-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 10
700 series Controller Firmware Updates (Linux)
This guide describes how to perform Over-The-Wire (OTW) firmware upgrades for Z-Wave 700-series controllers, in a Linux (and MacOS) environment.
Other options:
- Temporarily relocate your USB controller to a Windows PC and use the Silicon Labs PC Controller software
-
zw_programmer: The Z/IP Gateway software includes this CLI utility to program the controller firmware. This requires obtaining access to the Z/IP Gateway SDK download and the ability to compile it, which will be difficult for most. -
zpc: Thezpcservice provided by the Silicon Labs Unify SDK has the ability to program the controller firmware. This requires obtaining access to a private GitHub project and the ability to compile it, which will be difficult for most.
Read on if you want to update from a Linux/MacOS installation using freely available tools.
The following hardware and software were used in the creation of this guide:
- Platform: Raspberry Pi4
- OS: Raspberry Pi OS 64-bit (Debian 10)
- Silicon Labs SLUSB001A USB controller
- minicom version 2.7.1
- lrzsz version 0.12.21
Any Unix-like OS (Linux, MacOS) that supports USB serial devices, minicom and lrzsz should work with this guide, although some tweaks may be necessary.
Confirmed to work with:
- Raspberry Pi4 and Ubuntu 20.04 64-bit [*]
- Raspberry Pi2 Model B and Raspberry Pi OS 32-bit
- Apple Silicon and MacOS, using homebrew installed lrzsz and minicom [*]
- Synology NAS with a Debian 10.9 Docker container [*]
- Silicon Labs
- Aeotec
- Zooz
- HomeSeer
Most controllers use stock firmware images distributed by Silicon Labs via the Z-Wave SDKs. Vendors may also distribute the same files.
Locate your controller and region in this table and click the Download link to download the latest firmware file. Downloads for both the stock (Silicon Labs) and vendor images are provided, which at this time are identical files. An MD5 value has been provided for verification.
| Product | Chipset | Region | Stock Firmware 7.17.2.406 | Vendor Firmware 7.17.2.406 | Checksum (MD5) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aeotec Z-Pi 7 / Z-Stick 7 | EFR32ZG14 | EU | Download | Download | 46ce88e5e61db37b9e96d906dcbc48a8 |
| Aeotec Z-Pi 7 / Z-Stick 7 | EFR32ZG14 | US | Download | Download | d88e9e94d3df62c0c4d5c591fd88f5b6 |
| Silicon Labs UZB7 (SLUSB001A) | EFR32ZG14 | EU | Download | 46ce88e5e61db37b9e96d906dcbc48a8 |
|
| Silicon Labs UZB7 (SLUSB001A) | EFR32ZG14 | US | Download | d88e9e94d3df62c0c4d5c591fd88f5b6 |
|
| Everspring SA370 | ZGM130S | US | Download | 6cc0961168d209221869bdfd64d5a138 |
|
| HomeSeer SmartStick+ | ZGM130S | US | Download |
Download (PC Controller Software Bundled) |
6cc0961168d209221869bdfd64d5a138 |
| Zooz ZST10 700 | ZGM130S | US | Download | Download | 6cc0961168d209221869bdfd64d5a138 |
The two current chipsets for 700-series Z-Wave modules for gateways and controllers are the EFR32ZG14 and ZGM130S. The firmware file must match the chipset, otherwise the update will fail, so choose the file that is listed for your device.
The stock files have a .gbl file extension (Gecko Bootloader) and are named using the following format: ZW_SerialAPI_Controller_<VERSION>_<EFR32ZG14|ZGM130S>_REGION_<REGION>.gbl.
As of SDK v7.17.00, Silicon Labs distributes the firmware files with the Gecko SDK on GitHub. These public files can be downloaded without requiring a developer account or using the Silicon Labs Simplicity Studio application.
If you are in a different region not listed above, go to the SDK project's gbl directory and find the appropriate file. The listing may be truncated, so use GitHub's "Go to file" button to search for the file.
The entire SDK, including firmware files, can also be downloaded as a single zip file from the official releases page.
All commands listed here are being executed as the root user, to avoid any problems with permissions.
-
Install minicom and file transfer utilities.
apt install -y minicom lrzsz
-
Determine the path to the Z-Wave controller's serial device. For a UZB7 and other 700-series USB controllers, this will typically be
/dev/ttyUSB0. -
Set an environment variable for the USB path. This is used in commands below for easy copy and paste.
export USBPATH=/dev/ttyUSB0 -
Create a minicom profile named
zwavethat configures the serial port for FW upload. This configures the following settings:- Set serial port speed.
- Disable hardware flow control.
- Hide all file transfer choices except xmodem upload.
cat << EOF > /etc/minicom/minirc.zwave # Machine-generated file - use "minicom -s" to change parameters. pu pname1 YUNYY pu pname2 YUNYY pu pname4 NDNYY pu pname5 NDNYY pu pname6 YDNYN pu pname7 YUYNN pu pname8 NDYNN pu pname9 YUNYN pu updir /tmp pu port $USBPATH pu baudrate 115200 pu bits 8 pu parity N pu stopbits 1 pu rtscts No EOF
This is a one time setting and isn't necessary for future upgrades. The profile settings are stored in
/etc/minicom/minirc.zwave. -
Download or copy the controller firmware file to
/tmp. -
Stop zwavejs2mqtt or other zwave-js application so it doesn't interfere. Some users have reported that this step isn't necessary.
All commands listed here are being executed as the root user, to avoid any problems with permissions.
-
Configure the serial port speed. minicom would normally do this, but we issue a couple commands from the shell.
stty 115200 cs8 -cstopb -F $USBPATH -
Soft-reset the controller and wait long enough for it to recover.
printf '\x01\x03\x00\x08\xf4' > $USBPATH && sleep 10
-
Drop the controller into the bootloader.
printf '\x01\x03\x00\x27\xDB' > $USBPATH && sleep 1
-
Start minicom to connect to the device console. Be sure to use the profile configured previously.
minicom -o zwave
-
Press ENTER (one or more times) and you'll see the bootloader prompt. Enter
1to upload the firmware. The letterCwill be printed repeatedly to indicate that the controller is waiting for an upload.Gecko Bootloader v1.5.1 1. upload gbl 2. run 3. ebl info BL > begin upload CCCC -
Enter
CTRL-A sto open the file upload dialog.xmodemwill be the only option, so select it. Navigate the menu so the firmware file is highlighted and select it with Spacebar, then press Enter to upload. -
When the upload finishes, select option
2in the bootloader menu to run the new firmware. Some garbage characters will appear, meaning the firmware is running. Exit minicom withCTRL-A qand selectYesto exit. -
Start zwavejs2mqtt or other zwave-js application. If for some reason you have soft-reset disabled in zwave-js (you shouldn't), be sure to issue a soft-reset prior to starting the application. Confirm the controller firmware has changed to the expected version.