Board:lenovo/t420: Difference between revisions
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* Ctrl-Fn swap | * Ctrl-Fn swap | ||
* Mute button (Speaker only) | * Mute button (Speaker only) | ||
== Nvidia GPU == | |||
State of dual graphics on Lenovo Notebooks: [[Board:lenovo/Nvidia_Optimus]] | |||
== Proprietary components status == | == Proprietary components status == |
Latest revision as of 13:38, 31 December 2017
Status
Intel_Native_Raminit has it's own status page.
Thanks for your interest in Lenovo T420 port.
Issues:
- The USB/eSATA hybrid port that are used for EHCI debug cannot funtion after S3 resume if CONFIG_USBDEBUG is set (seems to be the southbridge problem, occurs in older Linux systems but not in newer Linux systems, I just can't figure out why, work around: reload ehci-pci module)
- Mini PCIe WWAN doesn't work
- Microphone Mute button not working in Windows 10 (but seems to work under linux)
- Synaptics Touchpad and Trackpint driver doesnot work originally under Windows 10 (but work under linux). The reason is the ACPI\VEN_PNP&DEV_0F13 generated by the coreboot can not be recognized by the driver. To workaround this, uncomment this line (MS_GROUP01_InterTouch_Inst,*PNP0F13) in the SynPD.inf file of Synaptics offcial driver. (A modified driver is here https://www.dropbox.com/s/t8d5f8n1tq5ddm7/Synaptics_v19_0_19_1__C__x86-x64__Win10__Signed__MS_Win10_UXUI.zip)
- Thermal Management. Coreboot seems does not have native thermal management (dptf.asl) for t420. Under linux it's possible to use the thermald software to work around this. Under Windows 10, the Intel Dynamic Platform and Thermal Framework driver does not work (PCI\VEN_8086&DEV_0153)
- System clock time does not change after sleep and wake up under Windows 10.
- An unknown device under Windows 10 is the ACPI\VEN_GOOG&DEV_CB00.
Tested:
- CPU: Sandy Bridge i5-2520M, i7-2630QM, and Ivy Bridge i5-3210M, i5-3360M, i7-3720QM
- RAM module combinations of 2G+0, 4G+0, 4G+4G, 8G+0, 0+8G, 4G+8G, 8G+8G
- S3 (Suspend to RAM)
- mSATA
- USB
- Video (internal, VGA, DisplayPort)
- Sound (integrated speakers, integrated mic, external headphones, external mic)
- LAN
- Mini-PCIe slots (WLAN)
- Bluetooth
- Fingerprint reader
- Linux (through GRUB-as-payload and a typical MBR install through SeaBIOS)
- Windows (through SeaBIOS as payload or chainload SeaBIOS from GRUB payload, using a VGA BIOS)
- DVD-ROM drive
- SD card slot
- TrackPoint
- Touchpad
- Webcam
- Fn hotkeys (backlight control, suspend, thinklight)
- Thinklight
- Dock (tested with a TYPE 4337)
- ExpressCard slot (hotplugging not work)
- eSATA (needs this patch, hotplugging not work)
- Ctrl-Fn swap
- Mute button (Speaker only)
Nvidia GPU
State of dual graphics on Lenovo Notebooks: Board:lenovo/Nvidia_Optimus
Proprietary components status
- CPU Microcode (optional): you may need it if your system is unstable (especially you're using a ES/QS processor)
- VGA Option ROM (optional): you need it if you want graphics in SeaBIOS but most payloads should work without it (text mode or corebootfb mode). The newest version that works is version 2170 https://www.dropbox.com/s/2h9x16kmloofp3y/snb_vbios_2170.rom
- ME (Management Engine) => The original ME is 5MB. The smallest stripped ME is 1.5MB that can be found. If you use the 1.5MB one https://www.dropbox.com/s/gesgk9ot2ho24zm/me.bin you also need the modified flash descriptor https://www.dropbox.com/s/gx9f48jqypnio2q/descriptor.bin
- EC (Embedded Controller) => you do not have to touch it (just leave as is)
Building
Just run make nconfig
, and select the board Lenovo T420. Other configurations include:
- Size of CBFS can be set up to 3M (0x300000), if you use a stripped ME from HM65 chipset, it can be more.
