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Brick (electronics)

A brick (or bricked device) is a mobile device, game console, router, computer or other electronic device that is no longer functional due to corrupted firmware, a hardware problem, or other damage.[1] The term analogizes the device to a brick's modern technological usefulness.[2]

A soft bricked Fire TV Stick, booting in emergency recovery and telling the user that the /data partition got corrupted, and requiring a factory reset in order to make it usable again.
A soft bricked iPod Touch, displaying only error messages as BSD root.

Cause and prevention edit

Bricking a device is most often a result of interrupting an attempt to update the device. Many devices have an update procedure which must not be interrupted before completion; if interrupted by a power failure, user intervention, or any other reason, the existing firmware may be partially overwritten and unusable. The risk of corruption can be minimized by taking all possible precautions against interruption.

Installing firmware with errors, or for a different revision of the hardware, or installing firmware incompetently patched such as DVD firmware which only plays DVDs sold in a particular region, can also cause bricking.

Devices can also be bricked by malware (malicious software) and sometimes by running software not intentionally harmful but with errors that cause damage.

Some devices include a backup copy of their firmware, stored in fixed ROM or writable non-volatile memory, which is not normally accessible to processes that could corrupt it. Should the firmware become corrupted, the device can copy from the backup memory to its main memory, restoring the firmware.

Types edit

Bricking is classified into two types, hard and soft, depending on the device's ability to function.[2]

Soft brick edit

A "soft bricked" device may show signs of life, but fails to boot or may display an error screen. Soft bricked devices can usually be fixed relatively easily; for example, a soft bricked iOS device may display a screen instructing the user to plug it into a computer to perform an operating system recovery using iTunes computer software.[3] In some cases, soft bricked devices are unable to be repaired without physical repairs being carried out; an example of this would be an iOS device locked with iCloud Activation Lock, of which the only solution is to contact the owner of the iCloud account the device is locked to, or to replace the entire logicboard with a non-locked board.[citation needed]

Hard brick edit

Hard bricked devices generally show few or no signs of life. A hard bricked device does not power on or show any vendor logo; the screen remains turned off or blank. Some of the major reasons for hard bricking include installing firmware not intended for the device, severe physical damage, interrupting a firmware flashing procedure, or following a flashing procedure incorrectly.

In the case of Android devices, some kernel bugs have been known that affect the /data partition in the eMMC chip, which becomes corrupted during certain operations such as wiping and flashing.

Recovering from a hard brick is generally considered difficult and requires the use of a more direct programming interface to the device; such an interface often exists, as there must be a way to program the initial firmware during the manufacturing process. However, additional tools or connections may be needed, such as low-level programming devices. Hardware hard brick recoveries are also considered difficult and require electrical knowledge to find and fix hardware issues. For example, an overloaded capacitor in a circuit may explode, thus stopping the flow of electricity and bricking the device. More complex examples involve permanent damage to integrated circuits and processors. Fixing such hardware bricks involve replacing these components entirely or fixing them by either bypassing if the circuit allows or other methods.

Most devices can be hard bricked in a variety of ways. Resolution generally follows a process of analyzing the boot process, determining the sub-type of hard brick, and making changes with the help of external (non-bricked) devices.[4]

Un-bricking edit

Some devices that become "bricked" because the contents of their nonvolatile memory are incorrect can be "un-bricked" using separate hardware (a debug board) that accesses this memory directly.[5][better source needed] This is similar to the procedure for loading firmware into a new device when the memory is still empty. This kind of "bricking" and "un-bricking" occasionally happens during firmware testing and development. In other cases software and hardware procedures, often complex, have been developed that have a good chance of un-bricking the device. There is no general method; each device is different. There are also user-created modifier programs to use on bricked or partially bricked devices to make them functional. Examples include the Wiibrew program BootMii used to fix semi-bricked Wiis, the Odin program used to flash firmware on Samsung Android devices,[6] or the fastboot Android protocol which is capable of re-flashing a device with no software installed.[6]

A soft bricked rooted Kindle Fire can be un-bricked by using unrooting tools.

A personal computer may be un-bricked by using various means of restoring techniques, from internal ones through the "Backup and Reset" feature, or external one using an external OS image.

Systems edit

In principle any device with rewritable firmware, or certain crucial settings stored into flash or EEPROM memory, can be bricked. Many, but not all, devices with user-updatable firmware have protection against bricking; devices intended to be updated only by official service personnel generally do not.

Amongst devices known to have bricking issues are: older PCs (more recent models often have dual BIOSes or some other form of protection), many mobile phones, handheld game consoles like the PlayStation Portable and Nintendo DS, video game consoles like the Wii, Xbox 360, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One, many SCSI devices and some lines of hard disk drives and routers.[citation needed]

At least some older consumer market router models[which?] can become unresponsive when the user tries to define a subnet mask that does not contain one contiguous run of 1s and then 0s. If even a single bit is set so that it breaks one of the runs, the router may become bricked, unresponsive to any standard troubleshooting or resolving procedures listed in the manual. Un-bricking the router may require opening the case, shorting some jumper pins on the board, then connecting the router by the USB cable to an old PC with USB 1.1 hardware, running a special DOS level program supplied by the manufacturer, and powering the router up. This procedure will flash the router to factory settings and original firmware.[citation needed]

Electric cars such as the Tesla Roadster (first generation) can brick if the battery is completely discharged.[7]

Sometimes an interrupted flash upgrade of a PC motherboard will brick the board, for example, due to a power outage (or user impatience) during the upgrade process. It is sometimes possible to un-brick such a motherboard, by scavenging a similar but otherwise broken board for a BIOS chip in the hopes that the BIOS will work even halfway, far enough to boot from floppy. Then it will be possible to retry the flash process. Sometimes it is possible to boot from a floppy, then swap the old presumably dead BIOS chip in and re-flash it.[8][better source needed] On some Gigabyte boards, it can also be possible to re-flash the bricked main BIOS using a backup BIOS.[9] Some vendors put the BIOS chip in sockets, allowing the corrupted BIOS chip to be removed and reprogrammed using an external tool, like a universal programmer or an Arduino.

Online and mobile services edit

Mobile phones have a fixed identification code, the IMEI. A telephone reported stolen can have its IMEI blocked by networks, preventing them from being used as mobile devices.[10] iOS offers a similar "Activation Lock" feature via the "Find My iPhone" security software, where a device can be remotely prevented from operating (even after it has been erased), protected by the owner's Apple ID.[11] Devices that have a strong dependency on online services in order to function may be bricked after services are discontinued by the manufacturer, or some other technological factor (such as expired security certificates or other services quietly becoming unavailable) effectively prevents them from operating. This can happen if the product has been succeeded by a newer model and the manufacturer no longer wishes to maintain services for the previous version, or if a company has been acquired by another or otherwise ceases operations, and chooses not to, or is no longer able to maintain its previous products. For example, Apple dropped support for OS X El Capitan in October 2018, and on 30 September 2021 the built-in security certificate expired, rendering users unable to connect to or use any iCloud services.[12][13][14] The security certificate issued with the final updates of OS X Sierra and High Sierra have expired as of 20 May 2022. The practice has especially been scrutinized within the Internet of things and smart home markets.[15][16][17][18] Bricking in these cases have been declared a means to enforce planned obsolescence.[19][20]

References edit

  1. ^ "brick". www.catb.org.
  2. ^ a b "The Big Android Dictionary: A Glossary of Terms You Should Know". WonderHowTo. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  3. ^ "If you can't update or restore your iPhone, iPad, or iPod Touch". Apple Support. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  4. ^ . Dot Android. Archived from the original on 2017-04-24. Retrieved 2017-04-24.
  5. ^ "Neo1973 Debug Board v2/Unbricking - Openmoko". wiki.openmoko.org.
  6. ^ a b Unbrick Android phones and tablets
  7. ^ Degusta, Michael (February 22, 2012). "Tesla Motors' Devastating Design Problem". Jalopnik.
  8. ^ "[motherboard] Bricked motherboard after bios update - Computer Hardware Help | DSLReports Forums". DSL Reports. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  9. ^ "--GIGABYTE--DUAL BIOS WEB". www.gigabyte.com. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  10. ^ Burke, David. "Thieves frustrated by stolen phone blacklist, hunt for ways around it". CBC News. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  11. ^ Singleton, Micah (2017-01-30). "Apple gets rid of tool that let you check whether iPhones were stolen". The Verge. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  12. ^ hoakley (2021-09-21). "El Capitan and older Mac OS X are about to have a security certificate problem". The Eclectic Light Company. Retrieved 2022-05-27.
  13. ^ Helme, Scott (20 September 2021). "Let's Encrypt's Root Certificate is expiring!". Scott Helme. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
  14. ^ "Let's Encrypt's root certificate has expired, and it might break your devices". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2022-05-27.
  15. ^ Hern, Alex (2016-04-05). "Revolv owners furious as Google shuts down smart home company". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  16. ^ Welch, Chris (2017-11-08). "Logitech will brick its Harmony Link hub for all owners in March". The Verge. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  17. ^ Gewirtz, David. "Revolv is dead. Google killed it. Long live innovation". ZDNet. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  18. ^ Diaz, Jesus (2019-03-06). "One of the decade's most hyped robots sends its farewell message". Fast Company. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  19. ^ Walsh, Kit (2016-04-05). "Nest Reminds Customers That Ownership Isn't What It Used to Be". Electronic Frontier Foundation. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  20. ^ Chung, Emily (April 6, 2016). "Nest's move to stop supporting Revolv smart hub leaves customers with costly 'brick'". CBC News. Retrieved 2019-03-11.

brick, electronics, confused, with, early, brick, style, mobile, phones, canadian, retailer, brick, building, material, brick, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, mes. Not to be confused with early brick style mobile phones the Canadian retailer The Brick or the building material Brick This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s factual accuracy may be compromised due to out of date information Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information October 2016 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Brick electronics news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2008 Learn how and when to remove this message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Brick electronics news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message A brick or bricked device is a mobile device game console router computer or other electronic device that is no longer functional due to corrupted firmware a hardware problem or other damage 1 The term analogizes the device to a brick s modern technological usefulness 2 A soft bricked Fire TV Stick booting in emergency recovery and telling the user that the data partition got corrupted and requiring a factory reset in order to make it usable again A soft bricked iPod Touch displaying only error messages as BSD root Contents 1 Cause and prevention 2 Types 2 1 Soft brick 2 2 Hard brick 3 Un bricking 4 Systems 5 Online and mobile services 6 ReferencesCause and prevention editBricking a device is most often a result of interrupting an attempt to update the device Many devices have an update procedure which must not be interrupted before completion if interrupted by a power failure user intervention or any other reason the existing firmware may be partially overwritten and unusable The risk of corruption can be minimized by taking all possible precautions against interruption Installing firmware with errors or for a different revision of the hardware or installing firmware incompetently patched such as DVD firmware which only plays DVDs sold in a particular region can also cause bricking Devices can also be bricked by malware malicious software and sometimes by running software not intentionally harmful but with errors that cause damage Some devices include a backup copy of their firmware stored in fixed ROM or writable non volatile memory which is not normally accessible to processes that could corrupt it Should the firmware become corrupted the device can copy from the backup memory to its main memory restoring the firmware Types editBricking is classified into two types hard and soft depending on the device s ability to function 2 Soft brick edit A soft bricked device may show signs of life but fails to boot or may display an error screen Soft bricked devices can usually be fixed relatively easily for example a soft bricked iOS device may display a screen instructing the user to plug it into a computer to perform an operating system recovery using iTunes computer software 3 In some cases soft bricked devices are unable to be repaired without physical repairs being carried out an example of this would be an iOS device locked with iCloud Activation Lock of which the only solution is to contact the owner of the iCloud account the device is locked to or to replace the entire logicboard with a non locked board citation needed Hard brick edit Hard bricked devices generally show few or no signs of life A hard bricked device does not power on or show any vendor logo the screen remains turned off or blank Some of the major reasons for hard bricking include installing firmware not intended for the device severe physical damage interrupting a firmware flashing procedure or following a flashing procedure incorrectly In the case of Android devices some kernel bugs have been known that affect the data partition in the eMMC chip which becomes corrupted during certain operations such as wiping and flashing Recovering from a hard brick is generally considered difficult and requires the use of a more direct programming interface to the device such an interface often exists as there must be a way to program the initial firmware during the manufacturing process However additional tools or connections may be needed such as low level programming devices Hardware hard brick recoveries are also considered difficult and require electrical knowledge to find and fix hardware issues For example an overloaded capacitor in a circuit may explode thus stopping the flow of electricity and bricking the device More complex examples involve permanent damage to integrated circuits and processors Fixing such hardware bricks involve replacing these components entirely or fixing them by either bypassing if the circuit allows or other methods Most devices can be hard bricked in a variety of ways Resolution generally follows a process of analyzing the boot process determining the sub type of hard brick and making changes with the help of external non bricked devices 4 Un bricking editSome devices that become bricked because the contents of their nonvolatile memory are incorrect can be un bricked using separate hardware a debug board that accesses this memory directly 5 better source needed This is similar to the procedure for loading firmware into a new device when the memory is still empty This kind of bricking and un bricking occasionally happens during firmware testing and development In other cases software and hardware procedures often complex have been developed that have a good chance of un bricking the device There is no general method each device is different There are also user created modifier programs to use on bricked or partially bricked devices to make them functional Examples include the Wiibrew program BootMii used to fix semi bricked Wiis the Odin program used to flash firmware on Samsung Android devices 6 or the fastboot Android protocol which is capable of re flashing a device with no software installed 6 A soft bricked rooted Kindle Fire can be un bricked by using unrooting tools A personal computer may be un bricked by using various means of restoring techniques from internal ones through the Backup and Reset feature or external one