Difference between revisions of "BIOS Upgrade"
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===DMI IDs=== | ===DMI IDs=== | ||
Please consider updating the [[List of DMI IDs]] before (and after) updating your BIOS. | Please consider updating the [[List of DMI IDs]] before (and after) updating your BIOS. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Alternative BIOS: Middleton BIOS == | ||
+ | Some Thinkpad models only support SATA1 in their BIOS even though the hardware is SATA2. This is a huge drawback for anyone wanting to use SSDs, because it is so much slower. | ||
+ | Someone made these alternative BIOSes to enable SATA2 on the Thinkpad models that support this. See [http://www.ali.dj/sata-ii-support-for-lenovo-thinkpad-t61-x61-r61/ this link] for the download links. | ||
= Updating Firmware = | = Updating Firmware = |
Revision as of 04:25, 7 November 2012
Contents
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This page is meant to describe ways to update the BIOS on a ThinkPad that only runs Linux for users that don't have ready access to Windows. If you have Windows on your ThinkPad you can just boot into it and follow instructions on the Lenovo website. Updating the BIOS in Linux (with few exceptions) is not officially supported by Lenovo. However there are work arounds.
ATTENTION!
By following any of the instructions here you are accepting the very real risk of turning your ThinkPad into a big expensive paper weight, as a firmware update gone wrong can create unfix-able problems.
Proceed at your own risk!
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Downloading New Firmware
A list of links to firmware downloads can be found at BIOS Upgrade Downloads for most Thinkpad models. You can also check the Lenovo Support website's driver matrix.
Lenovo provides firmware upgrades in a variety of packages:
- Diskette
- Non-diskette
- Linux diskette
- BIOS Utility
- Bootable CD
Not every type of package is available for every model.
The BIOS Utility and Bootable CD packages combine the BIOS and ECP firmwares. For the other packages, there is one for each firmware.
Help needed
Can an image be extracted from a "Linux diskette" .exe file?
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The Linux diskette is just the Diskette package that runs on Linux instead of Windows/DOS. It's unknown if a boot image can be extracted from it.
You may need to try different packages to find the one from which you can extract a boot image.
Two Firmwares: BIOS and ECP
It is important to understand that Thinkpads from IBM have two separate firmwares: the BIOS, and the Embedded Controller Program (ECP).
A given BIOS version will require a certain version of the ECP. You must read the Lenovo website and/or .txt files to confirm which BIOS is compatible with which ECP, and the order in which to update them.
Update Order
The IBM documentation is sometimes unclear about the order in which these two firmwares should be updated. When in doubt (i.e. IBM didn't provide specific instructions for your model or a particular firmware update), update the ECP first, and then the BIOS. Also, make sure to do the two updates immediately one after the other.
The EC firmware is usually much better at backwards compatibility than the BIOS.
(Updaters for newer models take care of both BIOS and EC, and use automatically whatever sequence is needed, so you don't have to worry about it.)
Installed Firmware
You can check the current BIOS and ECP versions on your ThinkPad by using dmidecode. For example:
# dmidecode -s bios-version
1RETDRWW (3.23 )
# dmidecode -t 11
# dmidecode 2.9 SMBIOS 2.33 present. Handle 0x0029, DMI type 11, 5 bytes OEM Strings String 1: IBM ThinkPad Embedded Controller -[1RHT71WW-3.04 ]-
Showing BIOS version 3.23 (1RETDRWW) and ECP version 3.04 (1RHT71WW).
DMI IDs
Please consider updating the List of DMI IDs before (and after) updating your BIOS.
Alternative BIOS: Middleton BIOS
Some Thinkpad models only support SATA1 in their BIOS even though the hardware is SATA2. This is a huge drawback for anyone wanting to use SSDs, because it is so much slower. Someone made these alternative BIOSes to enable SATA2 on the Thinkpad models that support this. See this link for the download links.
