updated pelicanconf, adds pocketbook disassembly post
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content/pocketbook_dissassembly_and_root.md
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Title: PocketBook Dissassembly and root
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Date: 2017-08-01T21:39+02:00
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Author: Wxcafé
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Category: idk
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Slug: pocketbook_dissassembly_and_root
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So uh a few years (! time flies) back I wanted to get an ereader to...
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*(e-read?)* read books for cheap and not carry a suitcase of paperbacks whenever
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I traveled (plus a lot of other advantages. I like ebooks, they're tiny,
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convenient and disposable. There are lots of books I prefer reading on paper,
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but I can't deny ebooks are neat sometimes. Anyway).
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I already had a Kindle Touch (I think that's the 3rd version of the kindle? idk
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tho) but I wanted something both more recent and with a bigger screen, because
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I kinda enjoy being able to read PDFs and doing that on a Kindle is torture.
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So I went looking for a reasonably sized ebook reader, of which there were (at
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the time) none. After much digging I finally found the [PocketBook
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InkPad](http://www.pocketbook-int.com/fr/products/pocketbook-inkpad) which is an
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8" e-reader with backlight and physical buttons, which sounded exactly like what
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I wanted! So I ordered one and got it delivered a few days later.
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Now this device works pretty well on its own. It's a bit small to read full-size
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PDFs but it's still better than 6" readers are, and even tho it doesn't have
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access to a bundled ebook shop you can always load your own books (which is what
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I intended to do anyway, hello [Library Genesis](http://gen.lib.rus.ec/)). But
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after a bit I wanted to try and do more with it, so I installed
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[koreader](https://github.com/koreader/koreader), which is an aftermarket ebook
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reader app for kindle, kobo, etc, and supports this thing. The installation is
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really easy, it's a matter of dropping the code into an `applications` folder
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(there are a few system libraries to install too and that's done the same way:
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drop the code into the root of the usb mount).
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So then I spent a few months reading books on this (I recommend The Unix Haters
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Handbook, which, while I largely don't agree with much that's on it and it's
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pretty outdated, is really entertaining), and before I knew it I found myself
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disassembling it, and owning the embedded OS running on it. Here's how that
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went (with recent pictures, since I opened it up again to write this!)
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So first of all, here's how it looks, before I get my hands on it. Pretty plain,
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no screws, no visible point of entry.
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The right way (there is never only *one* way to open a device. In fact, there is
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always a very large number of ways to open a device, but most often there's only
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a few ways to open it up while being able to get it working again afterwards) to
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open this thing is to unclip the front (display plus button area) from the back.
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No glue! Yay! It's just a bunch of clips, pretty stiff too, so keep going at
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them and after a while they'll unclip
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After that, just pull the front and the back apart and it's open. Easy! I'm not
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going to elaborate further into the disassembly because from then on there's
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glue everywhere and since I *do* use that ereader I don't want it to be FUBAR.
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Anyway, here are a few shots of the open device:
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and a few closeups. My favorite thing about this device is that it's advertised
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as 4 Gigs of flash storage and... well, it does contain 4Gigs of flash, but not
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really how other manufacturers do it
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Here are a few closeups of the mobo. It looks pretty good, considering. It could
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probably be 50% smaller but since the device itself is so large and the battery
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consumption of eInk screens is so low, why bother?
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Also, my device got a note at manufacture time (I'm guessing QC but who knows?)
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and I have *no idea* what it says/means. If you have something, please tell me
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Anyway. Of course, once I was done admiring the board, I wanted to dig into the
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OS. Since I had the "flash", I could just dump the OS from there, take a look,
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and be done with it, but knowing my motivation if I just dumped it I would never
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have gotten around to take a look at it, so I decided to get a shell on the damn
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thing. Since there are serial headers on there, I popped out my USB<->serial
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cable and plugged it right in.
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This thing listens at 112500 bauds, instead of (the more usual) 9600. So just
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start `screen /dev/ttyUSB0 112500` and it's all good. Then boot the thing.
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You'll see a nice bootlog pass by, and then you'll be stuck without any response
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to inputs.
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Here's such a bootlog from my device (it also contains a suspend event and
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a shutdown event): [html](https://pub.wxcafe.net/pocketbook_log_boot.html) and
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[text](https://pub.wxcafe.net/pocketbook_log_boot.txt)
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Of course, that's nice, but at some point we said we wanted to get a shell on
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it. Well, worry not, because a manufacturer who misspells **attached** as
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**Atached** can't be that good on security. And well, of course,, pressing `^C`
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while the device is booting will interrupt the boot process and give us a nice,
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cozy root shell that we can then use to do anything to the device... which we
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pretty much already could do anyway since a good part of the system folders are
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exposed through the USB mode. But let me enjoy my victory and take a look at the
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way to enable an SSH server at boot, so that it becomes a little more
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comfortable hacking on this thing:
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[html](https://pub.wxcafe.net/pocketbook_log_root.html) and
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[text](https://pub.wxcafe.net/pocketbook_log_root.txt)
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Once that's done don't forget to either drop your key into root's trusted keys
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folder or to set root's password, and you can now, uh, ssh to your e-reader. Why
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would you want to do that? WELL I DON'T KNOW YOU GO FIGURE IT OUT!
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Anyway, that's all I had for today. Oh and don't worry, the e-reader still
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works, perfectly! I did say at the beginning that I was gonna use the *right*
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way to open it!
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@ -29,10 +29,19 @@ AUTHOR_FEED_ATOM = None
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AUTHOR_FEED_RSS = None
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FEED_ALL_ATOM = None
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MD_EXTENSIONS = [
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'codehilite(linenums=False, guess_lang=True, noclasses=True, pygments_style=monokai)',
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'smarty',
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'extra']
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MARKDOWN = {
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'extension_configs': {
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'markdown.extensions.codehilite': {
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'linenums': False,
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'guess_lang': True,
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'noclasses': True,
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'pygments_style': 'monokai'
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},
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'markdown.extensions.smarty': {},
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'markdown.extensions.extra': {},
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},
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'output_format': 'html5',
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}
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# Social
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SOCIAL = (
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pelicanconf.pyc
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