Encrypted Hilink Uimage Firmware Header -
hexdump -C firmware.bin | head -n 20 Look for strings like "HUAWEI" , "HiLink" , or "UPDATE" at offset > 0x1000 (they often appear after the encrypted header). Method A – Static key (older devices) Search U-Boot binary (extracted via JTAG or from a decrypted image):
Check for HiLink markers:
with open("firmware.bin", "rb") as f: enc_header = f.read(4096) encrypted hilink uimage firmware header
If you’ve ever run binwalk on a HiLink firmware update (e.g., from an E3372, B310, or AR series router) and seen only high entropy data with no recognizable UImage magic ( 0x27051956 ), you’ve likely encountered this encrypted header.
Example decrypted header (hexdump):
1. Introduction Huawei’s HiLink protocol powers millions of routers, LTE dongles, and IoT gateways. While standard U-Boot images (UImages) use a well-documented header structure ( struct image_header ), recent HiLink firmware variants employ an encrypted header layer —a deliberate obfuscation to prevent third-party firmware modifications, analysis, and repacking.
cipher = AES.new(key, AES.MODE_CBC, iv) dec_header = cipher.decrypt(enc_header) hexdump -C firmware
If the magic appears, you have the correct key. The rest of the firmware may be encrypted in blocks. Many HiLink images encrypt only the header + first block. The remaining data may be plain or compressed. After decryption, run: