| .gitignore | ||
| ethsock.c | ||
| main.c | ||
| Makefile | ||
| nmrp.c | ||
| nmrpd.h | ||
| nmrpflash.dev | ||
| README.md | ||
| tftp.c | ||
nmrpflash - Netgear Unbrick Utility
This program uses Netgear's [NMRP protocol] (http://www.chubb.wattle.id.au/PeterChubb/nmrp.html) to flash a new firmware image to a compatible device. This utility has been tested with a Netgear EX2700, but is likely to work on many others as well.
Prebuilt binaries for Linux, OS X and Windows are available here.
Usage: nmrpflash [OPTIONS...]
Options (-a, -i and -f are mandatory):
-a <ipaddr> IP address to assign to target device
-f <firmware> Firmware file
-i <interface> Network interface directly connected to device
-m <mac> MAC address of target device (xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx)
-M <netmask> Subnet mask to assign to target device
-t <timeout> Timeout (in milliseconds) for regular messages
-T <timeout> Time to wait after successfull TFTP upload
-p <port> Port to use for TFTP upload
-U Test TFTP upload
-v Be verbose
-V Print version and exit
-L List network interfaces
-h Show this screen
Using nmrpflash
Connect your Netgear router to your computer using a network cable. Assign a static IP address to the network adapter that's plugged into the Netgear router.
For this example, we'll assume that your network interface is eth0.
First, we have to assign a static IP address to our network interface.
In this example, we'll use 192.168.1.2. All available network interfaces
can be listed using
$ nmrpflash -L
eth0 192.168.1.2 f2:11:a1:02:03:b1
Now we can start nmrpflash. The argument for the -a option needs
to be a free IP address from the same subnet as the one used by your
network interface. We'll use 192.168.1.254. The firmware image file
can usually be downloaded directly from Netgear's FTP servers.
$ nmrpflash -i eth0 -a 192.168.1.254 -f EX2700-V1.0.1.8.img
Advertising NMRP server on eth0 ... /
Received configuration request from a4:2b:8c:00:00:01.
Sending configuration: ip 192.168.1.254, mask 255.255.255.0.
Uploading EX2700-V1.0.1.8.img ... OK
Waiting for remote to respond.
Remote finished. Closing connection.
Common issues
No suitable network interfaces found.
If you're not on Windows, rerun nmrpflash -L using sudo. In any case,
use -vvvL to see more detailed messages, and file a bug report if applicable.
No response after 60 seconds. Bailing out.
The router did not respond. Try running nmrpflash with -m and specify
your router's MAC address. It's also entirely possible that your device does
not support the NMRP protocol.
Building and installing
Linux, Mac OS X, BSDs
$ make && sudo make install
Windows
The repository includes a
DevCpp
project file (nmrpflash.dev). Download the latest
WinPcap Developer Pack
and extract it into the root folder of the nmrpflash sources.