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User: SirSataniK

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  1. HACKING THE TIVO (Public Service Announcement) on TiVo Response to 2.0.1 Upgrade Issues · · Score: 1

    More to come in a few days...... How To Hack Your TiVo What we started with Phillips TiVo model number HDR312 (30 hours basic) A strong desire to get more record time. Fantastic resources at the AVS Forum . Specifically, the post 'how to upgrade your TiVo yourself' . What we ended up with TiVo with 68 hours basic storage. Great joy. Intense appreciation for the smart folks at the AVS Forum. Things we used to get the job done Quantum lct10 30 gig drive (part number QML30000LB-A). Cost: $128 (check Price Watch ). torx driver (a screw driver with the small star-pattern head) Cost: we had one already. another linux machine, with an IDE chain (couldn't use my laptop). Cost: we had one already. 2.4.0-test1 kernel. Cost: free. TiVo kernel patches. Cost: free. patched version of pdisk. Cost: free. 9-pin female to 9-pin female null modem adapter. Cost: $12 at Best Buy. 1 sheet of aluminum. Cost: $4 at Home Depot. 4 long screws with lock washers and nuts. Cost: $2 at Home Depot. 4 rubber bumpers. Cost: $2 at Home Depot. 4 harddrive screws. Cost: we already had them. 2 case screws. Cost: we already had them. drill & metal drill-bits. Cost: we already had them. tin snips: Cost: $10 Total cost: about $158. What we did First, ordered the Quantum drive. Unearthed a SCSI-booting test machine (my poor little 486) Downloaded the linux-2.4.0-test1 kernel. Downloaded the TiVo Mac-partition patches and the patched version of pdisk . (Also checked at wasteland.org or source forge .) Un-gzip/tar'd the files into the linux-2.4.0 tree. Compiled the kernel. Was sure we had IDE support and "macintosh partition table" support. Got the kernel booting on the test machine. Configured our TiVo to NOT use the serial port. We told it to use the IR to control the DSS receiver. Opened up the TiVo . This voided our warrenty. For us, we needed a torx driver. Made sure our TiVo had only one drive. Took out the primary ("A") drive. This took removing two screws near the front, and then lifting and sliding the drive back off the rear clips . Set the new ("B") drive to "slave". Ours shipped in "master" (.8:: so we moved the jumper as shown on the top of the drive to "slave" (.::8 . Mounted both drives on the secondary IDE chain. Our IDE cable was bad, so we had to replace ours. Booted the linux machine with byte swapping enabled for both drives. I used 'append="hdc=bswap hdd=bswap"' in my /etc/lilo.conf. We could type "hdc=bswap hdd=bswap" on the LILO prompt, too. I used the secondary IDE chain, so my drives were hdc and hdd. If we used the primary IDE chain, we'd have hda and hdb. So for us, drive A was hdc and drive B was hdd. On boot-up, we saw both quantum drives, and for drive A, there were 11 mac partitions. Mounted the 4th partition. ("mount /dev/hdc4 /mnt") Saved a copy of /mnt/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit. ("cp /mnt/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit /mnt/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit.old") Edited /mnt/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit. Found the place in the script where we saw the variable "shondss". There was be a line running "bash" into and out of the serial port just below there. We copied this line and placed it just before the entire "if" clause. Blanked out the first few sectors of the B drive. We made SURE we weren't destroying the original TiVo drive! ("dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hdd bs=512 count=32") Shutdown the linux box, and put both the hard drives back in the TiVo. We needed to carefully cut the zip-tie holding the extra power connector down inside the TiVo. Turned on the linux box again, and loaded "minicom" on /dev/ttyS0. Set the configuration parameters to 9600, 8N1, turned off flow control, and turned off DCD support. Plugged the TiVo serial cable into the null modem adapter, and the adapter into the linux box's first serial port. Powered on the TiVo (staying clear of the unshielded power supply ). Around the "please wait a few more seconds" screen, we saw the "bash" prompt show up in minicom. Initialized the bootpage of the new drive. ("/sbin/bootpage -D /dev/hdb; sync"). Shutdown the linux box, unplugged the TiVo, took out the B drive, switched it back to "master", put it in the linux box, and powered the linux box back on. Set up the partition table on the drive. (Ran "pdisk /dev/hdc" and typed: i w y q ). Set up the Mac partitions on the drive. (Ran "pdisk -d /dev/hdc" and typed: C 2p 4M "Second MFS application region" MFS C 3p 3p "Second MFS media region" MFS x m 3 x w y q ). Shutdown the Linux box, took out the drive, set the jumper back to "slave", put it back in the TiVo, turned on the linux box, got back into "minicom", and then plugged in the TiVo. Once we had the "bash" prompt back, we needed to mount the TiVo diagnostics partition. ("mount -t ext2 -o ro /dev/hda7 /mnt"). Set up the magic for the new drive. ("/mnt/diag/genAddDiskTiVoID /dev/hdb3"). Unmounted the diag partition. ("umount /mnt"). Rebooted the TiVo. Examined our system information . We now had "68 hours" available. To get the TiVo serial port back to normal, we powered off the TiVo, put drive A in the linux machine, mounted hdc4, and copied back the saved version of rc.sysinit, shutdown the linux machine, and moved the drive back to the TiVo. Now for the mounting hardware . We cut two sheets out of our sheet metal. One the size of the harddrive , but with about half an inch extra on either side. Then another sheet to cover the hole where the second drive should be mounted. We drilled four holes in the drive sheet for mounting the drive, and four more holes in the outside corners for the rubber bumpers. We drilled two holes in the other sheet to mount it in the TiVo case, and for hole lined up with the four outside corner holes in the drive sheet. We cut the rubber bumpers down to about 3/4 of a inch in height, and then drilled a hole vertically through the center. We mounted the drive to the drive sheet, and then the TiVo case sheet to the drive sheet with the rubber bumpers in between. The rubber bumbers were screwed in place with 4 long screws with a lock washer and nut. We mounted the entire assembly in the TiVo case with the 2 case screws. We tried to get the case sheet to hook around the rear clips, but we didn't have enough sheet metal hanging over. Maybe next time. I hope i killed all the live links if not sorry....Enjoy there is more to come.......