doesn't work anymore. After choose the fastboot via MfgTool, the kindle doesn't switch into fastboot mode, but sets itself to mass storage (If I'm lucky)(for some time). I'd love to re-flash a working fastboot, then flash the diags kernel and diags image, boot into diags and then dd the main partition from there, but getting fastboot to work is the first step so I'm kind of stuck with MfgBoot for that.. (or serial, though I haven't got a converter for RS232@1.7V yet) Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
To be honest: I've read through the "simple debricking", the "fastboot manifesto", the "fastboot for win32" and "select boot" (this one)-threads several times. I know you're the expert in Kindles, here (and as soon as I get the Karma system figured out, there'll be as much of it going your way as I can send). I kind of hoped that you'd have used a custom mfgboot-profile before (apart form the "switch bootmode"-ones) and could point me in the right direction for trying out writing my own. As soon as I know a correct "flash"-command, I guess, I can get back on track with fastboot, diags, ssh etc. I kinda like how one can get Kindles working again by working upwards from fastboot. But without fastboot, I'm way down at the "can never be destroyed" USB-HID mode and need to work upward to fastboot. I'm just lost in the mass of cmd-commands for fastboot and none of them seem to work with the kindle. I'll be more than happy to keep you posted. Building profiles to rescue-flash fastboot or the kernels (not sure whether mfgboot has a similar problem regarding "large" partitions) could keep people from messing with the more dangerous fastboot-commands ("hmm.. eraseall sounds nice"). But without any idea on the magic words for "flash file to kindle" in the xml-file, I'm stuck. Regards, TCC |
||||
Tags |
debricking, kindle mx50 select boot |
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Bricked Kindle Touch; Won't boot into diags/fastboot | kerotan | Kindle Developer's Corner | 3 | 05-19-2012 10:58 AM |
Kindle Touch does not boot | marmomr | Kindle Developer's Corner | 38 | 05-16-2012 01:19 PM |
Kindle Touch select text, copy paste? | Zimmy | Amazon Kindle | 3 | 02-18-2012 08:45 AM |
Kindle Touch Won't Boot | teekay | Kindle Developer's Corner | 3 | 12-10-2011 12:51 AM |
Opus cannot boot, stuck on boot screen | baloma | Bookeen | 35 | 11-13-2010 04:20 AM |