Nand erase
From Openmoko
(added nand erase warning) |
m (-Documentation, -Technical, -Software (non-openmoko), +Flash) |
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After connecting, you should get a prompt where you can tell u-boot to clean certain parts of the NAND memory. | After connecting, you should get a prompt where you can tell u-boot to clean certain parts of the NAND memory. | ||
− | {{warning|Before you hit enter on one of the following commands, make sure that you are *not* issuing a plain "nand erase" command - always make sure you tell it which partition to erase. If you forget this you'll brick the | + | {{warning|Before you hit enter on one of the following commands, make sure that you are *not* issuing a plain "nand erase" command - always make sure you tell it which partition to erase. If you forget this you'll brick the Neo1973 and you'll need a debug board to recover it. For FreeRunner, you can recover using the NOR flash.}} |
− | nand erase | + | nand erase rootfs |
− | nand erase | + | nand erase kernel |
To exit cu you need to type: | To exit cu you need to type: | ||
~. | ~. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Flash]] |
Latest revision as of 22:15, 12 September 2008
To make a NAND erase, you need to connect to your device while in uboot using minicom or cu. The device will usually be called /dev/ttyACM0. You might need to
sudo chown uucp.uucp /dev/ttyACM0
to get the necessary right (even as root). Using cu, you can then access the Neo:
cu -l /dev/ttyACM0
After connecting, you should get a prompt where you can tell u-boot to clean certain parts of the NAND memory.
WARNING: Before you hit enter on one of the following commands, make sure that you are *not* issuing a plain "nand erase" command - always make sure you tell it which partition to erase. If you forget this you'll brick the Neo1973 and you'll need a debug board to recover it. For FreeRunner, you can recover using the NOR flash. |
nand erase rootfs nand erase kernel
To exit cu you need to type:
~.