El sáb, 27 nov 2021 a las 12:47, Nico Huber (<nico.h@gmx.de>) escribió:
Hi,

On 17.11.21 23:51, Betibeteka Beranduetxea wrote:
> This is what I'm getting:> > https://aliexpress.com/item/1005001614869060.html (adapter)>
https://aliexpress.com/item/32725360255.html (burner + clamp,dirty
cheap, I> wanted the clamp, couldn't resist it)
this is an I2C/SPI programmer (says 24 25 series in the description)
your flash chip is an LPC/FWH one (49 series). So this won't work. LPC
programmers are not cheap (and that will likely not change as they
are rarely used these days).

However, I wonder if you need a programmer at all. As long as both
machines are still booting, you should be able to read/write the
BIOS flash with flashrom's "internal" programmer option. If in doubt,
you can send us a verbose log (or paste it on paste.flashrom.org)
taken with `flashrom -p internal -o logfile.txt`. Only if something
goes wrong and one of the machines isn't booting anymore, you should
need a separate programmer.


Shit happens. However I did purchase that programmed BIOS chip, so I could always unbrick the machine.


If you need a programmer, I'm not sure if I can give a good recom-
mendation. There is the teensy option [1], but it seems pretty much DIY.
What many people do (and succeed) is hot-plugging these flash chips, but
it comes with some risk of course. You can boot a PC normally, then,
while it's running, swap flash chips and then read/write the second
chip like you would during a BIOS update.


[1] https://www.flashrom.org/Teensy_3.1_SPI_%2B_LPC/FWH_Flasher

Thanks for the pointer. Of course, it had to be a teensy board, since all I have are arduinos and bluepills.

I'm just beginning to play with electronics so perhaps in the future something fast and dirty could be built on a protoboard. These programmer things look like good beginner projects. Will see.

Anyway, thank you very much for the information.

Best regards