Meraki MS120 hardware overview

I received an innocent sounding question via GitHub, would the custom firmware I have been developing for the MS220 work on an MS120?

I am an eternal sucker for good mysteries involving hardware, so I found a seller on eBay offering an MS120-8-HW for $95 USD (plus shipping and customs to the EU). A few weeks of buyer’s remorse and waiting, and I had the MS120 in my hands.

One thing that immediately struck me about the MS120 is the material change from aluminum to steel. While I thought Meraki’s use of anodized aluminum in the MS220 series was a silly choice for the larger rack mounted models, it did make me think they were attempting to position themselves as the Apple Computer of networking products (“You pay the premium because we’re different”). Regardless of their intentions with the aluminum MS220 series, it was a precedent and it cheapens the experience to see them swap out aluminum for steel.

Let us continue, because whinging about metal choices is not bringing us closer to answering the original question.

MS120 PCB

Inside the MS120-8-HW

The MS120 is based on the Marvell Alleycat3 platform, referred to as kelpie-8 in the u-boot source and otherwise known by its marketing name “Prestera.” It is an ARMv7 core running at 400MHz with 512MB of DDR3 and 256MB of NAND flash.

The UART header is J16 at 115200n8 with the pinout:

  1. Vcc (Do not connect)
  2. Rx
  3. Tx
  4. GND

Pin 1 is closest to the SFP cage.

J17 is a mystery jumper. I have not identified its purpose yet.


There is 32Mbit (4MB) of SPI flash present, however as far as I can tell, this is connected directly to the Microsemi SmartFusion 2 and not to the Marvell ASIC. Using a hardware reader and a chip clip, I dumped the contents to examine it. Running binwalk yielded no results.

The entropy graph of the dump suggests that there are multiple copies of the same data stored, which follows Meraki’s design with the MS220 switches where there are primary and backup copies of the bootloader.

Entropy of the 32Mbit flash of the M120

Entropy graph of the 32Mbit flash in the MS120

Further inspection confirms that there are two identical copies of what I think is u-boot stored in the flash, starting at 0x301000. Each copy is approximately 420KB, which would correspond to the size of u-boot for this platform. However, the entropy is much higher than the entropy of u-boot.bin built using the Meraki GPL source, and contains only one readable string: kelpie_top

Perhaps this is the output of u-boot after running doimage to enable Secure Boot and AES-128 encryption?

The PCB traces from the winbond flash appear to go directly to the SmartFusion 2, but the u-boot UART output shows that the BootROM is booting from SPI:

BootROM 1.41
Booting from SPI flash

Is the SmartFusion 2 emulating an SPI device to the Alleycat3 after verifying the integrity of the u-boot binary in ROM?

u-boot then executes an application at memory address 0x0C100000 that prints the value of multiple “SecureBoot Registers” the strings of which do not appear anywhere in the u-boot code provided in the GPL archive:

## Starting application at 0x0C100000 ...

----Security Versions----
SecureBoot: R03.11b39af022017-07-25
SB Core: F01114R18.1680555472017-07-12
Microloader: MG0008R01.0103302017

----SecureBoot Registers----
system_invalid: 0
boot_check_count_error: 0
boot_done: 1
boot_ok: 1
boot_check_count_golden: 0
boot_check_count_upgrade: 2
boot_status_golden: 0
boot_status_upgrade: 1
first_bootloader: 1

----Upgrade----
boot_error: 0
boot_check_count_error_vc: 0
boot_check_count_error: 0
boot_timeout_vc: 0
boot_timeout: 0
boot_cs_good: 1
boot_config_error: 0
boot_version_error: 0
boot_config_error_code: 0
boot_error_code: 0
boot_cs_good: 1
boot_version_error: 0
boot1_cs_key_type: 1
boot1_cs_return_code: 0
boot1_cs_key_index: 5
boot2_cs_return_code: 0
boot2_cs_key_index: 5
boot2_cs_key_type: 1

----Other Registers----
fpga_version: 001b

Meraki do not include the build toolchain in their GPL archive. Luckily, I remembered that I have encountered this Marvell fork of u-boot before, for the Western Digital EX2100 which also uses a Marvell Armada 385 from the same family of ARMv7 CPU cores. Western Digital does include the Marvell toolchain used to compile u-boot in their GPL archive, good guy Western Digital!

