---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Darmawan Salihun darmawan.salihun@gmail.com Date: Apr 22, 2007 8:15 AM Subject: Re: [LinuxBIOS] Intel Southbridge ROM Protection mechanism To: Stefan Reinauer stepan@coresystems.de
On 4/20/07, Stefan Reinauer stepan@coresystems.de wrote:
- Darmawan Salihun darmawan.salihun@gmail.com [070419 19:22]:
the matter, does Intel ICH5 southbridge (or other newer Inte
southbridge)
still protects (probably mirrors) the last 8KB block (bootblock) in the
BIOS
chip even when the protection bits in Block Locking Registers (BLRs) has
been
disabled? I experienced weird results between several flashing attempts using flashrom in Linux. SOme succeeded, some retain the original values.
Anyone has
an explanation on the issue?
Some flash chips support "write protecting" their boot block (and/or other blocks). I think the data sheets have more details on this.
What flash chip are you using?
Winbond W39V040FA
Usually if the south bridge or a GPIO does the protection, you'd be able
to write all or nothing. AFAIK
At some points I couldn't write at all. Maybe there is a a timing issue in the code that I added. Gonna check it again.
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