- You can select 'Use CMOS for configuration values'.
- You can use native graphics initialization.
- EHCI debug dongle support is recommended for debugging.
To obtain ME, Intel Descriptor, GbE images you will need to read the BIOS off your T420. Using ifdtool
you can extract those images from the backup BIOS image.
ifdtool -x </path/to/extracted/flash.bin>
You can use UEFITool or PhoenixTool to extract the VGA BIOS from factory firmware or Lenovo firmware update images, or dump the VGA BIOS via sysfs on Linux. See Retrieve VGA BIOS page for more details.
To use VGA option ROMs, you can manually add it to CBFS using cbfstool multiple times to support more GPUs on a single board. Or make use of file aliasing from SeaBIOS:
./build/cbfstool build/coreboot.rom add -f vgabios.rom -n pci8086,0106.rom -t optionrom ./build/cbfstool build/coreboot.rom add -f links -n links -t raw
The content of file links
is as follows: (I can't figure out how to do this... Is this still work in the latest source?)
pci8086,0116.rom pci8086,0106.rom pci8086,0126.rom pci8086,0106.rom pci8086,0166.rom pci8086,0106.rom
If the payload is not SeaBIOS, coreboot also support running VGA option ROMs, and the fallback file name is pci8086,0106.rom
, so you can just add it with this name.
On some T420's, a weird graphical glitch might occur using native graphics initialization. I managed to workaround through this problem by using the Option ROM initialization instead of the native way but YMMV (could the 1600x900 panel or a too new VBIOS (2119) cause issues?).
I have uploaded my build, if anyone want to try. There are 10 roms with different MAC addresses (gbe.bin) for sandybridge and another 10 for ivebridge (I tried to link vgabios, but does not work. So I build two sets). The reason for having 10 different MAC addresses is if you have several laptops plugged into the same router, you need different MAC addresses. https://www.dropbox.com/sh/mq1e2a54vv030nz/AAAgPSRYlPhuXiZiRE9qJbwQa
Flashing
T420 has an SOIC-8 flash chip of 8M (Winbond W25Q64CVSIG). It's subdivided in roughly in 3 parts:
- Descriptor (12K)
- ME firmware (5M-12K)
- System flash (3M)
ME firmware is not readable. Vendor firmware locks the flash and so you need to flash externally (unless until someone figures out a way around it).
Proceed as follows:
- Turn off your laptop, remove battery and AC adapter.
- Disassemble the T420 laptop as the hardware maintenance manual says. You have to take out the mainboard, because the flash chip is under the magnesium stucture frame.
- Connect your external SPI flasher to the SPI chip. Using an SOIC-8 clip is recommended although the flash can be done without one. Make a backup of the original BIOS in a safe place.
- Flash the chip with coreboot using flashrom.
- Reassemble the laptop.
- Plug in the AC adapter and turn on the laptop.
- You can solder five thin wires to connect the pins to near the memory. Then next time you don't need to fully disassable the laptop.
Using the Bus Pirate as an SPI flasher the pinout is as such:
Bus Pirate W25Q64BV CS /CS (1) 3.3V VCC (8) MISO DO (2) CLK CLK (6) GND GND (4) MOSI DI (5)
To read the chip using the Bus Pirate:
flashrom -p buspirate_spi:dev=/dev/ttyUSB0 -r <output file>
To flash the chip using the Bus Pirate:
flashrom -p buspirate_spi:dev=/dev/ttyUSB0 -w <coreboot image>
Reading and writing using the Bus Pirate takes time. Use the version 6.2 bootloader to make the reads and flashes faster.
I highly recommend reading the chip twice to make sure you have a stable connection. Make sure to read and compare your images like so:
flashrom -p <yourprogrammer> -r flash.bin flashrom -p <yourprogrammer> -r flash2.bin diff flash.bin flash2.bin
If you have trouble reading the chip successfully, the most common problems are:
- Insufficient power supply
- Bad contacts
- Too long wires
- Bad pinout
For more information on the chip, refer to the official datasheet of the chip available here: Winbond W25Q64CV
When the laptop is running coreboot, you can reflash the firmware using flashrom:
flashrom -p internal:laptop=force_I_want_a_brick -w <coreboot image>