To save anyone else the effort of setting up a development environment with an ancient version of GCC, I have created a Dockerfile that will handle building u-boot using the Marvell toolchain. You can find this work on GitHub.


I reached out to members of the Doozan forum who have been building Linux images for Marvell based NAS devices for many years to see if they had any more information about Secure Boot. Apparently Marvell CPUs will always kwboot before loading from other sources such as SPI or NAND:

Even if a box has secure boot in stock FW (u-boot, kernel,..), you should be able to kwboot it with a non-secure u-boot/spl binary.

I tried to kwboot the MS120 (with and without the Armada patches), but was unable to get it working. For some reason, the BootROM output is printed twice when kwboot is running, which I have not witnessed during any normal boot sequence:

$ ./kwboot -b u-boot.uart -f -t -B 115200 /dev/ttyUSB0
Sending boot message. Please reboot the target.../
BootROM 1.41
Pattern detected on UART-
BootROM 1.41
Pattern detected on UART/

uart.bin was created using tools/marvell/doimage:

$ ./doimage -T uart -D 0x0 -E 0x0 u-boot.bin u-boot.uart

Unfortunately, this investigation leaves us with more questions than answers.

  • What is the contents of the 32Mbit SPI flash?
    • Does the SmartFusion 2 only provide glue logic, or does it also protect/verify the contents of SPI flash?
  • Why won’t the Alleycat3 kwboot?
    • Is the duplicate output from BootROM when kwboot is invoked a clue?
  • What is the purpose of the header J17?
  • Why did Meraki switch from aluminum to steel?

The MS120 series is a completely different platform from the previous MS220 series, which used Vitesse ASICs with a MIPS core, 128MB of DDR2, 16MB of SPI, and 128MB of NAND flash.

The use of Secure Boot will complicate efforts to create a third-party firmware for the MS120 series. However, the more immediate issue is that kwboot does not work and there is no obvious copy of u-boot in SPI flash we can modify to alter the boot process.

Asus PN50 4700U review

The Asus PN50 is a NUC-sized mini PC based on AMD’s Renoir mobile platform. The PN50 is available in four configurations ranging from a Ryzen 3 4300U (4C/4T) to Ryzen 7 4800U (8C/16T).

I am not made of money and the 4800U commands an extreme premium for less than extreme additional performance over the 4700U (8C/8T), so I ordered the 4700U. I pre-ordered the 4700U in August for 370£ (408€) from Amazon UK (EU prices were 🤪).

Due to reasons which were never well communicated by Asus or Amazon, the release date of the product was delayed several times from early September 2020 until mid-October 2020.


tl;dr – The PN50 with the Ryzen 7 4700U offers a lot of computing power for the size and power budget, and offers a healthy amount of IO. If you are in the market for a NUC-sized PC, you would be remiss if you did not consider the PN50. The 4700U offers impressive performance, beating an i9-8950HK at one third the power.


The PN50 is sold as a barebones system, although some retailers offer it as a bundle with RAM and an SSD if you prefer overpaying for someone else installing 3 socketed components.

In the box:

  • Asus PN50
  • 19V power supply (65W for 4300/4500U, 90W for 4700/4800U)
  • IEC 60320 “mickey mouse” power cable
  • VESA mount
  • Screws for mounting the 2.5″ hard drive, M.2 SSD, and VESA mount
  • User’s guide and driver CDROM

Typical reviews are full of benchmarks (both CPU and GPU), but I want to provide my own perspective on the system so the benchmark section will be brief.

Renoir eats Intel’s mobile offers for lunch. The newest Intel system I have access to is an XPS 15 (9570) laptop with an Intel Core i9-8950HK.

Ryzen 7 4700U (Asus PN50) versus Intel Core i9-8950HK (XPS 15″ 9570)

The PN50 with Ryzen 7 4700U scores 10% higher in single-threaded performance and 12% higher in multi-core performance. The 8950HK is not the latest from Intel, but it’s still incredibly impressive that the Ryzen 7 4700U delivers superior performance at one third the power (i9-8950HK: 45W TDP; Ryzen 7 4700U: 15W TDP).


