| Scott Anderson | 9bfecb0 | 2012-12-06 09:34:34 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | FastBoot  Version  0.4 | 
 | 2 | ---------------------- | 
 | 3 |  | 
 | 4 | The fastboot protocol is a mechanism for communicating with bootloaders | 
| David Pursell | 2ec418a | 2016-01-20 08:32:08 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 5 | over USB or ethernet.  It is designed to be very straightforward to implement, | 
 | 6 | to allow it to be used across a wide range of devices and from hosts running | 
| Scott Anderson | 9bfecb0 | 2012-12-06 09:34:34 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 7 | Linux, Windows, or OSX. | 
 | 8 |  | 
 | 9 |  | 
 | 10 | Basic Requirements | 
 | 11 | ------------------ | 
 | 12 |  | 
| David Pursell | 2ec418a | 2016-01-20 08:32:08 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 13 | * USB | 
 | 14 |   * Two bulk endpoints (in, out) are required | 
 | 15 |   * Max packet size must be 64 bytes for full-speed, 512 bytes for | 
 | 16 |     high-speed and 1024 bytes for Super Speed USB. | 
 | 17 |   * The protocol is entirely host-driven and synchronous (unlike the | 
 | 18 |     multi-channel, bi-directional, asynchronous ADB protocol) | 
 | 19 |  | 
| David Pursell | 4601c97 | 2016-02-05 15:35:09 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 20 | * TCP or UDP | 
| David Pursell | 2ec418a | 2016-01-20 08:32:08 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 21 |   * Device must be reachable via IP. | 
| David Pursell | 4601c97 | 2016-02-05 15:35:09 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 22 |   * Device will act as the server, fastboot will be the client. | 
| David Pursell | 2ec418a | 2016-01-20 08:32:08 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 23 |   * Fastboot data is wrapped in a simple protocol; see below for details. | 
| Scott Anderson | 9bfecb0 | 2012-12-06 09:34:34 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 24 |  | 
 | 25 |  | 
 | 26 | Transport and Framing | 
 | 27 | --------------------- | 
 | 28 |  | 
 | 29 | 1. Host sends a command, which is an ascii string in a single | 
 | 30 |    packet no greater than 64 bytes. | 
 | 31 |  | 
 | 32 | 2. Client response with a single packet no greater than 64 bytes. | 
 | 33 |    The first four bytes of the response are "OKAY", "FAIL", "DATA",  | 
 | 34 |    or "INFO".  Additional bytes may contain an (ascii) informative | 
 | 35 |    message. | 
 | 36 |  | 
 | 37 |    a. INFO -> the remaining 60 bytes are an informative message | 
 | 38 |       (providing progress or diagnostic messages).  They should  | 
 | 39 |       be displayed and then step #2 repeats | 
 | 40 |  | 
 | 41 |    b. FAIL -> the requested command failed.  The remaining 60 bytes  | 
 | 42 |       of the response (if present) provide a textual failure message  | 
 | 43 |       to present to the user.  Stop. | 
 | 44 |  | 
 | 45 |    c. OKAY -> the requested command completed successfully.  Go to #5 | 
 | 46 |  | 
 | 47 |    d. DATA -> the requested command is ready for the data phase. | 
 | 48 |       A DATA response packet will be 12 bytes long, in the form of | 
| Elliott Hughes | fc79767 | 2015-04-07 20:12:50 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 49 |       DATA00000000 where the 8 digit hexadecimal number represents | 
| Scott Anderson | 9bfecb0 | 2012-12-06 09:34:34 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 50 |       the total data size to transfer. | 
 | 51 |  | 
 | 52 | 3. Data phase.  Depending on the command, the host or client will  | 
 | 53 |    send the indicated amount of data.  Short packets are always  | 
 | 54 |    acceptable and zero-length packets are ignored.  This phase continues | 
 | 55 |    until the client has sent or received the number of bytes indicated | 
 | 56 |    in the "DATA" response above. | 
 | 57 |  | 
 | 58 | 4. Client responds with a single packet no greater than 64 bytes.   | 
 | 59 |    The first four bytes of the response are "OKAY", "FAIL", or "INFO".   | 
 | 60 |    Similar to #2: | 
 | 61 |  | 
 | 62 |    a. INFO -> display the remaining 60 bytes and return to #4 | 
 | 63 |     | 
 | 64 |    b. FAIL -> display the remaining 60 bytes (if present) as a failure | 