Updating Firmware
There are two basic steps to updating the firmware (either the BIOS or the ECP) on a ThinkPad not running Windows:
- Extract a bootable update image
- Boot from that image
Extracting an update image
Older .exe installers from Lenovo mostly appear to be just a wrapper license program around Windows .cab files (see BIOS-Bootsplash). If you install the Linux program cabextract you can expand these .cab files directly. For example, if you downloaded 1iuj13us.exe from Lenovo:
$ cabextract 1iuj13us.exe
Extracting cabinet: 1iuj13us.exe extracting 1IUJ13US.IMG extracting BIOSUPTP.EXE extracting DOBOOT.EXE extracting DOSBOOT.COM extracting DOSBOOT.SYS extracting DOSBOOT.VXD extracting DOSBOOT2.COM extracting ECTLUPTP.EXE extracting EFLASHAS.SYS extracting HDFWUPTP.EXE extracting IBMTPI.XML All done, no errors.
The file we want is FILENAME.IMG, with "FILENAME" being the .exe. you downloaded. E.g., 1IUJ13US.IMG.
(If this does not work for the Non-diskette .exe, try it on the Diskette .exe. It's reported, for example, that the Non-diskette .exe for BIOS version 3.23 for the T41p was not extractable, but the Diskette .exe worked perfectly, with $ cabextract
delivering a .IMG file.)
Solution for old Thinkpads
Diskette .exe for some older models can't be extracted using cabextract. For example for the latest BIOS of 390E one gets
spsdilc9.exe: no valid cabinets found
Since such .exe will only extract the files to a floppy, there seems to be no way to extract them using Linux. The situation is actually even more complicated, as neither Vista nor Windows 7 allow these .exe to access the floppy drive directly. Neither DosBox nor Wine were able to "fool" the programm using virtual floppies. A solution that works is to use Windows XP (works in VirtualBox too) together with Virtual Floppy Drive. Rund vfdwin.exe, go to the Driver tab and hit Install and Start. Then go to the Driver0 tab, click on Change and select A:. Finally, click on Open/Create, and click Create. This should give you a virtual floppy drive the .exe file will extract files to.
Testing the Image
You can test that FILENAME.IMG is really a floppy image by running:
# mkdir /tmp/mntfloppy
# mount -o loop FILENAME.IMG /tmp/mntfloppy
If a ls command on the image returns what looks like a DOS floppy, and no read errors were displayed, you have a pretty good chance that the image is usable. For example:
# ls /tmp/mntfloppy
$0195000.FL1 069580.PAT 06d2.HSH IBMDOS.COM TPCHKS.EXE 0691.HSH 06D0.PAT 06d6.HSH LOGO.BAT UPDTFLSH.EXE 0691.PAT 06D1.PAT 06d8.HSH LOGO.SCR UPDTMN.EXE 0694.HSH 06D2.PAT CHKBMP.EXE PHLASH16.EXE USERINT.EXE 0694.PAT 06D6.PAT COMMAND.COM PREPARE.EXE UTILINFO.EXE 0695.HSH 06D8.PAT CONFIG.SYS PROD.dat lcreflsh.bat 0695.PAT 06d0.HSH FLASH2.EXE QKFLASH.EXE 069580.HSH 06d1.HSH IBMBIO.COM README.TXT
Unmount the image after you are done testing:
# umount /tmp/mntfloppy
Booting from update image
Now that you have a bootable image for the correct update for you hardware, you need to do is boot from that image to install the update.
There are different ways to do that:
Booting from a CD
Hint:
If there is a Bootable CD image available, e.g., FILENAME.iso, just download that, instead of mucking around with image files.
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If you are going to update the firmware by booting from a CD, you need to turn FILENAME.IMG that you extracted above into an .iso file.
The El Torito Bootable CD Specification is a wonderful thing. Thanks to it, a bootable CD can be made with a bootable floppy image in such as way that the CD believes that it is a 2.88 MB floppy drive. This allows you to replace a boot floppy by a boot CD in nearly all situations.
It is very easy to create such a bootable CD ISO image in Linux using the mkisofs tool1. Run a command as follows:
# genisoimage -b 1WUJ25US.IMG -c boot.catalog -o bootcd.iso 1WUJ25US.IMG
#or older mkisofs
Where *.IMG is the name of the image file extracted above. This creates a CD with one file on it and marks that file as the boot image.
You can now burn the bootcd.iso to a CD in your favorite CD-burning program.
Boot from the CD to update your firmware. Remember to have both BIOS and ECP firmware boot-CDs ready, as needed, and use them in the proper order.
