![]() – Improved recognition accuracy when connecting USB drives. If the name is in the form LS-***-EM***, the LinkStation is in EM (emergency) mode. The firmware version is displayed in the bottom right corner of the screen. Select your LinkStation from the NAS Navigator2 window. Note: If your LinkStation is in EM mode, this firmware update might recover it. If your firmware is already version 1.81 or later, you do not need this update. Yay! A little bit more waiting, and I had to repartition the drive and it was blue lights all on again.This software updates the LinkStation firmware to version 1.81. I counted them, and they informed me and, according to the manual, the machine was resetting its firmware. I rebooted the machine, and it still flashed red, but trying to go through this cycle again, at some point – I don’t remember when I saw yellow blinking lights. I changed the windows box, fired up the NasNavi (to obtain a different IP and to establish a connection to the Linkstation) and then I could follow the firmware update. At this point, another post pointed out that I needed to remove my static IP I had set earlier. One extra step that I ended up having to do was in response to a “Couldn’t connect” problems. At this point, you need to make sure you follow the Force Firmware Update post instructions. I downloaded the latest, and then waited to see if the machine would come up for an update. You should see two console messages as described in the post saying “uImage.buffalo, xxx Blocks Served” and “initrd.buffalo, xxx Blocks Served”Īt this point, I figured, the machine is rebooted, now you have to apply some firmware.The red flashing lights came on, and when I hit the function key again, it would eventually bootstrap Start the LS-CHL Linkstation Live in TFTP mode (hold the function key down for a while, turn on the power and wait for the blinking blue lights). ![]() Start the TFTP Boot.exe program from the kirkwood zip.Set a fixed IP to 192.168.11.1, allowing the default gateway details to fill in (tabbing away works).Connect the NAS via ethernet directly to the windows laptop.A kirkwood one floating the internet and listed on a forum post seemed to work best for me. This approach for booting the machine remotely is well-documented here, but unfortunately their linked software didn’t work for my case. Fortunately I had a windows netbook still around that I could use to reset it. I work on a mac, but the only software they provide to reset firmware effectively runs on windows. I’m writing them out here, step by step, just in case it helps someone. I tried quite a few combinations before I was able to restore anything. The result was a RED LED light blinking at me six times in a row upon reboot requiring. ![]() ![]() Unfortunately along the way the firmware update managed to fail and I ended up with a bricked NAS. I bought a NAS drive a year or two ago and I was trying to upgrade the firmware to the latest version, 1.60. ![]()
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