 | 65 |       reason and consider the command failed.  Stop. | 
 | 66 |  | 
 | 67 |    c. OKAY -> success.  Go to #5 | 
 | 68 |  | 
 | 69 | 5. Success.  Stop. | 
 | 70 |  | 
 | 71 |  | 
 | 72 | Example Session | 
 | 73 | --------------- | 
 | 74 |  | 
 | 75 | Host:    "getvar:version"        request version variable | 
 | 76 |  | 
 | 77 | Client:  "OKAY0.4"               return version "0.4" | 
 | 78 |  | 
 | 79 | Host:    "getvar:nonexistant"    request some undefined variable | 
 | 80 |  | 
 | 81 | Client:  "OKAY"                  return value "" | 
 | 82 |  | 
 | 83 | Host:    "download:00001234"     request to send 0x1234 bytes of data | 
 | 84 |  | 
 | 85 | Client:  "DATA00001234"          ready to accept data | 
 | 86 |  | 
 | 87 | Host:    < 0x1234 bytes >        send data | 
 | 88 |  | 
 | 89 | Client:  "OKAY"                  success | 
 | 90 |  | 
 | 91 | Host:    "flash:bootloader"      request to flash the data to the bootloader | 
 | 92 |  | 
 | 93 | Client:  "INFOerasing flash"     indicate status / progress | 
 | 94 |          "INFOwriting flash" | 
 | 95 |          "OKAY"                  indicate success | 
 | 96 |  | 
 | 97 | Host:    "powerdown"             send a command | 
 | 98 |  | 
 | 99 | Client:  "FAILunknown command"   indicate failure | 
 | 100 |  | 
 | 101 |  | 
 | 102 | Command Reference | 
 | 103 | ----------------- | 
 | 104 |  | 
 | 105 | * Command parameters are indicated by printf-style escape sequences. | 
 | 106 |  | 
 | 107 | * Commands are ascii strings and sent without the quotes (which are | 
 | 108 |   for illustration only here) and without a trailing 0 byte. | 
 | 109 |  | 
 | 110 | * Commands that begin with a lowercase letter are reserved for this | 
 | 111 |   specification.  OEM-specific commands should not begin with a  | 
 | 112 |   lowercase letter, to prevent incompatibilities with future specs. | 
 | 113 |  | 
 | 114 |  "getvar:%s"           Read a config/version variable from the bootloader. | 
 | 115 |                        The variable contents will be returned after the | 
 | 116 |                        OKAY response. | 
 | 117 |  | 
 | 118 |  "download:%08x"       Write data to memory which will be later used | 
 | 119 |                        by "boot", "ramdisk", "flash", etc.  The client | 
 | 120 |                        will reply with "DATA%08x" if it has enough  | 
 | 121 |                        space in RAM or "FAIL" if not.  The size of | 
 | 122 |                        the download is remembered. | 
 | 123 |  | 
 | 124 |   "verify:%08x"        Send a digital signature to verify the downloaded | 
 | 125 |                        data.  Required if the bootloader is "secure" | 
 | 126 |                        otherwise "flash" and "boot" will be ignored. | 
 | 127 |  | 
 | 128 |   "flash:%s"           Write the previously downloaded image to the | 
 | 129 |                        named partition (if possible). | 
 | 130 |  | 
 | 131 |   "erase:%s"           Erase the indicated partition (clear to 0xFFs) | 
 | 132 |  | 
 | 133 |   "boot"               The previously downloaded data is a boot.img | 
 | 134 |                        and should be booted according to the normal | 
 | 135 |                        procedure for a boot.img | 
 | 136 |  | 
 | 137 |   "continue"           Continue booting as normal (if possible) | 
 | 138 |  | 
 | 139 |   "reboot"             Reboot the device. | 
 | 140 |  | 
 | 141 |   "reboot-bootloader"  Reboot back into the bootloader. | 
 | 142 |                        Useful for upgrade processes that require upgrading | 
 | 143 |                        the bootloader and then upgrading other partitions | 
 | 144 |                        using the new bootloader. | 
 | 145 |  | 
 | 146 |   "powerdown"          Power off the device. | 
 | 147 |  | 
 | 148 |  | 
 | 149 |  | 
 | 150 | Client Variables | 
 | 151 | ---------------- | 
 | 152 |  | 
 | 153 | The "getvar:%s" command is used to read client variables which | 
 | 154 | represent various information about the device and the software | 
 | 155 | on it. | 
 | 156 |  | 
 | 157 | The various currently defined names are: | 
 | 158 |  | 
 | 159 |   version             Version of FastBoot protocol supported. | 
