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NAME

       int6k - Qualcomm Atheros INT6x00 Powerline Device Manager

SYNOPSIS

       int6k [options] [device] [device] [...]

DESCRIPTION

       This version of the Qualcomm Atheros Device Manager for Linux performs basic operations on
       Atheros INT6x00 devices using the raw Ethernet protocol described in the Qualcomm  Atheros
       HomePlug  AV  Firmware  Technical  Reference  Manual.   It  can be used to interrogate and
       control devices or upgrade firmware if on-board NVRAM is present.

       This program is part of the  Qualcomm  Atheros  Powerline  Toolkit.   Is  supports  legacy
       chipsets  INT6000,  INT6300  and  INT6400.   See  program  amptool  for  AR7400 and AR7450
       chipsets.  See program plctool for QCA6410, QCA7000 and QCA7420 chipsets.  See the plc man
       page for an overview and installation instructions.

OPTIONS

       -a     Read  device  attributes  using VS_OP_ATTRIBUTES.  Attributes are short strings and
              integers that describe device hardware and firmware.  They are concatenated to form
              the output that is similar to option -r but derived differently.

       -B action
              Press  the  simple connect pushbutton using VS_PB_ENC.  The action can be specified
              by number 1, 2, 3  or  4  or  by  symbol  "join",  "leave",  "status"  or  "reset",
              respectively.   Use 1 on both devices that are expected to join.  Use 2 only on the
              device that is expected to leave the network.

       -C module
              Commit (flash) downloaded modules to NVRAM using VS_MOD_NVM.   The  module  can  be
              spedified  by  number  1,  2 or 3 or by symbol "nvm", "pib" or "both", repectively.
              Module 3 is equivalent to option -F which writes the NVM  and  PIB  together.   You
              cannot force flash NVRAM using this option.  Use option -FF to force flash.

       -d filename
              Read  Watchdog  Report  from  the  device  and write it to the named file in binary
              format using VS_WD_RPT.  The report file  can  be  sent  to  Qualcomm  Atheros  for
              technical  analysis.   No  assumptions  are  made based on filename and no filename
              convetions are enforced; however, you should use a .log file extension to  indicate
              binary format.

       -D xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx
              Define  the  16  octet  Device  Access Key (DAK) in hex format.  The DAK is used by
              option -J.  It may also be set to  "key1"  or  "key2"  as  explained  in  the  KEYS
              section.

       -e     Redirects  stderr  messages to stdout.  By convention status and error messages are
              printed on stderr while primary program output is printed on stdout.   This  option
              prints all output on stdout in cases where this is desired.

       -f     Read  device  NVRAM parameters using VS_GET_NVM.  An error will be reported when no
              NVRAM is present.  This option can be used to determine if NVRAM is large enough to
              store the runtime firmware and parameter block.

       -F[F]  Write previously downloaded MAC and PIB to NVRAM using VS_MOD_NVM.  Adding a second
              F here or another -F anywhere on the command  line  will  force-flash  a  blank  or
              corrupted  NVRAM.   Firmware  loaded from NVRAM will treat force-flash as an error.
              This option can be used to create factory settings but cannot  be  used  to  change
              them  once  created.   Subsequent use creates and updates operational settings that
              can be erased using a factory reset.  This option is executed after all  others  on
              the command line, except for the -R option.

       -i interface
              Select  the host Ethernet interface.  All requests are sent via this host interface
              and only reponses received via this host interface  are  recognized.   The  default
              interface  is  eth1  because  most  people  use  eth0  as  their  principle network
              connection;  however,  if  environment  string  "PLC"  is  defined  then  it  takes
              precedence  over  the  default  interface.   This option then takes precedence over
              either default.

       -I     Read the device PIB header using VS_RD_MOD and print the  firmware  major  revision
              number,  PIB minor revision number, Device Access Key (DAK), Network Membership Key
              (NMK), MAC address and other information on stdout.

       -J xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx
              Set the Network Membership Key (NMK) on the remote device, specified by MAC,  using
              VS_SET_KEY.  This option is similar to option -K but requires the remote device MAC
              and DAK in addition to the NMK and local device MAC  address.   The  NMK  value  is
              defined  using  option -K unless you want to use the default value.  The remote DAK
              is defined using option -D unless you want to use the default  value.   Programming
              remote  device  keys  is  complicated.   It  is  often easier to connect the device
              directly to the host and use the -K option.