using an external OS image Systems editIn principle any device with rewritable firmware or certain crucial settings stored into flash or EEPROM memory can be bricked Many but not all devices with user updatable firmware have protection against bricking devices intended to be updated only by official service personnel generally do not Amongst devices known to have bricking issues are older PCs more recent models often have dual BIOSes or some other form of protection many mobile phones handheld game consoles like the PlayStation Portable and Nintendo DS video game consoles like the Wii Xbox 360 PlayStation 4 and Xbox One many SCSI devices and some lines of hard disk drives and routers citation needed At least some older consumer market router models which can become unresponsive when the user tries to define a subnet mask that does not contain one contiguous run of 1s and then 0s If even a single bit is set so that it breaks one of the runs the router may become bricked unresponsive to any standard troubleshooting or resolving procedures listed in the manual Un bricking the router may require opening the case shorting some jumper pins on the board then connecting the router by the USB cable to an old PC with USB 1 1 hardware running a special DOS level program supplied by the manufacturer and powering the router up This procedure will flash the router to factory settings and original firmware citation needed Electric cars such as the Tesla Roadster first generation can brick if the battery is completely discharged 7 Sometimes an interrupted flash upgrade of a PC motherboard will brick the board for example due to a power outage or user impatience during the upgrade process It is sometimes possible to un brick such a motherboard by scavenging a similar but otherwise broken board for a BIOS chip in the hopes that the BIOS will work even halfway far enough to boot from floppy Then it will be possible to retry the flash process Sometimes it is possible to boot from a floppy then swap the old presumably dead BIOS chip in and re flash it 8 better source needed On some Gigabyte boards it can also be possible to re flash the bricked main BIOS using a backup BIOS 9 Some vendors put the BIOS chip in sockets allowing the corrupted BIOS chip to be removed and reprogrammed using an external tool like a universal programmer or an Arduino Online and mobile services editMobile phones have a fixed identification code the IMEI A telephone reported stolen can have its IMEI blocked by networks preventing them from being used as mobile devices 10 iOS offers a similar Activation Lock feature via the Find My iPhone security software where a device can be remotely prevented from operating even after it has been erased protected by the owner s Apple ID 11 Devices that have a strong dependency on online services in order to function may be bricked after services are discontinued by the manufacturer or some other technological factor such as expired security certificates or other services quietly becoming unavailable effectively prevents them from operating This can happen if the product has been succeeded by a newer model and the manufacturer no longer wishes to maintain services for the previous version or if a company has been acquired by another or otherwise ceases operations and chooses not to or is no longer able to maintain its previous products For example Apple dropped support for OS X El Capitan in October 2018 and on 30 September 2021 the built in security certificate expired rendering users unable to connect to or use any iCloud services 12 13 14 The security certificate issued with the final updates of OS X Sierra and High Sierra have expired as of 20 May 2022 The practice has especially been scrutinized within the Internet of things and smart home markets 15 16 17 18 Bricking in these cases have been declared a means to enforce planned obsolescence 19 20 References edit nbsp Look up brick in Wiktionary the free dictionary brick www catb org a b The Big Android Dictionary A Glossary of Terms You Should Know WonderHowTo Retrieved 2017 05 06 If you can t update or restore your iPhone iPad or iPod Touch Apple Support Retrieved 2017 05 06 Unbricking a Hard Bricked Android Device Dot Android Archived from the original on 2017 04 24 Retrieved 2017 04 24 Neo1973 Debug Board v2 Unbricking Openmoko wiki openmoko org a b Unbrick Android phones and tablets Degusta Michael February 22 2012 Tesla Motors Devastating Design Problem Jalopnik motherboard Bricked motherboard after bios update Computer Hardware Help DSLReports Forums DSL Reports Retrieved 2017 05 06 GIGABYTE DUAL BIOS WEB www gigabyte com Retrieved 2017 05 06 Burke David Thieves frustrated by stolen phone blacklist hunt for ways around it CBC News Retrieved 2019 03 11 Singleton Micah 2017 01 30 Apple gets rid of tool that let you check whether iPhones were stolen The Verge Retrieved 2019 03 11 hoakley 2021 09 21 El Capitan and older Mac OS X are about to have a security certificate problem The Eclectic Light Company Retrieved 2022 05 27 Helme Scott 20 September 2021 Let s Encrypt s Root Certificate is expiring Scott Helme Retrieved 27 May 2021 Let s Encrypt s root certificate has expired and it might break your devices TechCrunch Retrieved 2022 05 27 Hern Alex 2016 04 05 Revolv owners furious as Google shuts down smart home company The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2019 03 11 Welch Chris 2017 11 08 Logitech will brick its Harmony Link hub for all owners in March The Verge Retrieved 2019 03 11 Gewirtz David Revolv is dead Google killed it Long live innovation ZDNet Retrieved 2019 03 11 Diaz Jesus 2019 03 06 One of the decade s most hyped robots sends its farewell message Fast Company Retrieved 2019 03 11 Walsh Kit 2016 04 05 Nest Reminds Customers That Ownership Isn t What It Used to Be Electronic Frontier Foundation Retrieved 2019 03 11 Chung Emily April 6 2016 Nest s move to stop supporting Revolv smart hub leaves customers with costly brick CBC News Retrieved 2019 03 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brick electronics amp oldid 1219957355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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