| Elliott Hughes | d505cd8 | 2016-02-03 14:30:01 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 160 |                       It should be "0.4" for this document. | 
| Scott Anderson | 9bfecb0 | 2012-12-06 09:34:34 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 161 |  | 
 | 162 |   version-bootloader  Version string for the Bootloader. | 
 | 163 |  | 
 | 164 |   version-baseband    Version string of the Baseband Software | 
 | 165 |  | 
 | 166 |   product             Name of the product | 
 | 167 |  | 
 | 168 |   serialno            Product serial number | 
 | 169 |  | 
 | 170 |   secure              If the value is "yes", this is a secure | 
 | 171 |                       bootloader requiring a signature before | 
 | 172 |                       it will install or boot images. | 
 | 173 |  | 
 | 174 | Names starting with a lowercase character are reserved by this | 
 | 175 | specification.  OEM-specific names should not start with lowercase | 
 | 176 | characters. | 
 | 177 |  | 
 | 178 |  | 
| David Pursell | 2ec418a | 2016-01-20 08:32:08 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 179 | TCP Protocol v1 | 
 | 180 | --------------- | 
 | 181 |  | 
 | 182 | The TCP protocol is designed to be a simple way to use the fastboot protocol | 
 | 183 | over ethernet if USB is not available. | 
 | 184 |  | 
 | 185 | The device will open a TCP server on port 5554 and wait for a fastboot client | 
 | 186 | to connect. | 
 | 187 |  | 
 | 188 | -- Handshake -- | 
 | 189 | Upon connecting, both sides will send a 4-byte handshake message to ensure they | 
 | 190 | are speaking the same protocol. This consists of the ASCII characters "FB" | 
 | 191 | followed by a 2-digit base-10 ASCII version number. For example, the version 1 | 
 | 192 | handshake message will be [FB01]. | 
 | 193 |  | 
 | 194 | If either side detects a malformed handshake, it should disconnect. | 
 | 195 |  | 
 | 196 | The protocol version to use must be the minimum of the versions sent by each | 
 | 197 | side; if either side cannot speak this protocol version, it should disconnect. | 
 | 198 |  | 
 | 199 | -- Fastboot Data -- | 
 | 200 | Once the handshake is complete, fastboot data will be sent as follows: | 
 | 201 |  | 
 | 202 |   [data_size][data] | 
 | 203 |  | 
 | 204 | Where data_size is an unsigned 8-byte big-endian binary value, and data is the | 
 | 205 | fastboot packet. The 8-byte length is intended to provide future-proofing even | 
 | 206 | though currently fastboot packets have a 4-byte maximum length. | 
 | 207 |  | 
 | 208 | -- Example -- | 
 | 209 | In this example the fastboot host queries the device for two variables, | 
 | 210 | "version" and "none". | 
 | 211 |  | 
 | 212 | Host    <connect to the device on port 5555> | 
 | 213 | Host    FB01 | 
 | 214 | Device  FB01 | 
 | 215 | Host    [0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x0E]getvar:version | 
 | 216 | Device  [0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x07]OKAY0.4 | 
 | 217 | Host    [0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x0B]getvar:none | 
 | 218 | Device  [0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x00][0x04]OKAY | 
 | 219 | Host    <disconnect> | 
| David Pursell | 4601c97 | 2016-02-05 15:35:09 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 220 |  | 
 | 221 |  | 
 | 222 | UDP Protocol v1 | 
 | 223 | --------------- | 
 | 224 |  | 
 | 225 | The UDP protocol is more complex than TCP since we must implement reliability | 
 | 226 | to ensure no packets are lost, but the general concept of wrapping the fastboot | 
 | 227 | protocol is the same. | 
 | 228 |  | 
 | 229 | Overview: | 
 | 230 |   1. As with TCP, the device will listen on UDP port 5554. | 
 | 231 |   2. Maximum UDP packet size is negotiated during initialization. | 
 | 232 |   3. The host drives all communication; the device may only send a packet as a | 
 | 233 |      response to a host packet. | 
 | 234 |   4. If the host does not receive a response in 500ms it will re-transmit. | 
 | 235 |  | 
 | 236 | -- UDP Packet format -- | 
 | 237 |   +----------+----+-------+-------+--------------------+ | 
 | 238 |   | Byte #   | 0  |   1   | 2 - 3 |  4+                | | 
 | 239 |   +----------+----+-------+-------+--------------------+ | 