Successful tests
Model | Tested by, and comments |
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600E 2645-4AU |
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600E 2645-5bU |
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600X 2645 |
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600X 2645 |
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A20p 2629-6VU |
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A21e 2628-JXU |
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A31p 2653 |
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A31 2652 |
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R30 |
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R31 |
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R40 |
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R50 1836-3SU |
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R50e 1834-PTG |
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R51 1829 |
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R51 1830-RM7 |
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R51 2887 |
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R52 1858 |
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T20 |
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T22 |
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T23 |
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T30 |
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T40 |
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T40p |
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T41 |
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T41p |
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T42 2373-JXG |
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T42 |
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T42p |
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T43 1871-W34 |
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T43 1871-4AG |
Both successfully upgraded from CD Image made from the instructions on this website. |
T43 2886 |
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T43 |
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T60 |
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T61 |
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T410 |
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X20 |
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X21 |
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X22 |
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X23 |
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X30 |
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X31 |
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X31 |
cabextract & unetbootin are staight foward(toggle floppy image instead of iso image in unetbootin dialog) No problems with update software. x31 has to be cajoled into booting from usb. Boot hangs when pendrive is present. Hit the key to bring up the boot menu. Unplug the pendrive. Let the boot menu come up. Plug in the pendrive. Select the pendrive in the boot menu and it boots. |
X40 |
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Z60m |
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Unsuccessful tests
Model | Tested by, and comments |
---|---|
Booting using GRUB
ATTENTION!
Many have warned not to use the SYSLINUX image-loader memdisk to boot firmware update images.
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Help needed
Who are these "many"? Link to a discussion?
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Once the bootable image, FILENAME.IMG, is extracted from the .exe, it can be booted directly through GRUB without the need of burning a CD, using the SYSLINUX image-loader memdisk.
Locate the memdisk file from the syslinux package. You can search for it with find:
# find /usr -name memdisk
#or just use "dlocate memdisk" or "locate memdisk" if these programs are installed
If /usr/.../memdisk is not present, syslinux is not installed. You will need to install it to boot a .IMG from GRUB.
Copy both the FILENAME.IMG and memdisk files into /boot directory. For example:
# cp ./FILENAME.IMG /usr/share/syslinux/memdisk /boot/
Open /boot/grub/menu.lst in your favourite editor. Copy the active section into a new section, and edit the new section:
Parameter | Instructions | Example |
---|---|---|
title | Pick a name for the new section. This will show up in the GRUB boot menu. | title IBM ECP Update |
root | Do not change. This is the partition containing the /boot directory | root (hd0,0) |
kernel | /boot/memdisk will allow you to boot an image file. | kernel /boot/memdisk |
initrd | This is the name of the firmware-updater image file, e.g., 1IUJ13US.IMG | initrd /boot/1IUJ13US.IMG |
Do not modify the original section in /boot/grub/menu.lst, or you might not be able to boot back to the operating system.
If you have two firmware updates to do, you will need a section for each firmware's FILENAME.IMG in /boot/grub/menu.lst.
Reboot your computer, entering the GRUB menu and selecting IBM BIOS Update, or whatever you named the new section in /boot/grub/menu.lst.
