This is a collection of tools for reading, patching and flashing the Novatouch TKL firmware.
This is just a quick hack that was originally developed by vekkt0r, and only tested by him. I forked it, modified it to make a Mac layout Novatouch, and went on my way. It is very dependent on a specific version of the firmware and if your keyboard has another firmware things will most probably break. The checksum of the original firmware will be checked before patching. If checksum differs the patching will fail.
NSHenry Note: It’s worth mentioning that I bought this keyboard a good year and a half after vekkt0r and my firmware passed the checksum.
Still… it is possible you will brick your keyboard by using these tools.
Make sure you store a copy of your original firmware safely.
- MSP430 toolchain - Last released version of osx-launchpad is included since I was having a TON of trouble compiling from source. This version worked for me on OS X El Capitan 10.11.6.
- mspdebug - Comes with above package.
- Python
Connect MSP430 programmer with Spy-Bi-Wire to the GNS, TEST, RST on the Novatouch programming connector (CN2):
+--------------------+ |CN2 | ++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 10 | | | | | | | | | | 1 + | | + | + + + + + | | | | | +-----+ RST | +---------+ TEST +-----------+ GND
Connect Novatouch to programmer and run the make flash
target:
$ make flash
This will fetch the original firmware (main flash only), do some patching, and then flash the patched firmware back to the Novatouch.
The patches done by default are:
- Switch place of the ‘Alt’ and ‘Super’ keys to make it easier when switching between iOS and OS X devices.
- Add hook function for entering BSL (bootloader) mode with Fn + F1 + F2.
Flashing via BSL is not yet tested because the HID driver on OS X promptly refuses to recognize the keyboard when in that mode. “Should” work fine on Linux though :-)
Edit the patch.py file to do other key mappings, hopefully it’s understandable with the overly commented code.
This a table representation of the actual key matrix. The row is the
lowest 3 bits of key id and the column is the 4 bits above that
(id = xCCCCRRR). I.e. tab = 5 + (2<<3) = 21
.
Nate Note: I’m too stupid to understand the above notation. The formula that works for me is (R(C-1))+R+1. C acts as the last full column and the 1 is set to offset that it starts at row 0.
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 2 | 1 | tilde | 3 | f1 | 4 | 6 | 5 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 0 | ins | - | bkspc | = |
1 | alt_l | super_l | ctrl_l | esc | spc | alt_r | left | super_r | ctrl_r | fn | ||||||
2 | f5 | f8 | f7 | f6 | f9 | printscr | f10 | f12 | f11 | |||||||
3 | z | shift_l | x | f4 | c | b | v | , | m | n | . | / | right | shift_r | ||
4 | s | a | caps | d | f2 | f | h | g | l | k | j | ; | ’ | ret | ||
5 | w | q | tab | e | f3 | r | y | t | o | i | u | p | del | [ | \ | ] |
6 | up | pause | pgup | |||||||||||||
7 | home | down | scroll | end |