 | 240 |   | Contents | ID | Flags | Seq # | Data               | | 
 | 241 |   +----------+----+-------+-------+--------------------+ | 
 | 242 |  | 
 | 243 |   ID      Packet ID: | 
 | 244 |             0x00: Error. | 
 | 245 |             0x01: Query. | 
 | 246 |             0x02: Initialization. | 
 | 247 |             0x03: Fastboot. | 
 | 248 |  | 
 | 249 |           Packet types are described in more detail below. | 
 | 250 |  | 
 | 251 |   Flags   Packet flags: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 C | 
 | 252 |             C=1 indicates a continuation packet; the data is too large and will | 
 | 253 |                 continue in the next packet. | 
 | 254 |  | 
 | 255 |             Remaining bits are reserved for future use and must be set to 0. | 
 | 256 |  | 
 | 257 |   Seq #   2-byte packet sequence number (big-endian). The host will increment | 
 | 258 |           this by 1 with each new packet, and the device must provide the | 
 | 259 |           corresponding sequence number in the response packets. | 
 | 260 |  | 
 | 261 |   Data    Packet data, not present in all packets. | 
 | 262 |  | 
 | 263 | -- Packet Types -- | 
 | 264 | Query     The host sends a query packet once on startup to sync with the device. | 
 | 265 |           The host will not know the current sequence number, so the device must | 
 | 266 |           respond to all query packets regardless of sequence number. | 
 | 267 |  | 
 | 268 |           The response data field should contain a 2-byte big-endian value | 
 | 269 |           giving the next expected sequence number. | 
 | 270 |  | 
 | 271 | Init      The host sends an init packet once the query response is returned. The | 
 | 272 |           device must abort any in-progress operation and prepare for a new | 
 | 273 |           fastboot session. This message is meant to allow recovery if a | 
 | 274 |           previous session failed, e.g. due to network error or user Ctrl+C. | 
 | 275 |  | 
 | 276 |           The data field contains two big-endian 2-byte values, a protocol | 
 | 277 |           version and the max UDP packet size (including the 4-byte header). | 
 | 278 |           Both the host and device will send these values, and in each case | 
 | 279 |           the minimum of the sent values must be used. | 
 | 280 |  | 
 | 281 | Fastboot  These packets wrap the fastboot protocol. To write, the host will | 
 | 282 |           send a packet with fastboot data, and the device will reply with an | 
 | 283 |           empty packet as an ACK. To read, the host will send an empty packet, | 
 | 284 |           and the device will reply with fastboot data. The device may not give | 
 | 285 |           any data in the ACK packet. | 
 | 286 |  | 
 | 287 | Error     The device may respond to any packet with an error packet to indicate | 
 | 288 |           a UDP protocol error. The data field should contain an ASCII string | 
 | 289 |           describing the error. This is the only case where a device is allowed | 
 | 290 |           to return a packet ID other than the one sent by the host. | 
 | 291 |  | 
 | 292 | -- Packet Size -- | 
 | 293 | The maximum packet size is negotiated by the host and device in the Init packet. | 
 | 294 | Devices must support at least 512-byte packets, but packet size has a direct | 
 | 295 | correlation with download speed, so devices are strongly suggested to support at | 
 | 296 | least 1024-byte packets. On a local network with 0.5ms round-trip time this will | 
 | 297 | provide transfer rates of ~2MB/s. Over WiFi it will likely be significantly | 
 | 298 | less. | 
 | 299 |  | 
 | 300 | Query and Initialization packets, which are sent before size negotiation is | 
 | 301 | complete, must always be 512 bytes or less. | 
 | 302 |  | 
 | 303 | -- Packet Re-Transmission -- | 
 | 304 | The host will re-transmit any packet that does not receive a response. The | 
 | 305 | requirement of exactly one device response packet per host packet is how we | 
 | 306 | achieve reliability and in-order delivery of packets. | 
 | 307 |  | 
 | 308 | For simplicity of implementation, there is no windowing of multiple | 
 | 309 | unacknowledged packets in this version of the protocol. The host will continue | 
