Skulls - Thinkpad T440P
Get it from our release page
- coreboot: We take coreboot's master branch at the time we build a release image.
- microcode update: revision
0x28
from 2019-11-12 - SeaBIOS: version 1.16.3 from 2023-11-07
Note: This release includes a non-free binary blob mrc.bin
that is used
for dram initialisation.
- run
sudo ./skulls.sh -b t440p
on your current T440P Linux system - Power down, remove the battery. Remove the keyboard and palmrest. Connect
a hardware flasher to an external PC (or a Raspberry Pi with a SPI 8-pin chip clip
can directly be used), and run
sudo ./external_install_bottom.sh
on the lower chip andsudo ./external_install_top.sh -b t440p
on the top chip of the two. - For updating later, run
./skulls.sh -b t440p
. No need to disassemble.
And always use the latest released package. This will be tested. The git master branch is not meant to be stable. Use it for testing only.
Run Linux on your T440P, install dmidecode
and run
sudo ./skulls.sh -b t440p
. It simply prints system information and
helps you to be up to date.
Make sure you have the latest skulls package release by running
./skulls.sh -b t440p -U
.
- An 8 Pin SOIC Clip, for example from Pomona electronics (you'll find it somewhere online)
- 6 female jumper wires like these to connect the clip to a hardware flasher (if not included with the clip)
- a hardware flasher supported by flashrom, see below for the examples we support
Follow any disassembly tutorial you can find online. You need to almost fully disassemble if you want to flash (unlock and me_cleaner) the 8M chip too. The 2 chips are rotated 180 degrees to one another on the board.
The 4MB chip:
The 8MB chip:
... choose one of the following supported flashing hardware examples:
A Raspberry Pi can directly be a flasher through it's I/O pins, see below. Use a test clip or hooks, see required hardware.
On the RPi we run Raspbian and have the following setup:
-
Connect to the console: Either
- connect a screen and a keyboard, or
- Use the Serial connection using a
USB-to-serial cable (like Adafruit 954,
FTDI TTL-232R-RPI or
others) and
picocom (
picocom -b 115200 /dev/ttyUSB0
) or minicom
-
in the SD Cards's
/boot/config.txt
fileenable_uart=1
anddtparam=spi=on
-
For flashrom we put
spi_bcm2835
andspidev
in /etc/modules -
Connect to a wifi or ethernet to
sudo apt-get install flashrom
-
connect the Clip to the Raspberry Pi 3 (there are prettier images too):
Edge of pi (furthest from you) (UART) L GND TX RX CS E | | | | F +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ T | x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x | | x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x | E +----------------------------------^---^---^---^-------------------------------^--+ D | | | | | G 3.3V MOSIMISO| GND E (VCC) CLK Body of Pi (closest to you)
Pin Number | Clip (25xx signal) | Raspberry Pi |
---|---|---|
1 | CS | 24 |
2 | MISO | 21 |
3 | not used | not used |
4 | GND | 25 |
5 | MOSI | 19 |
6 | CLK | 23 |
7 | not used | not used |
8 | 3.3V |
Connect corresponding RPI Pins, according to the images above.
Now copy the Skulls release tarball over to the Rasperry Pi and continue on the Pi.
The CH341A from Winchiphead, a USB interface chip, is used by some cheap memory programmers. The one we describe can be bought at aliexpress but it's available elsewhere too. This means you need a different computer running a Linux based system here. Also, we don't use the included 3,3V power output (provides too little power), but a separate power supply. If you don't have any, consider getting a AMS1117 based supply for a second USB port (like this or this).
- Leave the P/S Jumper connected (programmer mode, 1a86:5512 USB device)
- Connect 3,3V from your external supply to the Pomona clip's (or hook) VCC
- Connect GND from your external supply to GND on your CH341A programmer
- Connect your clip or hooks to the rest of the programmer's SPI pins
- Connect the programmer (and power supply, if USB) to your PC's USB port
tar -xf skulls-<version>.tar.xz
cd skulls-<version>
With the chips at the edge of the board closer to you, this is the right chip. Flashing the 8MB chip is optional but highly recommended. It has the same pinout as the 4MB chip, but the two chips are soldered the opposite way around. When you don't unlock the 8MB chip with an external flasher, you can't flash internally and fix the security issues in the Intel Management Engine.
sudo ./external_install_bottom.sh -m -k <backup-file-to-create>
That's it. Keep the backup safe. Here are the options (just so you know):
- The
-m
option appliesme_cleaner -S -d
before flashing back, see me_cleaner. - The
-l
option will (re-)lock your flash ROM, in case you want to force yourself (and others) to hardware-flashing, see updating.
This is the left chip of the 2. Choose the image to flash during running:
sudo ./external_install_top.sh -b t440p -k <backup-file-to-create>
This selects and flashes it and that's it. Keep the backup safe, assemble and turn on the T440P. coreboot will do hardware init and start SeaBIOS.
If you have locked your flash (i.e. ./external_install_bottom -l
) you can
flash externally using external_install_top.sh -b t440p
just like the
first time, see above. Only the "upper" 4MB chip has to be written.
It is recommended to do the update directly on your T440P using Linux
though. This is considered more safe for your hardware and is very convenient -
just install the "flashrom" program and run ./skulls.sh -b t440p
, see below.
- boot Linux with the
iomem=relaxed
boot parameter (for example in /etc/default/grubGRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT
) - download the latest Skulls release tarball and unpack it or check for updates by running
./skulls.sh -b t440p -U
. - run
sudo ./skulls.sh -b t440p
and choose the image to flash.
Hint: In case your Linux distribution's GRUB bootloader doesn't use the full
screen, put the line GRUB_GFXMODE=1366x768x32
in your /etc/default/grub
file
(and run update_grub
).
On the T440P, there are 2 physical "BIOS" chips. The 4MB one holds the actual bios we can generate using coreboot, and the 8MB one holds the rest that you can modify yourself once, if you like, but strictly speaking, you don't need to touch it at all. What's this "rest"? Mainly a tiny binary used by the Ethernet card and the Intel Management Engine. Read the coreboot documentation for more details.
git clone https://github.com/merge/skulls
cd skulls/t440p
git checkout 1.0.0
for the release you want to build../build.sh
and choose the configuration you want to build.
In order to create your own splashscreen image, before building,
overwrite the bootsplash.jpg
with your own JPEG, using
- "Progressive" turned off, and
- "4:2:0 (chroma quartered)" Subsampling