Looking at the internals of the Asus PN50, it seems that the configurable port that Asus offers on the rear is achieved by the use of a ribbon cable to a daughterboard:

DisplayPort daughterboard in the Asus PN50

On all retail units that I have seen for sale thus far, the port is configured as a full size DisplayPort. The Asus website shows DisplayPort, RS-232, VGA, and RJ-45 options under the configurable port. I don’t know if Asus ever plans to sell the FPC and daughterboards separately or if they will only be available as BTO options.

There is an FPC connector present for the secondary network (or RS-232) interface, as well as another FPC connector present for an M.2 carrier (though it isn’t clear what interface the M.2 card would use):

Unused FPC connectors for secondary LAN and M.2 card

Removing the metal guide for the bottom of the internal chassis is simple, only 4 Philips screws, and two cables (one for 2.5″ SATA connector and one for the micro SD reader):

Removing the bottom of the internal chassis is straightforward

Removing the plastic rear IO shield is also easily accomplished, as there are only 6 plastic retention clips and only 3 need to be released to remove it:

Clips to remove the plastic rear IO shield
Rear view of the PN50 with plastic IO shield removed

Unfortunately, I was unable to determine how you remove the motherboard from the chassis.


Here is the output of lspci with an NVMe SSD installed:

00:00.0 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Root Complex
00:00.2 IOMMU: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir IOMMU
00:01.0 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir PCIe Dummy Host Bridge
00:01.2 PCI bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir PCIe GPP Bridge
00:02.0 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir PCIe Dummy Host Bridge
00:02.1 PCI bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir PCIe GPP Bridge
00:02.2 PCI bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir PCIe GPP Bridge
00:02.3 PCI bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir PCIe GPP Bridge
00:08.0 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir PCIe Dummy Host Bridge
00:08.1 PCI bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Internal PCIe GPP Bridge to Bus
00:08.2 PCI bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Internal PCIe GPP Bridge to Bus
00:14.0 SMBus: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] FCH SMBus Controller (rev 51)
00:14.3 ISA bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] FCH LPC Bridge (rev 51)
00:18.0 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Device 24: Function 0
00:18.1 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Device 24: Function 1
00:18.2 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Device 24: Function 2
00:18.3 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Device 24: Function 3
00:18.4 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Device 24: Function 4
00:18.5 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Device 24: Function 5
00:18.6 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Device 24: Function 6
00:18.7 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir Device 24: Function 7
01:00.0 USB controller: ASMedia Technology Inc. ASM1042A USB 3.0 Host Controller
02:00.0 Ethernet controller: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8111/8168/8411 PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet Controller (rev 0e)
02:00.1 Serial controller: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. Device 816a (rev 0e)
02:00.2 Serial controller: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. Device 816b (rev 0e)
02:00.3 IPMI Interface: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. Device 816c (rev 0e)
02:00.4 USB controller: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. Device 816d (rev 0e)
03:00.0 Network controller: Intel Corporation Wi-Fi 6 AX200 (rev 1a)
04:00.0 Non-Volatile memory controller: Samsung Electronics Co Ltd NVMe SSD Controller SM981/PM981/PM983
05:00.0 VGA compatible controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI] Renoir (rev c2)
05:00.1 Audio device: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI] Device 1637
05:00.2 Encryption controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Family 17h (Models 10h-1fh) Platform Security Processor
05:00.3 USB controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir USB 3.1
05:00.4 USB controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Renoir USB 3.1
05:00.5 Multimedia controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Raven/Raven2/FireFlight/Renoir Audio Processor (rev 01)
05:00.6 Audio device: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Family 17h (Models 10h-1fh) HD Audio Controller
05:00.7 Signal processing controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Raven/Raven2/Renoir Sensor Fusion Hub
06:00.0 SATA controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] FCH SATA Controller [AHCI mode] (rev 81)
06:00.1 SATA controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] FCH SATA Controller [AHCI mode] (rev 81)

Here is the output of lsusb:

Bus 006 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0003 Linux Foundation 3.0 root hub
Bus 005 Device 003: ID 8087:0029 Intel Corp. 
Bus 005 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub
Bus 004 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0003 Linux Foundation 3.0 root hub
Bus 003 Device 003: ID 0bda:0129 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. RTS5129 Card Reader Controller
Bus 003 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub
Bus 002 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0003 Linux Foundation 3.0 root hub
Bus 001 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub

Unfortunately the micro SDXC card reader is only connected via USB 2.0, and the maximum read speed I was able to obtain using a UHS-1 class card was 41MB/s.

