Ignore version of Boundary Scan TAP in newer revisions of the str9.
Change-Id: I6e205f8c731f07078c469e686025857c180f3a6d
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <spen@spen-soft.co.uk>
Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/1436
Tested-by: jenkins
Drop useless double-space occurences, drop trailing whitespace, and fix
some other minor whitespace-related issues.
Change-Id: I6b4c515492e2ee94dc25ef1fe4f51015a4bba8b5
Signed-off-by: Uwe Hermann <uwe@hermann-uwe.de>
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <spen@spen-soft.co.uk>
Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/137
Tested-by: jenkins
Globally rename "jtag_nsrst_delay" as "adapter_nsrst_delay", and move it
out of the "jtag" command group ... it needs to be used with non-JTAG
transports
Includes a migration aid (in jtag/startup.tcl) so that old user scripts
won't break. That aid should Sunset in about a year.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
The semantics of "-work-area-virt 0" (or phys) changed with
the patch to require specifying physical or virtrual work
area addresses. Specifying zero was previously a NOP. Now
it means that address zero is valid.
This patch addresses three related issues:
- MMU-less processors should never specify work-area-virt;
remove those specifications. Such processors include
ARM7TDMI, Cortex-M3, and ARM966.
- MMU-equipped processors *can* specify work-area-virt...
but zero won't be appropriate, except in mischievous
contexts (which hide null pointer exceptions).
Remove those specs from those processors too. If any of
those mappings is valid, someone will need to submit a
patch adding it ... along with a comment saying what OS
provides the mapping, and in which context. Example,
say "works with Linux 2.6.30+, in kernel mode". (Note
that ARM Linux doesn't map kernel memory to zero ...)
- Clarify docs on that "-virt" and other work area stuff.
Seems to me work-area-virt is quite problematic; not every
operating system provides such static mappings; if they do,
they're not in every MMU context...
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Add configuration for an old AT91rm9200 board, the Cogent CSB 337.
Worth noting from the OpenOCD perspective:
- It got a real hardware trace port connector; wired up here as
much as we can, lacking inexpensive trace-aware dongles.
- This is the first in-tree use of the "arm920t cp15" command.
It adjusts the CPU clocking and enables i-cache, which gives
more than 4x speedup after booting Linux; it's visible even
just running U-Boot.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk@2134 b42882b7-edfa-0310-969c-e2dbd0fdcd60
- Move src/tcl to tcl/.
- Update top Makefile.am to use new path name.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk@1919 b42882b7-edfa-0310-969c-e2dbd0fdcd60