The Netgear SRS60 and SRR60 (sold together as SRK60) are two almost
identical AC3000 routers. The SRR60 has one port labeled as wan while
the SRS60 not. The RBR50 and RBS50 (sold together as RBK50) have a
different external shape but they have an USB 2.0 port on the back.
This patch has been tested only on SRS60 and RBR50, but should work
on SRR60 and RBS50.
Hardware
--------
SoC: Qualcomm IPQ4019 (717 MHz, 4 cores 4 threads)
RAM: 512MB DDR3
FLASH: 4GB EMMC
ETH:
- 3x 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet
- 1x 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet (WAN)
WIFI:
- 2.4GHz: 1x IPQ4019 (2x2:2)
- 5GHz: 1x IPQ4019 (2x2:2)
- 5GHz: 1x QCA9984 (4x4:4)
- 6 internal antennas
BTN:
- 1x Reset button
- 1x Sync button
- 1x ON/OFF button
LEDS:
- 8 leds controlled by TLC59208F (they can be switched on/off
independendently but the color can by changed by GPIOs)
- 1x Red led (Power)
- 1x Green led (Power)
UART:
- 115200-8-N-1
Everything works correctly.
Installation
------------
These routers have a dual partition system. However this firmware works
only on boot partition 1 and the OEM web interface will always flash on
the partition currently not booted.
The following steps will use the SRS60 firmware, but you have to chose
the right firmware for your router.
There are 2 ways to install Openwrt the first time:
1) Using NMRPflash
1. Download nmrpflash (https://github.com/jclehner/nmrpflash)
2. Put the openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_srs60-squashfs-factory.img
file in the same folder of the nmrpflash executable
3. Connect your pc to the router using the port near the power button.
4. Run "nmrpflash -i XXX -f openwrt-ipq40xx-generic-netgear_srs60-squashfs-factory.img".
Replace XXX with your network interface (can be identified by
running "nmrpflash -L")
5. Power on the router and wait for the flash to complete. After about
a minute the router should boot directly to Openwrt. If nothing
happens try to reboot the router. If you have problems flashing
try to set "10.164.183.253" as your computer IP address
2) Without NMRPflash
The OEM web interface will always flash on the partition currently not
booted, so to flash OpenWrt for the first time you have to switch to
boot partition 2 and then flash the factory image directly from the OEM
web interface.
To switch on partition 2 you have to enable telnet first:
1. Go to http://192.168.1.250/debug.htm and check "Enable Telnet".
2. Connect through telent ("telnet 192.168.1.250") and login using
admin/password.
To read the current boot_part:
artmtd -r boot_part
To write the new boot_part:
artmtd -w boot_part 02
Then reboot the router and then check again the current booted
partition
Now that you are on boot partition 2 you can flash the factory Openwrt
image directly from the OEM web interface.
Restore OEM Firmware
--------------------
1. Download the stock firmware from official netgear support.
2. Follow the nmrpflash procedure like above, using the official
Netgear firmware (for example SRS60-V2.2.1.210.img)
nmrpflash -i XXX -f SRS60-V2.2.1.210.img
Notes
-----
1) You can check and edit the boot partition in the Uboot shell using
the UART connection.
"boot_partition_show" shows the current boot partition
"boot_partition_set 1" sets the current boot partition to 1
2) Router mac addresses:
LAN XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69
WAN XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6a
WIFI 2G XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69
WIFI 5G XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6b
WIFI 5G (2nd) XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:6c
LABEL XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:69
Signed-off-by: Davide Fioravanti <pantanastyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
[added 5.10 changes for 901-arm-boot-add-dts-files.patch, moved
sysupgrade mmc.sh to here and renamed it, various dtsi changes]
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Project ImmortalWrt
ImmortalWrt is a fork of OpenWrt, with more packages ported, more devices supported, better performance, and special optimizations for mainland China users.
Compared the official one, we allow to use hacks or non-upstreamable patches / modifications to achieve our purpose. Source from anywhere.
Default login address: http://192.168.1.1 or http://immortalwrt.lan, username: root, password: password.
Development
To build your own firmware you need a GNU/Linux, BSD or MacOSX system (case sensitive filesystem required). Cygwin is unsupported because of the lack of a case sensitive file system.
Requirements
To build with this project, Ubuntu 18.04 LTS is preferred. And you need use the CPU based on AMD64 architecture, with at least 4GB RAM and 25 GB available disk space. Make sure the Internet is accessible.
The following tools are needed to compile ImmortalWrt, the package names vary between distributions.