This is disappointing as UHS SD cards are frequently capable of read speeds in excess of 100MB/s and Asus appears to have cost-optimized the SDXC card reader here by going with an older USB2.0 design.


I will give a brief overview of the BIOS, but suffice to say it’s pretty basic with no advanced functionality. But first, the pretty Asus splash screen:

Much incredible, so Renoir

The Main summary is quite basic, and seems to have a bug where the M.2 SSD is shown as Not Present even when installed. The bug is present in both 0409 and 0416 releases.

Summary screen of Asus PN50 0416 BIOS

Despite the Main page stating Not Present, an installed NVMe device is visible under Advanced > NVMe Configuration

The Monitor view offers a summary of system temperatures, CPU Vcore, and fan speed. You can select the fan profile as well.

NVMe temperature is present here ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

The included EzFlash utility makes updating firmware easy, simply extract the ZIP archive containing the firmware update and put the CAP file on a FAT formatted USB device.

EzFlash: Select the update file from your USB device
Updating the firmware requires a few minutes but is otherwise painless

There seems to be a bug where you are prompted to save settings before entering the utility, and selecting No prevents you from entering EzFlash.

MCTP Configuration, DASH Configuration, and Serial Port Console Redirection are all options added in BIOS 0416 that were not present in BIOS 0409.

Advanced menu of BIOS 0416

Thus far, it seems there is no option to select a temporary boot device from the main splash screen, you must first enter BIOS and then navigate to the Boot menu. It would be nice if Asus added the option to select a temporary boot device to the splash screen in a future release.

BIOS boot menu

I had no issues with 64GB of Mushkin RAM running at 3200MHz on BIOS 0409 or BIOS 0416. The PN50 ran 4 passes of Memtest86 (BIOS 0409) without any errors.

Sadly Asus offers no option to set the cTDP at 15W or 25W. From what I’ve read, the cTDP should be set to 15W in the PN50, though I am not sure how to verify this is actually the case. It would be nice if Asus offered the option to set the cTDP at 15W or 25W, though perhaps their thermal design would not accommodate that.


I have only had my PN50 for about a week, but initial impressions are quite good. It is not overly loud and performance is quite frankly amazing for the 15W TDP.

I am really excited to use the PN50 to accelerate the time consuming tasks I have now, such as buildroot make clean && make. For someone who has been using a Xeon E3-1220v3 and Xeon E5-2620v2 for compiling, the Ryzen 7 4700U is stupidly fast and sips power. It even embarrasses the Intel i9-8950HK in the XPS 15, which is a top-spec laptop from just 2 years ago.

I am excited and cannot wait to see what Cezanne brings in 2021. Hopefully Asus see fit to update their mini PC offering for future AMD platforms.

Meraki MS220: PoE support

The last several posts in this series have focused primarily on getting a custom firmware running on the Meraki MS220-series switches, without much regard for preserving existing features. Since I am now at a point where my custom firmware is functional as a Layer 2-ish switch, my attention has turned to PoE, since many switches in the series have PoE support and that is feature I think switch owners (especially MS220-8P) are interested in.

From my investigation into libpoecore included in the Meraki firmware, PoE on the MS220-8P appears to be managed by Microsemi’s PD690xx series of Power over Ethernet Management chips (datasheet). The PD690xx series communicates over I2C with the management CPU to manage PoE on the switch ports (enable/disable PoE, set 802.3af/at modes, query power consumed by a PoE device).

