Posted: Sat May 12, 2018 22:40 Post subject: Unable to transfer to my WZR-300HP
I believe I have everything I need to successfully transfer the pro enc base binary to my WZR-300HP.
File name: wzr300hp-pro-r30356.enc
I think the issue in transferring is I don't have the proper mac address for my router. I must be missing something so simple but I am unable to determine what this is. As it seems to be common knowledge, there is no hardware mac address printed anywhere. I read somewhere where the mac address is the SSID (which on mine is BUFFALO-6205DE).
I've tried at an elevated command prompt, the following:
netsh interface ipv4 add neighbors 10 192.168.11.1 BUFFALO-6205DE
Well, that obviously won't work. It's not a valid format and the resulting error message tells me so.
Desperately, after removing the previous neighbor I tried:
I've tried plugging the cat 5 into the WAN port and port #1. Same thing. Pumpkin gives up and says it can't transfer the file.
To summarize, I have done the following:
Set my ethernet adapter to:
192.168.11.2
255.255.255.0
Gateway is 192.168.11.1
Added the neighbor
Plugged in the ethernet cable between the ethernet adapter and the router.
Que the flash file in Pumpkin to send the file to 192.168.11.1
Click OK to "put" the file
Power on the router
Wait about thirty seconds and Pumpkin says:
Transmission of [filename] is timed out
Transfer of [filename] was aborted
My gut tells me it's that mac address. I need the actual mac address of this router but I can't find anywhere (googling, etc.) how to determine what that is.
Any thoughts on this? Is my WZR-300HP truly bricked. (Oh, it was working with a 2013 firmware and it was a router that I was setting up for my mother (hey, it's Mother's Day) so that she wouldn't have to rent her modem/wifi router any longer. I got it working and and then made the fateful decision to flash the firmware via the web interface. Everything seemed fine proceeding through the upgrade process but the router never booted up. It just has a persistent green power indicator and the solid red diag light. It doesn't even appear to be rebooting as it just sits there with differences in state.)
EDIT: Copy and paste error. I had "delete" instead of "add" in my original cite of the command I executed on the command line.
I'm guessing there's no easy feedback available on this issue? Is there an important aspect of my problem description that's missing that I can provide in order to help spur some ideas?
Hi BrakTalk, having recently had to TFTP a firmware onto a WZR-600DHP (which is a nearly identical unit) I'd strongly recommend that you use Linux to do it, there's too many variables on Windows that can mess up the process and prevent the communication happening in the time frame required.
I tried for about 2 hours on Windows, failing every time, when on Linux it worked on second attempt. I was just about to give up too when I thought what the hell may as well give it a go.
Just remember that even on Linux, you still have a small window of time to execute the command, so you may have to take a few attempts at it. You should try varying the time that you wait before hitting enter on the TFTP transfer anywhere between immediately and up to 30 seconds later, it's hard to say exactly.
Here's thread I made in case you want to have a read for the commands etc
Both the DD-WRT wiki and the OpenWRT wiki say that the mac address for the bootloader is 02:aa:bb:cc:dd:20 so I'd say it's a safe bet that that's what you should be using when setting a static route for that process.
Joined: 12 Dec 2007 Posts: 781 Location: Pittsburgh, PA USA
Posted: Sat May 26, 2018 20:38 Post subject:
I've successfully flashed the WZR-600DHP a number of times using Windows 7 and Windows 10. I posted the procedure I used some time ago. Your router should be similar. It says Windows 7, but the process is identical in Win 10.