Eachlink H6 Mini

Inexpensive TV box with the H6 SoC and some decent specifications (3GiB RAM, 32GiB eMMC), but missing GBit Ethernet.

= Identification =

On the back of the device, the following is printed: H6 MINI PLAYER HOME MEDIA CENTER DESIGNED BY HONG KONG INPUT: DC 5V / 2A MADE IN CHINA

The PCB has the following silkscreened on it: H6-mini_H6_V1.1

= Sunxi support =

Current status
WIP. Boots mainline Linux under "lab conditions", using a hacked boot0 and FEL mode. U-Boot DRAM driver support is WIP, based on a register dump after boot0 has initialised the DRAM.

Manual build
You can build things for yourself by following our Manual build howto and by choosing from the configurations available below.

Sunxi/Legacy U-Boot
Use the  build target.

Mainline U-Boot
Use the  build target.

Sunxi/Legacy Kernel
Use the  file.

Mainline kernel
Use the  device-tree binary.

= Tips, Tricks, Caveats =

Despite being a TV box shipped with Android and the Play Store plus other sensitive apps, the box is completely open. It boots normal eGON images (as created by U-Boot) or boots happily into FEL mode with the FEL button pressed. When booting the shipped Android system, you are greeting with a prompt on the serial line. If you have the RX line fix in place, you can explore the system. A dauntless "su" will give you root privileges for full system access.


 * The box does not seem to come with the usual AXP 805 PMIC (typically bundled with the H6). There is an IC which looks like a PMIC, judging by the coils and the many SMD components around it. However it is much smaller than the AXP and has a rather cryptic label "A8038 8099330k". The BSP log features "probe axp is dummy" and "no pmu exist".
 * The LED 7-segment display is controlled by an I2C controlled chip called FD655 from the Chinese company FDHISI (TODO: find I2C bus number, I2C address and required power lines for the display. Google turns up a Chinese datasheet, also there is some driver code on Github).
 * There are eight(!) DRAM chips, four from Samsung (K4B2G0446D) and four from Micron (D9PQL). It needs to be worked out whether this is to give the rather odd 3GiB or there are actually 4GiB, with the last GiB not usable.

FEL mode
There is a small hole between the two USB ports, the button behind it triggers FEL mode when held down while resetting or powering up. The USB 2.0 port will act as the OTG device, you need a USB-A <-> USB-A cable for FEL mode (same as the Pine64).

= Adding a serial port (might void warranty?) =



There are clearly labelled UART pads on the PCB, please refer to the UART howto for more details on using a serial port. There is some space near the microUSB power supply socket to drill a small hole and lead the three needed cables through.

The RX pin doesn't work out of the box, as there is a FET missing on the PCB. Normally this FET gates the RX line when the device is off, preventing it from leaking power into the system and allowing a proper shutdown and reboot. However this FET is not populated, so the RX line is not working initially: You can't type anything, but see all messages. To fix this either bridge the pins labelled "S" and "D" in the picture to the right, or solder a proper FET to the SOT23 footprint.

Device disassembly
To open the box, turn it upside down, gently slide a plastic tool or a knife in the small gap around all edges of the box to eventually lift the bottom plate. There is no need to remove the rubber feet. Then unscrew the four screws securing the PCB. To remove the PCB, first lift the side with the 7 segment display up (use a knife or similar tool), then gently pull the PCB out. This is needed because the backside connectors are somewhat locked into the case.

Locating the UART
The UART pins are located in the upper left corner on the top of the PCB, near the SPDIF connector. They are the usual 3.3V GND/TX/RX/VCC pin, clearly labelled as such. As usual, the VCC should not be needed.

= Pictures =

= See also =