We can confirm that the PD690xx communicates via I2C by running poe_server from Meraki’s firmware and enabling I2C tracing in the kernel:

# cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace
# tracer: nop
#
# entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 1358/1358   #P:1
#
#                              _-----=> irqs-off
#                             / _----=> need-resched
#                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
#                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
#                            ||| /     delay
#           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
#              | |       |   ||||       |         |
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.356000: i2c_write: i2c-1 #0 a=030 f=0000 l=4 [13-32-0f-ff]
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.358000: i2c_result: i2c-1 n=1 ret=1
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.358000: i2c_write: i2c-1 #0 a=030 f=0000 l=2 [13-32]
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.358000: i2c_read: i2c-1 #1 a=030 f=0001 l=2
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.359000: i2c_reply: i2c-1 #1 a=030 f=0001 l=2 [0f-ff]
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.359000: i2c_result: i2c-1 n=2 ret=2
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.359000: i2c_write: i2c-1 #0 a=030 f=0000 l=4 [13-32-0f-ff]
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.360000: i2c_result: i2c-1 n=1 ret=1
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.360000: i2c_write: i2c-1 #0 a=030 f=0000 l=4 [13-9e-dc-03]
      poe_server-682   [000] ....   560.362000: i2c_result: i2c-1 n=1 ret=1

I2C tracing is extremely helpful, as running strace against poe_server directly will not yield useful output as to what operations it is performing to configure PoE.

While it is good news that we are able to recover the I2C commands via kernel tracing, it’s bad news in the sense that writing a new daemon to duplicate the features of poe_cli is non-trivial.


Thankfully, with the libpoecore from the Meraki firmware dump and free disassembly tools like Ghidra (sorry Hex-Rays, support MIPS in IDA Free ¯\_(ツ)_/¯), understanding some of the logic behind functionality provided by poe_server and poe_cli becomes much easier.

If you disassemble libpoecore, you can find the function hard_init which contains code to set up GPIO outputs. Interesting to note is that while the GPIO pins change depending on which switch ASIC is present, the sequence of GPIO outputs to configure the PD690xx remains constant.

Disassembler view of the function hard_init from the library libpoecore.so

The same GPIO configuration is executed when switch_brain is started (full strace output):

writev(1, [{iov_base="", iov_len=0}, {iov_base="echo 7 > /sys/class/gpio/export\n", iov_len=32}], 2echo 7 > /sys/class/gpio/export) = 32
writev(1, [{iov_base="", iov_len=0}, {iov_base="echo 12 > /sys/class/gpio/export\n", iov_len=33}], 2echo 12 > /sys/class/gpio/export) = 33
writev(1, [{iov_base="", iov_len=0}, {iov_base="echo out > /sys/class/gpio/gpio7/direction\n", iov_len=43}], 2echo out > /sys/class/gpio/gpio7/direction) = 43
writev(1, [{iov_base="", iov_len=0}, {iov_base="echo out > /sys/class/gpio/gpio12/direction\n", iov_len=44}], 2echo out > /sys/class/gpio/gpio12/direction) = 44
writev(1, [{iov_base="", iov_len=0}, {iov_base="echo 1 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio7/value\n", iov_len=37}], 2echo 1 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio7/value) = 37
writev(1, [{iov_base="", iov_len=0}, {iov_base="echo 0 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio12/value\n", iov_len=38}], 2echo 0 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio12/value) = 38
writev(1, [{iov_base="", iov_len=0}, {iov_base="echo 1 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio12/value\n", iov_len=38}], 2echo 1 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio12/value) = 38
writev(1, [{iov_base="", iov_len=0}, {iov_base="echo 0 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio7/value\n", iov_len=37}], 2echo 0 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio7/value) = 37
writev(1, [{iov_base="", iov_len=0}, {iov_base="echo 1 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio12/value\n", iov_len=38}], 2echo 1 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio12/value) = 38

The datasheet for the luton26 ASIC used in the MS220-8P, MS220-24P, and MS22 (VDMS-10393) doesn’t list anything connected to GPIO 7, and GPIO 12 is used for either SFP17_SD or PHY7_LED1 depending on the overlay function chosen. The functionality of these GPIO pins is undefined in the ASIC datasheet, however libpoecore is setting them and manipulating their outputs.

We can implement the logic of hard_init in an init script to set up the GPIO pins in the same way, and the result is that the PD690xx is configured for auto mode. I am not sure how, there is nothing in the PD690xx datasheet which suggests GPIO pins can be used to configure the operating mode, but the switch will automatically negotiate and power a PoE device.

Writing a new daemon to communicate with the PD690xx will ultimately be necessary if fine control over PoE functionality is to be achieved. Without I2C communication to the PD690xx, it is not possible to query the power budget, or limit port power delivery. In the mean time, for those who do not mind unmanaged “plug-and-play” style, PoE can be considered functional.