-
Here is an example for Ubuntu users:
-
Method 1:
Setup dependencies via APT
sudo apt update -y sudo apt full-upgrade -y sudo apt install -y ack antlr3 asciidoc autoconf automake autopoint binutils bison build-essential \ bzip2 ccache cmake cpio curl device-tree-compiler ecj fastjar flex gawk gettext gcc-multilib g++-multilib \ git gperf haveged help2man intltool lib32gcc1 libc6-dev-i386 libelf-dev libglib2.0-dev libgmp3-dev libltdl-dev \ libmpc-dev libmpfr-dev libncurses5-dev libncursesw5 libncursesw5-dev libreadline-dev libssl-dev libtool lrzsz \ mkisofs msmtp nano ninja-build p7zip p7zip-full patch pkgconf python2.7 python3 python3-pip python3-ply \ python-docutils qemu-utils re2c rsync scons squashfs-tools subversion swig texinfo uglifyjs upx-ucl unzip \ vim wget xmlto xxd zlib1g-dev -
Method 2:
curl -s https://build-scripts.immortalwrt.eu.org/init_build_environment.sh | sudo bash
-
-
You can also download and use prebuilt container directly:
See #Quickstart - Build image via OPDE
Note:
- For the for love of god please do not use ROOT user to build your image.
- Using CPUs based on other architectures should be fine to compile ImmortalWrt, but more hacks are needed - No warranty at all.
- You must not have spaces in PATH or in the work folders on the drive.
- If you're using Windows Subsystem for Linux (or WSL), removing Windows folders from PATH is required, please see Build system setup WSL documentation.
- Using macOS as the host build OS is not recommended. No warranty at all. You can get tips from Build system setup macOS documentation.
- As you're building ImmortalWrt, patching or disabling UPX tools is also required.
- For more details, please see Build system setup documentation.
Quickstart
-
Method 1:
- Run
git clone -b <branch> --single-branch https://github.com/immortalwrt/immortalwrtto clone the source code. - Run
cd immortalwrtto enter source directory. - Run
./scripts/feeds update -ato obtain all the latest package definitions defined in feeds.conf / feeds.conf.default - Run
./scripts/feeds install -ato install symlinks for all obtained packages into package/feeds/ - Run
make menuconfigto select your preferred configuration for the toolchain, target system & firmware packages. - Run
maketo build your firmware. This will download all sources, build the cross-compile toolchain and then cross-compile the GNU/Linux kernel & all chosen applications for your target system.
- Run
-
Method 2:
Build image via OPDE
-
Pull the prebuilt container:
docker pull immortalwrt/opde:base # docker run --rm -it immortalwrt/opde:base -
For Linux User:
git clone -b <branch> --single-branch https://github.com/immortalwrt/immortalwrt && cd immortalwrt docker run --rm -it \ -v $PWD:/openwrt \ immortalwrt/opde:base zsh ./scripts/feeds update -a && ./scripts/feeds install -a -
For Windows User:
- Create a volume 'immortalwrt' and clone ImmortalWrt source into volume.
docker run --rm -it -v immortalwrt:/openwrt immortalwrt/opde:base git clone -b <branch> --single-branch https://github.com/immortalwrt/immortalwrt .- Enter docker container and update feeds.
docker run --rm -it -v immortalwrt:/openwrt immortalwrt/opde:base ./scripts/feeds update -a && ./scripts/feeds install -a- Tips: ImmortalWrt source code can not be cloned into NTFS filesystem (symbol link problem during compilation), but docker volume is fine.
-
Proxy Support:
docker run --rm -it \ -e all_proxy=http://example.com:1081 \ -e http_proxy=http://example.com:1081 \ -e https_proxy=http://example.com:1081 \ -e ALL_PROXY=http://example.com:1081 \ -e HTTP_PROXY=http://example.com:1081 \ -e HTTPS_PROXY=http://example.com:1081 \ -v $PWD:/openwrt \ immortalwrt/opde:base zshRecommand
httprathersocks5protocolIP can not be
localhostor127.0.0.1 -
For Windows User, binary is still in volume. It can be copied to outside via followed command:
docker run --rm -v <D:\path\to\dir>:/dst -v openwrt:/openwrt -w /dst immortalwrt:base cp /openwrt/bin /dstMake sure
D:\path\to\dirhas been appended in File Sharing.
-
Related Repositories
The main repository uses multiple sub-repositories to manage packages of different categories. All packages are installed via the ImmortalWrt package manager called opkg. If you're looking to develop the web interface or port packages to ImmortalWrt, please find the fitting repository below.
- LuCI Web Interface: Modern and modular interface to control the device via a web browser.
- ImmortalWrt Packages: Community repository of ported packages.
- OpenWrt Routing: Packages specifically focused on (mesh) routing.
- CONTRIBUTED.md: the 3rd-party packages we introduced.
Support Information
For a list of supported devices see the OpenWrt Hardware Database
Documentation
Support Community
- Support Chat: group @ctcgfw_openwrt_discuss on Telegram.
License
ImmortalWrt is licensed under GPL-3.0-only.