The WRGG images exist in both big and little endian variants,
as can be seen from the image generator in
tools/firmware-utils/src/mkwrggimg.c, you either pass
the "-b" flag or not. The D-Link DIR-685 is using little
endian images so we need to support splitting these.
Detect endianness like this: if the kernel entity size
gets silly big (bigger than the flash memory) we are
probably using the wrong endianness.
Example: my kernel of 0x0067ff64 was switched around by
wrong endianness and detected as 0x64ff67a0 (the actual
size in swapped endianness + header 0xa0).
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
/* sanity checks */
if (le32_to_cpu(hdr.magic1) == WRGG03_MAGIC) {
kernel_ent_size = hdr_len + be32_to_cpu(hdr.size);
+ /*
+ * If this becomes silly big it's probably because the
+ * WRGG image is little-endian.
+ */
+ if (kernel_ent_size > master->size)
+ kernel_ent_size = hdr_len + le32_to_cpu(hdr.size);
+
+ /* Now what ?! It's neither */
+ if (kernel_ent_size > master->size)
+ return -EINVAL;
} else if (le32_to_cpu(hdr.magic1) == WRG_MAGIC) {
kernel_ent_size = sizeof(struct wrg_header) + le32_to_cpu(
((struct wrg_header*)&hdr)->size);