 | 310 | to send the same packet until a response is received. Windowing functionality | 
 | 311 | may be implemented in future versions if necessary to increase performance. | 
 | 312 |  | 
 | 313 | The first Query packet will only be attempted a small number of times, but | 
 | 314 | subsequent packets will attempt to retransmit for at least 1 minute before | 
 | 315 | giving up. This means a device may safely ignore host UDP packets for up to 1 | 
 | 316 | minute during long operations, e.g. writing to flash. | 
 | 317 |  | 
 | 318 | -- Continuation Packets -- | 
 | 319 | Any packet may set the continuation flag to indicate that the data is | 
 | 320 | incomplete. Large data such as downloading an image may require many | 
 | 321 | continuation packets. The receiver should respond to a continuation packet with | 
 | 322 | an empty packet to acknowledge receipt. See examples below. | 
 | 323 |  | 
 | 324 | -- Summary -- | 
 | 325 | The host starts with a Query packet, then an Initialization packet, after | 
 | 326 | which only Fastboot packets are sent. Fastboot packets may contain data from | 
 | 327 | the host for writes, or from the device for reads, but not both. | 
 | 328 |  | 
 | 329 | Given a next expected sequence number S and a received packet P, the device | 
 | 330 | behavior should be: | 
 | 331 |   if P is a Query packet: | 
 | 332 |     * respond with a Query packet with S in the data field | 
 | 333 |   else if P has sequence == S: | 
 | 334 |     * process P and take any required action | 
 | 335 |     * create a response packet R with the same ID and sequence as P, containing | 
 | 336 |       any response data required. | 
 | 337 |     * transmit R and save it in case of re-transmission | 
 | 338 |     * increment S | 
 | 339 |   else if P has sequence == S - 1: | 
 | 340 |     * re-transmit the saved response packet R from above | 
 | 341 |   else: | 
 | 342 |     * ignore the packet | 
 | 343 |  | 
 | 344 | -- Examples -- | 
 | 345 | In the examples below, S indicates the starting client sequence number. | 
 | 346 |  | 
 | 347 | Host                                    Client | 
 | 348 | ====================================================================== | 
 | 349 | [Initialization, S = 0x55AA] | 
 | 350 | [Host: version 1, 2048-byte packets. Client: version 2, 1024-byte packets.] | 
 | 351 | [Resulting values to use: version = 1, max packet size = 1024] | 
 | 352 | ID   Flag SeqH SeqL Data                ID   Flag SeqH SeqL Data | 
 | 353 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 354 | 0x01 0x00 0x00 0x00 | 
 | 355 |                                         0x01 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x55 0xAA | 
 | 356 | 0x02 0x00 0x55 0xAA 0x00 0x01 0x08 0x00 | 
 | 357 |                                         0x02 0x00 0x55 0xAA 0x00 0x02 0x04 0x00 | 
 | 358 |  | 
 | 359 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 360 | [fastboot "getvar" commands, S = 0x0001] | 
 | 361 | ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data            ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data | 
 | 362 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 363 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01  getvar:version | 
 | 364 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01 | 
 | 365 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x02 | 
 | 366 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x02  OKAY0.4 | 
 | 367 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x03  getvar:foo | 
 | 368 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x03 | 
 | 369 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x04 | 
 | 370 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x04  OKAY | 
 | 371 |  | 
 | 372 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 373 | [fastboot "INFO" responses, S = 0x0000] | 
 | 374 | ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data            ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data | 
 | 375 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 376 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  <command> | 
 | 377 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00 | 
 | 378 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01 | 
