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posted by martyb on Monday October 16 2017, @01:50AM   Printer-friendly
from the b-b-b-but-I-have-an-AMD! dept.

We've covered that it was possible and in theory how to do so before but I think having a proper How-To written up will save even us nerd types some hair pulling. Here's what you'll need to start:

  • an Intel-CPU-based target PC — that does not have Boot Guard enabled — on which you wish to disable the IME;
    • the target PC may be running an OEM BIOS (such as AMI, Dell etc.), or coreboot;
  • a Raspberry Pi 3 Model B single board computer ('RPi3'), for use as an external flash programmer;
  • a spare >= 8GB microSD card (to hold the 64-bit Gentoo O/S image we will use for the RPi3);
  • an appropriate IC clip for your target PC's flash chip, e.g.:
    • a Pomona 5250 for SOIC-8 chips;
    • a Pomona 5208 for unsocketed DIP-8 chips, or
    • a Pomona 5252 for SOIC-16 chips;
  • 8 female-female connector wires (to attach the appropriate clip to the RPi3's GPIO header);
  • a maintenance manual for your target PC, where available, to assist in safe disassembly / reassembly; and
    • whatever tools are stipulated in the above.

Given the above list, you'll obviously need to be comfortable identifying and connecting an IC clip to your flash chip. So, it's not a procedure for most grandmothers but neither is especially complex or difficult for the vast majority of desktop machines (laptop/other difficulty will vary widely). Also, the guide explicitly does not cover PLCC or WSON flash chips, so you're out of luck here if your board has such.

Happy hacking, folks.


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  • (Score: 5, Informative) by RamiK on Monday October 16 2017, @10:23AM

    by RamiK (1813) on Monday October 16 2017, @10:23AM (#582948)

    a Raspberry Pi 3 Model B single board computer ('RPi3'), for use as an external flash programmer;

    Get yourself a CH341A instead. Cheaper and safer since you want a real-time clock doing the R/W which the Pi can't guarantee.

    As an additional side-note, some EEPROMS are 1.8v Vcc and high logic so pushing 3.3v down their lanes is dangerous even for the first probing operation. For those you'll need a relatively expensive TL866CS and its respective 1.8v adapter module (~40$).

    I guess the only caveat with the CH341A is the incomplete linux software compared to the windows software. But I doubt the Pi is doing any better.

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