Open the Firmware Version Finder tool on your computer
Select the folder where your flash or dump files are stored
Enter the model code of the device, not the market name
Example: write rmx3997 instead of realme 12x
Click the Search button
The tool will scan all files inside that folder
It will show all firmware version and release tags found in the files
You can now easily identify the correct firmware for the device
Firmware Version Finder V1.3 By Mofadal El-Tayeb – Changelog
Version: V1.3
Developer: Mofadal El-Tayeb
Release Type: Update
What's New
MTK EXPDB Analyzer Added
A new EXPDB Analyzer feature is now included to help analyze important MTK sectors that store boot information.
Integrated With Firmware Version Finder
Extra Notes
This tool can even work with partial dumps and retracted flashes. It is not required that big partitions like system or super must be present. Many times, firmware and model information is stored in smaller sectors, and this tool is able to read those properly.
The tool is about halfway complete right now, so there’s still room for future improvements. Features like stronger threading, quicker processing of large files, and skipping small patterns that don’t matter can be added later. For the time being, though, the tool works well and clearly does what it was built for.
GSM Binary Analyzer & MTK LK Analyzer V1.4 – Changelog
Latest Version Changelog
- Firmware Version Finder renamed to GSM Binary Analyzer
- Added EXPDB Analysis
- Added MTK LK Fastboot Command Analyzer
- Now shows Fastboot Commands
- Now shows OEM Fastboot Commands
- Now shows Getvar Variables
- Now shows Partition Names from LK
- Website restructured
- Telegram support added for questions and help
Firmware Version Finder V1.3 by Mofadal El-Tayeb now comes with a new feature called MTK EXPDB Analyzer. It helps users read data from MTK phone sectors like EXPDB, LK, and Cache. Before this, checking these files was not easy because you had to look through many lines one by one. Now the tool can quickly show useful text from the files. It also has a search option, so you can find words like battery, dram, or usbdl inside the logs. The tool works with files such as expdb.bin, log.bin, cache.bin, and other dump files. This feature is mostly made for testing and learning, and it is useful for people who like exploring phone boot logs and device data.
The analyzer is combined directly inside the Firmware Version Finder tool since both features work with the same method.
Sector Log Analysis Support
Users can now analyze several MTK partitions such as EXPDB, LK, Cache and other sectors that contain boot logs and system data.
Automatic String Analysis
The tool can read sector files and extract readable strings automatically. This removes the need to check files manually line by line.
Search Function Added
A search option allows users to find specific terms inside log files such as usbdl, i2c, panic, battery, emi, dram and many more.
Works With Multiple Sector Files
The feature can be used with different files like expdb.bin, log.bin, cache.bin, recovery.img and other extracted partitions.
Chipset Component Detection
The analyzer may show hardware components that start with MTxx, such as WiFi IC or other chipset parts.
Boot Log Pattern Observation
The tool helps users view repeated boot patterns and raw logs created during the device startup process.
Supports Extracted Dump Files
The analyzer works best with extracted flash or dump files instead of raw official firmware packages.
Inspired by Motorola MTK Device Analysis
The idea came while analyzing Motorola MTK devices like MT6855, MT6835, MT6897, and MT6878, where sectors such as oem_mfd contain raw data like IMEI and carrier information.
Changelog – Firmware Version Finder V1.2
Fixed file size limit issue
In the previous version, the tool was not able to read dumps or files larger than 50MB. This was only a test limit. Now this has been removed, and the tool can handle very large files without any problem, even files up to 100GB.
The analysis is now smooth and fast, even when working with big files. Unlike Notepad++, which can hang or get slow with files above 2GB, this tool can scan large files properly without freezing or crashing.
Skipped unimportant patterns
Some useless and minor patterns are now ignored. This helps make the search cleaner and gives more accurate results without showing random or meaningless matches.
Search logic improved
The tool now focuses better on real firmware tags and device-related strings, making results more useful for repair and flashing work.
Important Note to Users
Please reload and update your Firmware Version Finder tool to the latest version. The previous version had a small issue with large files, which has now been fully fixed.
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