Difference between revisions of "Didj How to Extract Files"
m (not sure about older kernels, but 2.6.32 uses jffs2 not jff2 (I think it was a typo)) |
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Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
*modprobe mtdram | *modprobe mtdram | ||
− | *modprobe | + | *modprobe jffs2 |
*modprobe mtdchar | *modprobe mtdchar | ||
*modprobe mtdblock | *modprobe mtdblock |
Revision as of 10:51, 7 April 2010
Download http://download.leapfrog.com/leapfrogconnect/PC/didj/DidjPlugin.exe
- Get the v1.2 tarbal from http://www.cabextract.org.uk/
- extract it
- run ./configure
- run make
- copy the bin somewhere convienent like /usr/local/bin
- cabextract -d test DidjPlugin.exe will put all the extracted files in the test directory.
The .lfs files are really .zip files inside
Mount the rootfs.jffs2 somewhere convinent and do a ls -lR >files this will give you a list of what's inside.
Hack away!!
BTW here is how to mount the rootfs.jffs2 image onto the temp directory:
First load a few required modules.
For newer kernels (2.6.28+)
- modprobe mtdram
- modprobe jffs2
- modprobe mtdchar
- modprobe mtdblock
For older kernels
- modprobe mtdcore
- modprobe jffs2
- modprobe mtdbig
- modprobe mtdchar
- modprobe mtdblock
Finally, copy the jffs2 filesystem to ram, and mount it:
- dd if=erootfs.jffs2 of=/dev/mtd0
- mount -t jffs2 /dev/mtdblock0 temp