       -K xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx
              Define the Network Membership Key (NMK) value  used  by  options  -M  or  -J.   The
              symbolic names "key1" and "key2" are recognized as described in the KEY section.

       -l count
              Define  the  number  of  times  that  the  command will be repeated for each device
              specified.  Normally, you will repeat operations on one device only.

       -m     Read network  membership  information  using  VS_NW_INFO.   This  can  be  used  to
              determine network configuration.

       -M     Set the Network Membership Key (NMK) on the local device using VS_SET_KEY.  The NMK
              value is specified using the -K option unless you want to use the default value.

       -n filename
              Read firmware from the device SDRAM and write it  to  the  named  .nvm  file  using
              multiple  VS_RD_MOD  messages.   No  assumptions  are made based on filename and no
              filename conventions are enforced.  This option is performed before option -N  when
              both are specified.

       -N filename
              Read  the  named  .nvm  file  and  write  it to the device using multiple VS_WR_MOD
              messages.  No assumptions are made based on filename and  no  filename  conventions
              are  enforced;  however,  files  having invalid .nvm format will be rejected.  This
              option is executed after -n when both are specified.

       -p filename
              Read parameters from the device SDRAM and write them to the named .pib  file  using
              multiple  VS_RD_MOD  messages.   No  assumptions  are made based on filename and no
              filename convetions are enforced.  This option is executed before  option  BP  when
              both are specified.

       -P filename
              Read  the  named  .pib  file  and  write  it to the device using multiple VS_WR_MOD
              messages.  No assumptions are made based on filename and  no  filename  conventions
              are  enforced;  however,  files  having invalid .pib format will be rejected.  This
              option is executed after -p when both are specified.

       -q     Suppresses status messages on stderr.

       -Q     Quick flash.  The program will not wait for a device to reset or  the  firmware  to
              restart  after  writing flash memory.  This option is desirable with newer firmware
              that writes flash memory in the background.  It has  no  effect  unless  used  with
              option -F or -C.

       -r     Read  device  firmware and hardware revision using VS_SW_VER.  Output is similar to
              option -a but is derived differently.

       -R     Reset the device using VS_RS_DEV.  This option is executed after all others on  the
              same command line.

       -s     Read device SDRAM configuration using VS_RD_CBLOCK.

       -S filename
              Read  the  named  .cfg  file  and  write  it  to the device using VS_SET_SDRAM.  No
              assumptions are made based on filename and no filename  conventions  are  enforced;
              however, files having an invalid .cfg file format will be rejected.  Do not confuse
              .cfg files with .config files.  See chkcfg and config2cfg for more  information  on
              SDRAM configuration file formats.

       -t milliseconds
              Read  timeout  in milliseconds.  Values range from 0 through UINT_MAX.  This is the
              maximum time allowed for a response.  The default  is  shown  in  brackets  on  the
              program menu.

       -T     Restore  factory  defaults.  This permanently erases all PIB changes made since the
              device was  last  programmed  with  factory  default  settings.   The  device  will
              automatically reset and reboot.

       -v     Print  additional information on stdout.  In particular, this option dumps incoming
              and outgoing packets which can be saved as text files for reference.

       -w seconds
              Defines the number of seconds to wait before repeating command line options.   This
              option has no effect unless option -l is also specified with a non-zero value.

       -x     Cause  the  program to exit on the first error instead of continuing with remaining
              iterations, operations or devices.  Normally, the program reports errors and  moves
              on to the next operation, iteration or device depending on the command line.

       -?,--help
              Print  program  help  summary  on  stdout.  This option takes precedence over other
              options on the command line.

       -?,--version
              Print program version information on stdout.  This  option  takes  precedence  over
              other  options  on  the command line.  Use this option when sending screen dumps to
              Atheros Technical Support so that they know exactly  which  version  of  the  Linux
              Toolkit you are using.

ARGUMENTS

       device The  Ethernet hardware address of some powerline device.  More than one address may
              be specified on the command line.  If more  than  one  address  is  specified  then
              operations are performed on each device in turn.  The default address is local.  as
              explained in the DEVICES section.

KEYS

       Passwords are variable length character strings that end-users  can  remember.   Keys  are
       fixed  length  binary  values  created  by encrypting passwords.  There are two encryption
       algorithms for HomePlugAV.  One for DAKs and the other for NMKs.  This means that a  given
       password  will produce different keys depending on use.  This program only deals with keys
       because that is what powerline devices recognize.  The passwords that generated  the  keys
       are irrelevant here.