 | 379 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01  INFOWait1 | 
 | 380 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x02 | 
 | 381 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x02  INFOWait2 | 
 | 382 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x03 | 
 | 383 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x03  OKAY | 
 | 384 |  | 
 | 385 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 386 | [Chunking 2100 bytes of data, max packet size = 1024, S = 0xFFFF] | 
 | 387 | ID   Flag SeqH SeqL Data                ID   Flag SeqH SeqL Data | 
 | 388 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 389 | 0x03 0x00 0xFF 0xFF download:0000834 | 
 | 390 |                                         0x03 0x00 0xFF 0xFF | 
 | 391 | 0x03 0x00 0x00 0x00 | 
 | 392 |                                         0x03 0x00 0x00 0x00 DATA0000834 | 
 | 393 | 0x03 0x01 0x00 0x01 <1020 bytes> | 
 | 394 |                                         0x03 0x00 0x00 0x01 | 
 | 395 | 0x03 0x01 0x00 0x02 <1020 bytes> | 
 | 396 |                                         0x03 0x00 0x00 0x02 | 
 | 397 | 0x03 0x00 0x00 0x03 <60 bytes> | 
 | 398 |                                         0x03 0x00 0x00 0x03 | 
 | 399 | 0x03 0x00 0x00 0x04 | 
 | 400 |                                         0x03 0x00 0x00 0x04 OKAY | 
 | 401 |  | 
 | 402 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 403 | [Unknown ID error, S = 0x0000] | 
 | 404 | ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data            ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data | 
 | 405 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 406 | 0x10  0x00  0x00  0x00 | 
 | 407 |                                         0x00  0x00  0x00  0x00  <error message> | 
 | 408 |  | 
 | 409 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 410 | [Host packet loss and retransmission, S = 0x0000] | 
 | 411 | ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data            ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data | 
 | 412 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 413 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  getvar:version [lost] | 
 | 414 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  getvar:version [lost] | 
 | 415 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  getvar:version | 
 | 416 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00 | 
 | 417 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01 | 
 | 418 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01  OKAY0.4 | 
 | 419 |  | 
 | 420 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 421 | [Client packet loss and retransmission, S = 0x0000] | 
 | 422 | ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data            ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data | 
 | 423 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 424 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  getvar:version | 
 | 425 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00 [lost] | 
 | 426 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  getvar:version | 
 | 427 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00 [lost] | 
 | 428 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  getvar:version | 
 | 429 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00 | 
 | 430 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01 | 
 | 431 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01  OKAY0.4 | 
 | 432 |  | 
 | 433 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 434 | [Host packet delayed, S = 0x0000] | 
 | 435 | ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data            ID    Flags SeqH  SeqL  Data | 
 | 436 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 437 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  getvar:version [delayed] | 
 | 438 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  getvar:version | 
 | 439 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00 | 
 | 440 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01 | 
 | 441 |                                         0x03  0x00  0x00  0x01  OKAY0.4 | 
 | 442 | 0x03  0x00  0x00  0x00  getvar:version [arrives late with old seq#, is ignored] |