GRUB2
With grub2, one would append the following to /boot/grub/grub.cfg :
menuentry "My BIOS Upgrade" { set root=(hd0,0) #should match the others in your grub.cfg linux16 /boot/memdisk initrd16 /boot/1WUJ25US.IMG #or whatever yours is }
Successful tests
Model | BIOS | ECP | Tested by | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
T510 4349-5KG | 6muj27uc.iso: BIOS 6MET88WW (1.48 ) | EC 6MHT46WW-1.21 | Marc Burkhardt | Gentoo: sys-boot/grub-1.99-r2, sys-boot/syslinux-4.05 |
R30 2656-64G | v.1.40 | Yuri Spirin | ||
R40 2723 | 1OHJ11WW.IMG | 1PUJ25US.IMG | Qunying | memdisk from syslinux 3.70 (slackware 12.1) |
R50e 1834NV1 | 1WUJ25US.IMG | Jidanni | memdisk from syslinux-common 2:3.84+dfsg-1 (Debian), grub2 (1.96+20080724-16) | |
R51 2888 | ||||
T23 2647 | 1AUJ20US.IMG | 1AHJ06US.IMG | cthon | memdisk from syslinux 4.02-1 (arch linux) |
T40 2373 | 1RUJ37US.IMG | 1RHJ10U2.IMG | Euphoria | memdisk from syslinux 1:3.31-4 (Debian package version) |
T40 2373 | 1RHJ10U2.IMG (3.04, 2004-11-15) |
1RUJ37US.IMG (3.23, 2007-07-03) |
Morphics | cabextract and memdisk from syslinux 3:1.36-4ubuntu5 |
T41 2373 | 1RUJ37US.IMG (3.23, 2007-07-03) |
Tonko | Fedora 12 | |
T41p 2373 | 1RUJ37US.IMG (3.23, 2007-07-03) |
Deggel | cabextract and memdisk from syslinux 3.71 on gentoo | |
T41p 2373 | James Lee | |||
T42 2373 | 1RUJ37US.IMG | Simon Csaba Endre | Ubuntu 10.04 Pre-update versions: BIOS v3.21 / ECP v3.04 After-update versions: BIOS v3.23 / ECP v3.04 | |
T42p 2374 | 1RUJ37US.IMG | 1RHJ10U2.IMG | Achim Derigs | Debian GNU/Linux sid, works with `linux16 ...' and `initrd16 ...' only |
X31 2673-CBU | Jan Topinski | |||
X31 2672-CXU | TheAnarcat | |||
X31 2672-JBU | 3.02 1QUJ19US.IMG | 1.08 1QUJ08US.IMG | twbxf4 | worked flawlessly |
X31 2673-58G | FaUl | |||
X31 2672-PG9 | Starox | a big moment between starting update and the updating window | ||
X31 2672-PG9 | v3.02 1QUJ19US.IMG | v1.08 1QHJ08US.IMG | TeeLittle | Apr 10, 2010: Using Debian 5.0 "Lenny" + package syslinux-common (Version: 2:3.71+dfsg-5). Pre-update versions: BIOS v2.11 / ECP v1.03 |
X40 2371 | 2.07 1uuj21us.exe | 1.62 1uhj10us.exe | Jakob Truelsen | Worked on two X40-2371 |
X40 2386 | 2.08 1uuj22us.exe | 1.62 1uhj10us.exe | Galen Seitz | memdisk from syslinux 3.61 |
(More successful grub tests are scattered in the previous table too.)
Unsuccessful tests
Model | BIOS | ECP | Tested by | Notes |
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R32 2658-NWU | 2.16 1MUD23US.IMG | n/a | Mike Millman | Boots into the BIOS flashing program just fine, but when it comes time to start the update process, the system hangs completely. Luckily, it hangs before it actually modifies anything... A hard reboot got me back into a working system. I would not recommend this route! |
Template:R52e 1846-CGL | 1.29 76UJ28UD.IMG |
1.01 | Laszlo Takacs | Boots into BIOS flashing program but it hangs up before the upgrade process. I used memdisk from syslinux-4.01. |
T43 2668-F7G | 1.29 1YUJ18US.IMG | Maus3273 | I got into the bios program, but the machine never restarts after initiating the upgrade. | |
X41 2525-FAG | 2.09 74UJ15US | Uwe Kleine-König | booted fine (Debian syslinux 2:3.71+dfsg-5), but didn't succeed to write, just hang at "Don't restart or remove diskette etc. pp" (not bricked). Worked fine via CD method. | |
X41 2525-F8G | 2.06 74UJ12US.IMG 2.07 74UJ13US.IMG 2.09 74UJ15US.IMG |
Lauri Koponen | hangs while initializing the actual BIOS flashing process ECP: 1.02 74HJ03US.IMG works |
GRUB2 Boot CD Image
Download the bootable iso file from the Lenovo Website. Copy the file 'memdisk' from the syslinux package to /boot. Also create a symlink, so you do not have to change the grub configuration for each bios upgrade:
sudo su - cd /boot cp /home/youruser/Downloads/6uuj12uc.iso . cp /usr/share/syslinux/memdisk . ln -s 6uuj12uc.iso biosupgrade.iso
Now create the boot entry:
cat >> /etc/grub.d/40_custom <<EOF menuentry "Lenovo BIOS Upgrade" { set root=(hd0,1) # <-- check for correct numbering linux16 /boot/memdisk iso initrd16 /boot/biosupgrade.iso } EOF update-grub
Reboot an Select "Lenovo BIOS Upgrade".
