Hi, @Jonathan, how get access to the bootloader? do you send it to the router by streaming, or write it and then boot it?
@Hauke, I saw there's partial support, and I was planning to implemente the eth support. But I found myself that I don't know mucho about the most basic step as I allways used jtag. I think now is time to move forward :D thanks for the replies! On Sat, Apr 28, 2012 at 2:52 PM, Hauke Mehrtens <ha...@hauke-m.de> wrote: > On 04/28/2012 01:58 PM, Alberich de megres wrote: >> Hello Guys, >> >> I'm newbie at openwrt, since now I've used allways boards with jtag. >> I have a cisco e3000 router, which I bought some time ago, and I think >> is time to give it a try with openwrt. >> >> I saw there's no official build for the router, but some promising >> test. My question is how you test/develop the kernel for this routers? >> >> Let's suppose I don't have the jtag access, and normally we don't hit >> with the first try (on a new kernel porting) a full working kernel. >> How you test those new kernels? >> >> Thanks!!! >> Alberich > > Hi Alberich, > > The Cisco e3000 uses the BCM4718 chip [0] which is partly supported by > OpenWrt trunk, the generic image should work. OpenWrt should boot on > your device and 2.4 GHz WLAN should work with 802.11g speed, 802.11n > speed could work with broadcom-wl, I am currently working on getting > brcmsmac to work on that SoC. But we do not have Ethernet support for > that chip, someone has to implement this spec [1]. > > Hauke > > [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linksys_routers#E3000 > [1]: http://bcm-v4.sipsolutions.net/mac-gbit _______________________________________________ openwrt-devel mailing list openwrt-devel@lists.openwrt.org https://lists.openwrt.org/mailman/listinfo/openwrt-devel