nmrpflash
uses Netgear's NMRP protocol
to flash a new firmware image to a compatible device. It has been successfully used on a Netgear
EX2700, EX6100v2, EX6120, EX6150v2, DNG3700v2, R6100, R6220, R7000, D7000, WNR3500, R6080, R6400
and R6800, R8000, R8500, WNDR3800, WNDR4500v3 but is likely to be compatible with many other Netgear
devices.
Prebuilt binaries for Linux, macOS and Windows are available here
(Npcap is required on Windows). FreeBSD packages can be fetched and installed using the
FreeBSD pkg
command.
Usage: nmrpflash [OPTIONS...]
Options (-i, and -f or -c are mandatory):
-a <ipaddr> IP address to assign to target device
-A <ipaddr> IP address to assign to selected interface
-B Blind mode (don't wait for response packets)
-c <command> Command to run before (or instead of) TFTP upload
-f <firmware> Firmware file
-F <filename> Remote filename to use during TFTP upload
-i <interface> Network interface directly connected to device
-m <mac> MAC address of target device (xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx)
-M <netmask> Subnet mask to assign to target device
-t <timeout> Timeout (in milliseconds) for NMRP packets
-T <timeout> Time (seconds) to wait after successfull TFTP upload
-p <port> Port to use for TFTP upload
-R <region> Set device region (NA, WW, GR, PR, RU, BZ, IN, KO, JP)
-v Be verbose
-V Print version and exit
-L List network interfaces
-h Show this screen
Download the correct firmware image for your device. When downloading from the Netgear site,
the firmware is usually contained in a .zip
file - extract this first. The actual firmware
file will have an extension such as .chk
, .bin
, .trx
or .img
.
Now, using an Ethernet cable, connect your Netgear router to the computer that will run
nmrpflash
. Use the LAN port, which is often colored blue on Netgear devices. If the
router has multiple LAN ports, use the one labled 1
.
Next, you'll have to determine which network interface corresponds to the one connected to the Netgear router. All available interfaces can be listed using
# nmrpflash -L
eth0 192.168.1.2 c0:de:fa:ce:01:23
eth2 0.0.0.0 ca:fe:ba:be:45:67
wifi0 10.0.10.138 de:ad:be:ef:89:ab
For the rest of this example, let's assume that your router is connected to eth2
, and that
you want to flash a firmware image named EX2700-V1.0.1.8.img
.
First of all, turn off the router. Then start nmrpflash
using the following command:
# nmrpflash -i eth2 -f EX2700-V1.0.1.8.img
Waiting for Ethernet connection.
As soon as you see the Waiting for Ethernet connection.
message, turn the router on. If all went
well, nmrpflash
will continue printing messages:
Advertising NMRP server on eth2 ... /
Received configuration request from fe:ed:1b:ad:f0:0d
Sending configuration: 10.164.183.252/24
Received upload request: filename 'firmware'.
Uploading EX2700-V1.0.1.8.img ... OK (3539077 b)
Waiting for remote to respond.
Received keep-alive request (11).
Remote finished. Closing connection.
Reboot your device now.
Now reboot the device, and you're good to go.
In any case, run nmrpflash
with -vvv
before filing a bug report!
You must install your Linux distribution's libpcap
and libnl-3
packages (exact names will vary depending on your distribution).
On Debian based distros (such as Ubuntu) you can install these dependencies with
sudo apt install libpcap libnl-3
Install Npcap. For nmrpflash
versions prior
to 0.9.14, install Npcap with "WinPcap Compatibility" enabled.
Version 0.9.13 was the last version to support Windows XP.
Go to -> System Preferences -> Security & Privacy
. Under the General
tab, there should
be a message like "nmrpflash was blocked from use because it is not from an identified
developer". Click the Allow anyway
button next to it, and run nmrpflash
again.
If that doesn't work, try this.
Make sure the network interface is up (wireless interfaces are not supported). On Windows, try restarting the Npcap service (commands must be run as administrator):
C:\> net stop npf
C:\> net start npf
The router did not respond. Always run nmrpflash
in the sequence
described above!
If that still doesn't work, you can try "blind mode", which can be
invoked using -B
. Note that you also have to specify your router's
mac address using -m xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx
. Also beware that in this mode,
careful timing between running nmrpflash
and turning on the router may
be required!
It's also possible that your device does not support the NMRP protocol.
The device did not respond to nmrpflash
's TFTP upload request. By default,
nmrpflash
will assign 10.164.183.252
to the target device, while adding 10.164.183.253
to the network interface specified by the -i
flag. You can use -a
to change the IP
address assigned to the target (e.g. if your network is 192.168.1.0/24
, specify a free
IP address, such as -a 192.168.1.252
), and -A
to change the IP address used for the
network interface.
After a successful file upload, nmrpflash
waits for up to 5 minutes for an
answer from your device. You can increase this by specifying a longer timeout
using -T
switch (argument is in seconds).
It's entirely possible that the image was flashed successfully, but the operation took longer than 5 minutes.
nmrpflash
refuses to use an IP address / subnet mask combination that would
make the remote device unreachable from the device running nmrpflash
. For
example, if the IP address of your computer is 192.168.0.1/255.255.255.0, assigning
192.168.2.1/255.255.255.0 to the router makes no sense, because the TFTP upload will
fail.
This can happen if the network interface in question automatically detects that the network cable has been connected, and your computer tries to reconfigure that interface (NetworkManager on Linux does this for example) - this can usually be disabled.
This usually means that flashing is in progress. On some devices, you may get a few hundred keep-alive requests before it eventually finishes!
By default, file transfers using TFTP are limited to 65535 * 512
bytes
(almost 32 MiB). Uploading files exceeding this limit might fail, depending
on the device.
Extraneous upload requests are usually sent by the device if the image validation failed. Some possible causes are:
-
If you downloaded a firmware that's contained in an archive (a
.zip
for example), you must extract this file, and then use the contained firmware file as the argument to the-f
parameter. Some examples for file extensions used for firmware:.chk
,.bin
,.trx
,.img
. -
Some devices prevent you from downgrading the firmware. See if it works with the latest version available for your device. If you're already using the latest version, it might be possible to patch the version info of the firmware file. A future version of
nmrpflash
might incorporate an auto-patch feature for these cases. -
Your device might expect a different image format for
nmrpflash
than when flashing via the web interface.
This could indicate that the device hasn't finished flashing, after the default timeout
(5 minutes until version 0.9.4
). Try increasing the timeout, using the -T <seconds>
option,
for example use -T 1800
to specify a timeout of 30 minutes.
Specify the address of the router (-a
), and address of your computer (-A
).
For example:
-A 10.0.0.2 -a 10.0.0.1
or
-A 192.168.1.2 -a 192.168.1.1
On Linux, developer packages for libpcap
, libnl
and libnl-route
must be installed:
$ sudo apt install libpcap-dev libnl-3-dev libnl-route-3-dev
Then, it's as easy as
$ make && sudo make install
On FreeBSD (assuming the ports infrastructure is installed and you have root permissions):
$ cd /usr/ports/sysutils/nmrpflash
$ make install
Or install the FreeBSD binary package with:
$ pkg install nmrpflash
The repository includes a
CodeBlocks
project file (nmrpflash.cbp
). Download the latest
Npcap SDK
and extract it into the root folder of the nmrpflash
sources.
You can buy me a coffee if you want, but please consider donating the money for charity instead - Médecins Sans Frontiers comes to mind, but any other organization, local or international, that you think deserves support will do. Thank you!