For the next Bios Upgrade you'll just need to copy the new iso file to /boot and adjust the symlink.
Successful tests
Model | BIOS | ECP | Tested by | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
X100e 2876-55G | 6xuj05uc.iso | User:nikel | ||
Template:Edge | 1.17 6yuj04uc.iso | User:theBro | Current memdisk from syslinux worked (5/2010), the one provided by Ubuntu 9.10 did not. | |
X200s | 1.13 6duj40uc.iso | User:theBro | Current memdisk from syslinux worked (5/2010), the one provided by Ubuntu 9.10 did not. | |
X200s | 3.14 6duj41uc.iso | 1.06 | Dag Wieers | Using memdisk from syslinux 4.01 |
X201 3626-A14 | 1.15 6quj05uc.iso | 1.09 6quj05uc.iso | Alexander List | memdisk from syslinux 3.86 |
Edge 13" 0197-6GG | 1.18 6yuj05uc.iso | User:fethio | Current memdisk from syslinux worked (5/2010), the one provided by Ubuntu 9.10 did not. | |
Edge 13" 0197-34Q | 1.21 6yuj08uc.iso | User:Kapil | Current memdisk from syslinux debian version 2:4.02+dfsg-7 | |
Edge 13" 0197-34Q | 1.18 6yuj05uc.iso | User:Kapil | Current memdisk from syslinux debian version 2:4.01+dfsg-1 | |
X200s | 3.15 6duj42uc.iso | User:lawnjam | Memdisk 4.02 worked, the one provided by Ubuntu 10.04 did not. | |
X201 | 1.22 6quj08uc.iso | 1.11 | Dag Wieers | Using memdisk from syslinux 4.03 |
T410s | 1.41 6uuj12uc.iso | 1.12 | regatus | Gentoo + memdisk (syslinux 4.0.3) |
Unuccessful tests
Model | BIOS | ECP | Tested by | Notes |
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T61 6466-55G | 2.27 7luj26uc.iso | 1.08 | User:mgedmin | Grub2 + memdisk (2:4.01+dfsg-3ubuntu1) booted the DOS image on the CD, which then tried to load a DOS CD-ROM driver, which then could not find the CD, and ended up with the infamous Abort, Retry, Fail. |
Booting from a Floppy
This is how IBM/Lenovo intended it. Use their .exe files to create a bootable floppy with the flash update on it. Boot from the floppy and there you go.
So, why is it not recommended?
- If something goes wrong, your ThinkPad may be permanently damaged
- Floppy disk drives are not reliable
- Floppy disks are not reliable
- It only works with /dev/fd0, meaning it won't work with a USB floppy
So, even though Lenovo is now offering "Linux diskette" updaters, that will create a bootable floppy under Linux, using a floppy is still not recommended. Besides, many people don't even have a floppy drive on their ThinkPad.
If you really want to do it with a floppy, some tips:
- Use a clean (in the physical sense) floppy drive
- Use new floppies
- Test floppies for errors before starting update process
- Have multiple copies of the update disks ready--if one should fail, replace it with a copy
- Should DOS complain of a read error, only respond wth "Retry"
Booting from a USB Flash drive
Updating the BIOS in MS-DOS mode
(This process works for most Thinkpad models that has Windows XP, Windows Vista or Windows 7 OS)
1. Using HP USB Boot Utility, create a bootable USB flash drive [http://www.bay-wolf.com/utility/usbkey/win98boot.zip DOS using Windows 98 Boot Disk Floppy Image.
2. Extract the (*.ima) from the ISO BIOS image (e.g. WinRAR will do this).
3. Using a tool that can open .IMA files (such as WinImage), extract all files to a temporary folder.
4. Run the HP tool, select the USB device, I used FAT32, create a DOS bootable disk and point at the win98boot folder - then "Start". Warning: this formats the USB flash drive and all data will be erased!
