Commit graph

14 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Amaury Pouly
d6c9303c75 sonynwz/scsitools: add support for NW-A56
Change-Id: I07e57218638ef62c0e4bf92833add6c3ba7bdcd8
2020-01-12 17:59:02 +01:00
Amaury Pouly
063ff294a2 nwztools: add DMP-Z1 to the database
This is one of those fancy gold-plated devices. Of course it breaks my scripts
that were nicely expecting every device to start with NW.

Change-Id: I161320f620f65f4f92c2650d192b26a9831eeb9d
2019-04-22 23:45:33 +02:00
Amaury Pouly
110e3b43a0 sonynwz: add NW-A57 and NW-ZX300G to the database
Change-Id: I9bbfa56c5b2d79568de5443f1098d724c4beda6a
2018-11-30 15:37:10 +01:00
Amaury Pouly
110fd2cae6 Add the NWZ-A844 to the database
For some reason even Sony didn't have it in its list...

Change-Id: I26de6071e5887cc7c6ebb695ea333c7b3d1b50db
2018-11-30 15:37:10 +01:00
Amaury Pouly
8a4cb5e619 sonynwz: add NW-A55 to database
Change-Id: I59861119c59490f586b3c6ed32a1c41df8b3d365
2018-10-29 13:29:39 +01:00
Amaury Pouly
62f0ba1c30 nwztools: add NW-A46 to the database
Change-Id: I85dc2080e0be07ff689384c0445f4f1595baf4ac
2017-11-01 12:43:33 +01:00
Amaury Pouly
819d3ee02e nwztools: add NW-A45
Change-Id: I75a7723498564ee73c3682391582e354ad672fd7
2017-10-24 17:47:28 +01:00
Amaury Pouly
2ae792c2f5 nwztools: add NW-ZX300A
Change-Id: I8b311ed6b48b92b9ecf4fb25c19119cfb2d5beb1
2017-10-24 11:46:19 +01:00
Amaury Pouly
6922323466 sonynwz: add NW-A47 to the database and regenerate nwz_db.{c,h}
Change-Id: I6331a48a4d336348e90a32cf151427b29eeedb2b
2017-10-17 13:05:11 +02:00
Amaury Pouly
7eb240a288 Add Sony NW-ZX300 model id to database
Change-Id: I8e7a14b86408c52cbd4a059e2db6a9c9d0966fc6
2017-10-07 12:45:48 +02:00
Amaury Pouly
28c3f6b4d3 Add NW-A36 and NW-A37 model IDs, based on the A30 service manual.
I am unsure about the names of the player, the manual says A36HN and A37HN but
at the same time there is a A35 and A35HN with the same ID, and Sony does not
usually put the "HN" in its device list.

Change-Id: Idbf32970aa334b30f1b8947a78b8eebd524b193b
2017-06-05 16:17:13 -05:00
Amaury Pouly
80d91e0cf5 nwztools: add A35 model and KAS
We don't know the encryption method, the KAS is completely different but it
might be useful to record it anyway for future purposes. MID extracted from
device, Japanese NW-A35.

Change-Id: I4c4bb5b063da99003b5c316061d8c490b77428a4
2017-01-08 12:30:46 +01:00
Amaury Pouly
be68b6a7bd nwztools: add NW-WM1A/Z model IDs
Also fix code that was supposed to sort things deterministically and was a
massive failure.

Change-Id: Iedf25f05a94ef51421710a283eb60f33ee977de1
2017-01-07 17:32:47 +01:00
Amaury Pouly
44bb2856a5 nwztools/database: add database of information on Sony NWZ linux players
There must be an evil genius in Sony's Walkman division. Someone who made sure
that each model is close enough to the previous one so that little code is needed
but different enough so that an educated guess is not enough.

Each linux-based Sony player has a model ID (mid) which is a 32-bit integer.
I was able to extract a list of all model IDs and the correspoding name of
the player (see README). This gives us 1) a nice list of all players (because
NWZ-A729 vs NWZ-A729B, really Sony?) 2) an easy way to find the name of player
programatically. It seems that the lower 8-bit of the model ID gives the storage
size but don't bet your life on it. The remaining bytes seem to follow some kind
of pattern but there are exceptions.

From this list, I was able to build a list of all Sony's series (up to quite
recent one). The only safe way to build that is by hand, with a list of series,
each series having a list of model IDs. The notion of series is very important
because all models in a series share the same firmware.

A very important concept on Sony's players is the NVP, an area of the flash
that stores data associated with keys. The README contains more information but
basically this is where is record the model ID, the destination, the boot flags,
the firmware upgrade flags, the boot image, the DRM keys, and a lot of other stuff.
Of course Sony decided to slightly tweak the index of the keys regularly over time
which means that each series has a potentially different map, and we need this map
to talk to the NVP driver. Fortunately, Sony distributes the kernel for all its
players and they contain a kernel header with this information. I wrote a script
to unpack kernel sources and parse this header, producing a bunch of nw-*.txt
files, included in this commit. This map is very specific though: it maps Sony's
3-letter names (bti) to indexes (1). This is not very useful without the
decription (bti = boot image) and its size (262144). This information is harder
to come by, and is only stored in one place: if icx_nvp_emmc.ko drivers, found
on the device. Fortunately, Sony distributes a number of firmware upgrade, that
contain the rootfs, than once extracted contain this driver. The driver is a
standard ELF files with symbols. I wrote a parsing tool (nvptool) that is able
to extract this information from the drivers. Using that, I produced a bunch
of nodes-nw*.txt files. A reasonable assumption is that nodes meaning and
size do not change over time (bti is always the boot image and is always
262144 bytes), so by merging a few of those file, we can get a complete picture
(note that some nodes that existed in older player do not exists anymore so
we really need to merge several ones from different generations).

The advantage of storing all this information in plain text files, is that it
now makes it easy to parse it and produce whatever format we want to use it.
I wrote a python script that parses all this mess and produces a C file and
header with all this information (nwz_db.{c,h}).

Change-Id: Id790581ddd527d64418fe9e4e4df8e0546117b80
2016-11-11 16:07:14 +01:00