       Encryption  keys  are tedious to type and prone to error.  For convenience, symbolic names
       have been assigned to common encryption keys and are recognized by options -D and -K.

       key1   Key      for      encrypted       password       "HomePlugAV".        This       is
              "689F074B8B0275A2710B0B5779AD1630"         for         option         -D        and
              "50D3E4933F855B7040784DF815AA8DB7" for option -K.

       key2   Key      for      encrypted      password      "HomePlugAV0123".       This      is
              "F084B4E8F6069FF1300C9BDB812367FF"         for         option         -D        and
              "B59319D7E8157BA001B018669CCEE30D" for option -K.

       none   Always "00000000000000000000000000000000".

DEVICES

       Powerline devices use Ethernet hardware, or Media Access Control (MAC), addresses.  Device
       addresses  are  12  hexadecimal  digits  (0123456789ABCDEFabcdef) in upper, lower or mixed
       case.  Individual octets may be separated by colons, for clarity, but not all octets  need
       to be seperated.  For example, "00b052000001", "00:b0:52:00:00:01" and "00b052:000001" are
       valid and equivalent.

       These symbolic addresses are recognized by this program and may be  used  instead  of  the
       actual address value.

       all    Equivalent to "broadcast", described next.

       broadcast
              The  Ethernet  broadcast  address,  FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF.  All devices, whether local,
              remote or foreign will respond to this address.

       local  The Atheros Local  Management  Address  (LMA),  00:B0:52:00:00:01.   Local  Atheros
              powerline  devices  recognize this address but remote and foreign powerline devices
              do not.  A remote device is any poserline device at the far end of  the  powerline.
              A foreign device is a powerline device not manufactured by Atheros.

REFERENCES

       See  the  Qualcomm  Atheros  HomePlug  AV  Firmware  Technical  Reference  Manual for more
       information.

DISCLAIMER

       Atheros  HomePlug  AV  Vendor  Specific  Management  Message  structure  and  content   is
       proprietary  to  Qualcomm Atheros, Ocala FL USA.  Consequently, public information may not
       be available.  Qualcomm Atheros reserves the right to modify message structure or  content
       in  future  firmware releases without any obligation to notify or compensate users of this
       program.

EXAMPLES

          # int6k -n old.nvm -p old.pib -N new.nvm -P new.pib -F 01:23:45:67:89:AB

       Performs 5 operations on one device.  Uploads the firmware and PIB  from  the  device  and
       writes  them  to files old.nvm and old.pib, respectively.  Reads files new.nvm and new.pib
       and downloads them as new firmware and PIB, respectively.  Commits the downloaded firmware
       and  PIB  to NVRAM.  Operations are executed in the order just described regardless of the
       order specified on the command line.  If you want  reading  and  writing  to  occur  in  a
       different  order  then  you must use two or more commands to accomplish tasks in the order
       you want.

          # int6k -N new.nvm 01:23:45:67:89:28
          # int6k -P new.pib 01:23:45:67:89:28
          # int6k -C 3 01:23:45:67:89:28

       It is not neccessary to specify all operations on one command  line.   The  three  command
       lines  above  do  essentially  the  same  thing  as  the command line shown in the previou
       example.  Notice that this example uses -C 3, instead of -F, as an alternate way to  write
       MAC  and  PIB  to  NVRAM.   Specifying  -C  1,  instead,  would  write the .nvm file only.
       Specifying, -C 2, instead, would write the .pib file only.  The value 3 is the logical  OR
       of 1 and 2.

          # int6k -N new.nvm -P new.pib -FF local

       Downloads  file  new.nvm  and  file  new.pib  and  force  flashes the local device.  Force
       flashing only works on running firmware  that  has  been  downloaded  and  stated  by  the
       Qualcomm  Atheros Boot Loader.  See int6kf to download, start firmware and perform a force
       flash in one operation.

          # int6k -MK key1
          # int6k -M

       These two commands are equivalent.  They set the NMK  on  the  local  device  to  key1  as
       descripted in the KEYS section.  The first command resets the NMK on the local device with
       -M then specifies the NMK as key1.  The second command omits the key  specification  since
       key1 is the program default NMK.  One could, of course, type the encryption key.

SEE ALSO

       plc(1),  amptool(1),  int6kf(1),  int6khost(1),  int6kid(1),  int6krate(1),  int6krule(1),
       int6kstat(1), int6kwait(1), plctool(1)

CREDITS

        Charles Maier
        Nathaniel Houghton