5. Once complete (you could test if it boots at this point), copy the extracted BIOS files from the temporary folder you created to the USB flash drive.
6. Boot from USB flash drive by pressing F11 within the BIOS boot logo. At the DOS command prompt, type "updflsh" and then follow the prompts by pressing "Y" or Enter. Make sure that you have a fully charged battery pack and the AC Adapter is firmly plugged before proceeding with the BIOS update. DO NOT Power off the laptop or unplug the USB flash drive while the update is in progress or else update will fail and your computer will be unable to boot and system board may need to be serviced.
This process takes around 1-2 minutes. A long beep followed by a short beep will notify you that the update is complete and the system will automatically power off.
7. Power on the laptop then enter the BIOS setup by pressing F1 and Load BIOS defaults.
Using grub4dos (also for Linux)
grub4dos is a GNU GRUB fork with interesting features. One of them is the ability to boot ISO images directly off USB flash drives. Contrary to the name, GRUB for DOS works fine on Linux. Follow these steps:
- Download the latest grub4dos package at http://download.gna.org/grub4dos/ (I needed 0.4.4 for my USB2 drive - 0.4.3 did not work.)
- Unpack
- Insert your FAT-32 formatted pendrive
- Run
sudo ./bootlace.com /dev/sdX
, where /dev/sdX is the device name assigned to your pendrive (usesudo fdisk -l
to figure this out). Be very careful to get the device correct or else you could overwrite your hard drive! This creates grub4dos boot sector in MBR of the flash drive. - Copy the files
grldr
andmenu.lst
to the root directory of your pendrive. - Convert the ThinkPad .IMG file to a .ISO file using
genisoimage -b 1yuj18us.img -c boot.catalog -o 1yuj18us.iso 1yuj18us.img
- Copy the ISO image to the root directory of your pendrive (e.g.
1yuj18us.iso
). - Edit
menu.lst
on the pendrive and include the following section (of course putting the appropriate ISO image name):
title thinkpad-bios map (hd0,0)/1yuj18us.iso (hd32) map --hook chainloader (hd32) boot
- Reboot and press F12 to select booting from USB.
- If all went well, you should be able to boot the Thinkpad's ISO image and flash the BIOS. I tested it successfully on T400. Wanted 20:23, 16 July 2010 (UTC)
Using UNetbootin
Unetbootin 422 worked with the image files unpacked with cabextract on my x31.
Booting from a Network Boot Image
BIOS, ECP, CD/DVD and Harddisk firmware disks can be booted over the network with PXELINX as part of the SYSLINUX package. This requires that you have a DHCP and tftp server configured and setup properly on your network, and is probably not for the faint of heart.
Make sure the firmware bootdisk is in linux 'dd' format, as the self-extracting .exe disks from the IBM website cannot be booted directly as such.
This worked on the R31, X22, T21, T30 and T41p with various firmware updates. On the X22, it worked with ECP 1.30 but not with BIOS 1.32
Updating without battery or with dead battery
This is a last-resort approach. Use this only if everything else fails.
The BIOS updater may refuse to update a BIOS without a battery, or if the battery charge is too low. In that case, extract the disk image with cabextract as per instructions above and dd it to an usb stick. (This will destroy the data on it, of course.) Acquire a pure DOS boot cd such as Windows 98 recovery CD and boot that.
Use F8 to abort the boot sequence of a windows 98 boot CD. If you need CD-ROM support, load CD-related things but say no to everything else. In particular, avoid loading himem.sys and doskey, as the presence of either program causes Phoenix bios flash tool phlash16.exe to abort.
Change to the volume where flash2.exe and other tools are installed, and execute "flash2.exe /u". This should bypass the battery check and perform the flashing. If that doesn't work, check if the update disk contains a tool called "phlash16.exe". This can be used directly to flash the image, and the invocation is typically "phlash16 /exit $01c80000.fl1".
