Workaround
I’m not sure what was going wrong with what I was doing initially, but, thanks to @[email protected], as suggested, I disabled the tftp server system service, and, instead, started it with the following command:
sudo in.tftpd -L /srv/tftp --verbose --permissive -s
and it then flashed successfully.
Original Post
I’m trying to flash firmware to a router (Archer C7) using TFTP, but, when the router makes the request for the firmware file over TFTP, the TFTP server responds with the following error
Error code: Access violation (2)
Error message: Only absolute filenames allowed
This is the config for tftpd in /etc/conf.d/tftpd
:
TFTP_OPTIONS="-s"
TFTP_DIRECTORY="/srv/tftp"
TFTP_USERNAME="tftp"
TFTP_ADDRESS="192.168.0.66:69"
I have the firmware file in /srv/tftp
, and both the firmware file, and /srv/tftp
have chmod 777
permissions.
The TFTP server is running on Archlinux, and is installed as tftp-hpa
from the arch repos.
If I test as a client, I can get it to download if I specify the full (absolute) path to the file /srv/tftp/filename
, so it seems that the config isn’t pointing the server to /srv/tftp
as the relative path… How would I go about fixing that?
I set
TFTP_DIRECTORY="/"
, and then restarted the service, but, unfortunately, it didn’t work.