Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "interface.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <jtag/interface.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "commands.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <jtag/commands.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "types.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/types.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "time_support.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/time_support.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "replacements.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/replacements.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "membuf.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/membuf.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "log.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/log.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "jim.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/jim.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "ioutil.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/ioutil.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "fileio.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/fileio.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "configuration.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/configuration.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "command.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/command.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "binarybuffer.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <helper/binarybuffer.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
Includes the src directory in the search path, so header files may be
migrated from:
#include "foo.h"
to
#include <module/foo.h>
which is more conducive for installation.
Moves JTAG interface drivers to src/jtag/drivers/,
Adds src/jtag/drivers/Makefile.am.
Builds libocdjtagdrivers.la.
Flattens the rlink driver files into the drivers/ directory, adding
the 'rlink_' prefix or '.rlink' suffix as appropriate.
Remove the remaining extra copy of DSCR, and the register cache
of which it was a part. That cache wasn't a very safe, or even
necessary, idea; it was essentialy letting debugger-private state
be manipulated by Tcl code that couldn't know how to do it right.
This makes the "reg" output of an ARM11 resemble what most other
ARM cores produce ... forward motion in the "make ARM11 work like
the rest of the ARM cores" Jihad!
Just store a clean copy of DSCR in the per-CPU struct, so we
trivially pass a pointer to a recent copy. This replaces the
previous "last_dscr" and cleans up most of the related calling
conventions ... but it doesn't remove the other DSCR copy.
Don't expose the WDTR register through the register cache any
more. If anyone wants Tcl scripts to be able to use DCC based
communication with app code in the target, this wouldn't do it.
Bugfix: don't trust the Tcl-accessible version of DSCR to
flag whether WDTR needs to be restored when resuming.
Don't expose the RDTR register through the register cache any
more. If anyone wants Tcl scripts to be able to use DCC based
communication with app code in the target, this wouldn't do it.
Bugfix: don't trust the Tcl-accessible version of DSCR to
flag whether RDTR needs to be restored when resuming.
Streamline arm11_on_enter_debug_state() entry:
- It should handle the standard updates:
* target->debug_reason
* target->state
- Don't waste time re-reading DSCR; just pass it in
Also rename the routine to "arm11_debug_entry()", matching the
convention used elsewhere in OpenOCD.
The new stubs for httpd and ioutil gave errors like:
ioutil_stubs.c: In function ‘ioutil_init’:
ioutil_stubs.c:27: error: implicit declaration of function ‘LOG_DEBUG’
ioutil_stubs.c:28: error: ‘ERROR_OK’ undeclared (first use in this function)
ioutil_stubs.c:28: error: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
ioutil_stubs.c:28: error: for each function it appears in.)
Fix.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Add httpd_stubs.c to provide no-op implementations of httpd_start()
and httpd_stop().
Allows these routines to be called unconditionally and ensures the
libocdserver ABI remains unchanged regardless of whether this feature
was built-in or not.
Prints a DEBUG message when the stub implementation is included.
Add ioutil_stubs.c to provide an empty ioutil_init() routine.
Add ioutil.h to prevent applications from needing to declare it.
Allows unconditionally calling that function during startup, and the
resulting libocdhelper library API is now more stable.
Prints a DEBUG message when the stub implementation is included.
Save and display the address of the instruction which triggered the
watchpoint. Because of pipelining, that's well behind the PC value
when debug entry completes. (Example in a subroutine that had been
returned from...)
Remove unused A8 stuff, mostly watchpoint hooks from the header.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Except for USR/SYS mode, the labels for the shadowed SP and LR
registers were reversed. LR is r14; SP is r13. Fix.
This would not affect GDB users; GDB references are positional.
Only folk working directly with OpenOCD register values would
have noticed this bug.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Actually this should handle both breakpoints and watchpoints ... but
the DPM framework only handles watchpoints for now. Works on Beagle.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
This is a NOP unless the underlying core exposes two new methods, and
neither of the two cores using this (ARM11xx, Cortex-A8) do so yet.
This patch only updates those cores so they pass a flag saying whether
or not to update breakpoint and watchpoint status before resuming; and
removing some now-needless anti-segfault code from ARM11. Cortex-A8
didn't have that code ... yes, it segfaulted when setting watchpoints.
NOTE: this uses a slightly different strategy for setting/clearing
breakpoints than the ARM7/ARM9/etc code uses. It leaves them alone
unless it's *got* to change something, to speed halt/resume cycles
(including single stepping).
ALSO NOTE: this under-delivers for Cortex-A8, where regions with size
up to 2 GBytes can be watched ... it handles watchpoints which ARM11 can
also handle (size 1/2/4 bytes). Should get fixed later.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>