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Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli, 03/27/2020 01:25 AM
I9100GBootloader¶
- Table of contents
- I9100GBootloader
Findings, TODO and status¶
See OMAPBootrom for more information on the OMAP restricted boot.
- I've extracted the MLO but I'm unsure of its size and when I sent it through USB to the bootrom it failed. It might be because of the sram size limit but anyway as I don't know how to parse signatures yet (I need to look at the wiki for breaking motorolla restricted boot) I'm unsure of the exact binary size to send. Once I can parse that stuff, I will know the exact size of the signed area and so of the binary.
- I've not managed to get any difference by booting from mmc1
- I've not dumped yet the usual register for booting configuration like SYS_BOOT
- check the device's OMAP4 the sram size limit
- check the load address / memory mapping of MLO in case of USB boot or boot from eMMC.
- Check mmc1 booting constraint (card size, look if < 4GiB works)
- Read about SYS_BOOT and booting, though fuse infos is most probably missing
- check if chipsec has infos on OMAP fuses
- Read more on the wiki against motorolla
- Try to find a way to access the OMAP wiki and look if there is any stuff on fuses and restricted boot
- If infos about fuses are ever found, ideally write drivers and upstream them in Linux, u-boot, Barebox and crucible
- Look if crucible is good for adding infos about OM pins, SYS_BOOT etc. Not sure if Linux exports such registers and where
hpagseddy and GNUtoo tried several tests on their respective devices, and the device always ended up going to the battery charging screen:
- Building xloader and loaing it with omap-usb-boot through USB
- Same with the addition of a for(;;) loop in the code to see if it hangs (it's supposed to if the code runs)
- Same but with the watchdog being configured to reboot after 1 second (it's supposed to reboot if the code is correct and runs)
hpagseddy and GNUtoo also found that when using odin to flash the MLO partition, odin interface makes the user think that the MLO partition was flashed correctly, while odin didn't flash anything. That may be due to the partition being set Read-Only and/or to the "File Offset" and "File Size" being 0.
-- Entry #0 --- Binary Type: 0 (AP) Device Type: 2 (MMC) Identifier: 1 Attributes: 0 (Read-Only) Update Attributes: 0 Partition Block Size/Offset: 0 Partition Block Count: 0 File Offset (Obsolete): 0 File Size (Obsolete): 0 Partition Name: X-loader Flash Filename: MLO FOTA Filename:
We know that nothing was successfuly flashed as we dumped MLO, and verified that the binary was signed by looking if it contained the strings that indicate that (PRIMAPP, KEYS, CertPK_)
MLO versions¶
As MLO is under the GPLv2+, its binaries are also under that license.
This means that if the binaries are not signed, they are legally speaking and practically speaking free software. So if we find the full and corresponding source code (which is or was probably distributed by Samsung on opensource.samsung.com) we can use them and redistribute them very easily.
As for the signed versions, while we can legally distribute them as well, as they are legally under a free software license, they are signed with keys that users don't have. If users don't have the ability to run modified version then they are practically speaking not free software.
Weather or not the binaries also work on unsigned devices and if they can be modified on such devices remains to be tested.
Device | Android version | String | Signed |
---|---|---|---|
I9100G_CHN_CHN | Android 2.3.6 | Texas Instruments X-Loader 1.41 (Mar 20 2012 - 11:20:26) | Yes |
? | Android 4.1.2 | Texas Instruments X-Loader 1.41 (Jun 27 2013 - 18:34:17) | Yes |
How to check if you have a signed bootloader¶
How to check from the bootloader interface to install the recovery.¶
To do that you need to get into the ODIN MODE that is typically used to install the Replicant recovery:
- Start the device by holding the following key combination: Volume down, Select, Power,
- Hold the key combination until the device shows a Warning message.
- Confirm that you want to download a custom OS using volume up
- Make sure the device is in Downloading mode
When this is done, it should show some text:
ODIN MODE PRODUCT NAME: GT-I9100G_CHN_CHN
Here CHN_CHN probably refers to the Chinese version. And it looks like that version has a signed bootloader: According to a thread on the XDA developers forum "Means that you own a chinese bootloader locked I9100G. You can't flash any other bootloader than the chinese one."
How to check with command line utilities¶
To get the bootrom to try to boot on USB, you need to do the following:- Connect the USB cable to the device but make sure it's not connected on the computer.
- Power off the device
- Connect the USB cable
If we do that, we get the following in the kernel log of your laptop:
usb 1-1: new high-speed USB device number 24 using ehci-pci usb 1-1: unable to get BOS descriptor or descriptor too short usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=0451, idProduct=d00f, bcdDevice= 0.00 usb 1-1: New USB device strings: Mfr=33, Product=37, SerialNumber=0 usb 1-1: Product: OMAP4430 usb 1-1: Manufacturer: Texas Instruments
Note that your kernel might need to be compiled with CONFIG_USB_ANNOUNCE_NEW_DEVICES=y
to print that. In Parabola CONFIG_USB_ANNOUNCE_NEW_DEVICES=y is enabled.
We can also try to get a bit more infos with omap-usb-boot:
$ sudo omap-usb-boot -v -w boot invalidbootmedia Finding and opening USB device Found and opened omap4 USB device: OMAP4430 ASIC device id: 4430, HS device Booting from device invalidbootmedia... Booting device invalidbootmedia not found Booting from device failed
Here we know the device is signed because it's a "HS device".
If it was not signed it would print "GP device" instead.
Using the Android version or other devices properties?¶
hpagseddy/i9100g_xloader is based on ths-backup/i9100g_xloader which has an ics (Icecream Sandwitch, an Android version) branch only. According to hpagseddy, that branch is also used for Android Jelly brean.
It's still unclear if there is some correlation between Android version and signed bootloaders.
The device that was given to GNUtoo that has a signed bootloader also has the following characteristics:
Software state: Running the stock OS, unmodified
Android version: Android 2.3.6
Baseband version: IG9100GZCLC2
Build number: GINGERBREAD.ZCLC2
Kernel version: 2.6.35.7 se.infra@SEI-30#2
According to a thread on XDA there is a corelation between the Baseband version
and the geographic zone that is targeted. And as we can see above, the Build number
seem to be related to the Baseband version
as well. While the list of baseband versions is incomplete, we can still use it to avoid the Chinese version (CHN_CHN) which has a signed bootloader.
At this point it's also still unclear if any of the other characteristics above correlate to signed or unsigned bootloaders.
As the binaries are under the GPLv2 or later, It would also be a good idea to collect all of them, match them with the device characteristics like the Build
number and Baseband version
, and verify if they are signed or not with some free software tool.
We could even publish the unsigned versions. As for the signed versions, if they cannot run on devices that don't enforce bootloader signatures, it would probably not be a good idea to publish them as the binaries wouldn't respect the 4 freedoms, but we can still check with the FSF if they have good ideas on that point.
Source code¶
- https://github.com/hpagseddy/i9100g_xloader This got rebuilt and flashed, and it worked on the device it was tested on.
- https://blog.the-leviathan.ch/?p=408
TODO¶
- Document the various firmware version mentioned here: https://www.sammobile.com/samsung/galaxy-s2/firmware/#GT-I9100G
- Understand how to get unsigned versions (Android version, serial number, etc)
- Get a device with an unsigned bootloader and u-boot and ask samsung for source code
- Check the boot order on unsigned devices (is it possible to boot from USB easily?)
- Try to boot the xloader nevertheless, as the device could be in some "verify but not enforce mode" for signatures
Updated by Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli over 4 years ago · 36 revisions