This method won't work for the Thinkpad 560X (and likely other older models). Since the 560X is a bit older, it won't be a big surprise if the battery is as dead as a dodo. Here's how to update the bios in this case: download the spsdi833 bios update and create the update floppy. If you have trouble creating this disk, download an archive with the files and put them on a floppy. Don't worry about making it bootable. Also, you will need a DOS bootdisk. A Windows 98 bootdisk will be fine. Boot the system with the W98 bootdisk, do not load CD-rom support. Remove the W98 bootdisk and put the disk with the BIOS update in the drive. If you would now run UPDTFLSH you would get the battery message, so don't do that. If you open UPDTFLSH.exe with a text editor, you would find some lines about UPDTROM. UPDTROM is the actual flash tool, but you can't simply run it just like that. Run the following:
- updtrom /np /prep1
- updtrom /np /prep2
- updtrom /np /prep3
- updtrom /np /romcmp /romflsh /prep4
- updtrom /np /h8flsh /h8img /model
Yes, you need to run updtrom five times. Hold your breath and reboot the machine. It's done.
Perhaps not all these lines are necessary, but to be sure I ran them all, and this worked for me. So I suggest you do the same. This could probably be done from the harddisk as well, but I did not test that.
After updating
Lenovo recommends reseting your BIOS settings to their factory defaults after a firmware update.
DMI IDs
Please consider updating the List of DMI IDs after updating your BIOS.
Special Cases
- In one case, see (APM setup on a type 2379 ThinkPad T40), it was not possible to upgrade the BIOS from Windows XP; a downgrade to Windows 98 was required to successfully run the BIOS upgrade app. The symptoms in this case were that, once the files had been extracted to the hard disk, and the machine was to reboot into the upgrade app, it would beep and hang just before reboot, requiring a power cycle. Once the power was cycled, it would simply reboot back into XP without performing any BIOS upgrade actions. So even if you have Windows, you may still need to use the info on this page.
Updating Thinkpad X Series
The special update instructions for X1, X1 Carbon, X1 Carbon G2, X1 Carbon G3, X1 Carbon G4, X1 Carbon G5, X1 Carbon G6, X1 Carbon G7, X1 Carbon G8, X1 Extreme, X1 Extreme G2, X1 Hybrid, X13, X20, X21, X22, X23, X24, X30, X31, X32, X40, X41, X41 Tablet, X60, X60s, X60 Tablet, X61, X61s, X61Ls, X61 Tablet, X100e, X120e, X121e, X130e, X131e, X140e, X200, X200s, X200 Tablet, X201, X201i, X201s, X201si, X201 Tablet, X201i Tablet, X220, X220i, X220 Tablet, X220i Tablet, X230, X230i, X230s, X230 Tablet, X230i Tablet, X240, X240s, X250, X260, X270, X280, X300, X301, X390, X395 Thinkpads are quite long. You can find them at the page BIOS_Upgrade/X_Series.
FOOTNOTES [Δ] |
- For lots of detail on making and burning .iso files, see The Linux Documentation Project (tldp.org): 3.1 Writing CD-ROMs (pure data).
- 600E
- 600X
- A20p
- A21e
- A31p
- A31
- R30
- R31
- R40
- R50
- R50e
- R51
- R52
- T20
- T22
- T23
- T30
- T40
- T40p
- T41
- T41p
- T42
- T42p
- T43
- T60
- T61
- T410
- X20
- X21
- X22
- X23
- X30
- X31
- X40
- Z60m
- T510
- R32
- X41
- X100e
- X200s
- X201
- Edge 13"
- T410s
- T21
- 560X
- X1
- X1 Carbon
- X1 Carbon G2
- X1 Carbon G3
- X1 Carbon G4
- X1 Carbon G5
- X1 Carbon G6
- X1 Carbon G7
- X1 Carbon G8
- X1 Extreme
- X1 Extreme G2
- X1 Hybrid
- X13
- X24
- X32
- X41 Tablet
- X60
- X60s
- X60 Tablet
- X61
- X61s
- X61Ls
- X61 Tablet
- X120e
- X121e
- X130e
- X131e
- X140e
- X200
- X200 Tablet
- X201i
- X201s
- X201si
- X201 Tablet
- X201i Tablet
- X220
- X220i
- X220 Tablet
- X220i Tablet
- X230
- X230i
- X230s
- X230 Tablet
- X230i Tablet
- X240
- X240s
- X250
- X260
- X270
- X280
- X300
- X301
- X390
- X395