Re: [PATCH v2] usb: serial: Repair FTDI FT232R bricked eeprom

From: James Hilliard
Date: Thu Sep 10 2020 - 04:35:12 EST


On Thu, Sep 10, 2020 at 2:08 AM Johan Hovold <johan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Sep 10, 2020 at 12:33:55PM +0700, Lars Melin wrote:
> > On 9/10/2020 10:02, Oliver Neukum wrote:
> > > Am Mittwoch, den 09.09.2020, 13:34 -0600 schrieb James Hilliard:
> > >> This patch detects and reverses the effects of the malicious FTDI
> > >> Windows driver version 2.12.00(FTDIgate).
> > >
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > this raises questions.
> > > Should we do this unconditionally without asking?
> > > Does this belong into kernel space?
> > >
> >
> > My answer to both of those question is a strong NO.
> >
> > The patch author tries to justify the patch with egoistical arguments
> > (easier for him and his customers) without thinking of all other users
> > of memory constrained embedded hardware that doesn't need the patch code
> > but have to carry it.
> >
> > The bricked PID is btw already supported by the linux ftdi driver so
> > there is no functionality gain in the patch.
>
> I fully agree. This doesn't belong in the kernel. If the Windows driver
> breaks someones device on purpose they should know about it, and *if*
> they want they can reprogram the device using the tools mentioned in the
> thread. But the kernel shouldn't be playing such games and reprogram
> eeproms behind people's backs.
One of the main issues is that this issue is very often not-obvious, FTDI
specifically designed their malicious driver to make it appear that the
hardware failed, they intentionally do not provide proper feedback to
the user when they soft-brick it. I assume this is because they want
to push the support costs related to their malicious driver onto the
integrator rather than themselves.
>
> Johan