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Hi,

Unfortunately my Sonos Connect AMP got bricked somehow. I opened it up, measured the voltages and found a UART port. I hooked it up to my laptop and it gave me the following serial output:
 


U-Boot 1.1.1(1-17-3-2.1), Build: 2.1

MPC8272 Reset Status: Check Stop, External Soft, External Hard

MPC8272 Clock Configuration
- Bus-to-Core Mult 3x, VCO Div 4, 60x Bus Freq 16-50 , Core Freq 50-150
- dfbrg 1, corecnf 0x10, busdf 3, cpmdf 1, plldf 0, pllmf 3
- vco_out 400000000, scc_clk 100000000, brg_clk 25000000
- cpu_clk 300000000, cpm_clk 200000000, bus_clk 100000000
- pci_clk 33333333

CPU: MPC8272 (HiP7 Rev 14, Mask unknown immr=0x0d10,k=0x00e1]) at 300 MHz
Board: Sonos Wembley
DRAM: 64 MB
DRAM test
Test complete - 0 errors, error pattern 00000000
Using default environment

In: serial
Out: serial
Err: serial
NAND:64 MB
ST Micro NAND 64MiB 3,3V 8-bit at 0xf8000000 (64 MB, 16 kB sector)
Bad block lbase 0, pbase 0, count 4096
Net: FCC2 ETHERNET
Hit any key to stop autoboot: 0
S0 provisionally good, KP=1, G=17
S1 provisionally good, KP=4, G=16
Boot from partition 1
Load Kernel start 10 nblock c8
Command Line (at 03fb1a08) is...

## Booting image at 01000000 ...
Image Name: Linux-2.6.39.4
Image Type: PowerPC Linux Kernel Image (gzip compressed)
Data Size: 1489443 Bytes = 1.4 MB
Load Address: 00400000
Entry Point: 00400000
Verifying Checksum ... OK
Uncompressing Kernel Image ... OK
Memory <- <0x0 0x4000000> (64MB)
CPU clock-frequency <- 0x11e1a300 (300MHz)
CPU timebase-frequency <- 0x17d7840 (25MHz)
CPU bus-frequency <- 0x5f5e100 (100MHz)

zImage starting: loaded at 0x00400000 (sp: 0x03fb0d18)
Allocating 0x2f94a1 bytes for kernel ...
gunzipping (0x00000000 <- 0x0040d000:0x006ea6e8)...done 0x2ccee0 bytes

Linux/PowerPC load: console=ttyCPM0,38400 root=/dev/ram
Finalizing device tree... flat tree at 0x6f8300
/sbin/init: error while loading shared libraries: /lib/libc.so.6: cannot read file data: Input/output error

the last line “Input/output error” indicates a correct app partition. Unfortunately the device got shipped with a minimal u-boot setup meaning you don’t have any commands, not even the help command. After playing around with it I found the sonos command which triggers a tftpboot firmware download:
 

  1. I think the device can be fixed easily by letting u-boot boot the factory partition instead of the app partition 1.

    Questions:

    1. Is there any u-boot command that can set the boot partition to the factory partition?

    2. is there a binary that I can use to fix this issue? Would the use of a corrupt binary trigger a checksum mismatch and automatically boot the factory partition?

     

@Sonos Support 

Could you provide me with a link to the firmware latest production firmware? I can set up the tftpboot server on my laptop and use the “sonos” command to download the firmware onto the device if I'm correct?


Hi ​@Reinovitch 

Welcome to the Sonos Community!

You did not receive a response from Sonos staff before now because you mentioned that you had opened the case of your Sonos product - we simply do not get involved in such situations. In addition, we are not equipped to supply this level of support on the Community.

No, we cannot provide you with firmware - I have no idea where I would get such a file, and I am not convinced that I would be allowed to if I did. I don’t really know one way or another, to be clear; this is the first time in 7 years that I have been asked!

You will likely still be able to get a 30% discount for a replacement (assuming you have not already done so) if you go to Sonos.com, log in and go to the Upgrade page - if it’s still available for that product, it will show up there.

Our posting again to this thread will have it show up in the Recently Active section of the forum - you may yet receive assistance from the Community, but I don’t think anyone will be able to supply you with a firmware file.

I hope this helps.

 


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