For historical reasons, no license information was added to the
tcl files. This makes trivial adding the SPDX tag through script:
fgrep -rL SPDX tcl/ target| while read a;do \
sed -i '1{i# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later\n
}' $a;done
With no specific license information from the author, let's extend
the OpenOCD project license GPL-2.0-or-later to the files.
Change-Id: I7b2610300b24cccd07bfa6fb5f1266970d5d3a1b
Signed-off-by: Antonio Borneo <borneo.antonio@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.openocd.org/c/openocd/+/7027
Tested-by: jenkins
- add 'dap create' command to create dap instances
- move all dap subcmmand into the dap instance commands
- keep 'dap info' for convenience
- change all armv7 and armv8 targets to take a dap
instance instead of a jtag chain position
- restructure tap/dap/target relations, jtag tap no
longer references the dap, daps are now independently
created and initialized.
- clean up swd connect
- re-initialize DAP also on JTAG errors (e.g. after reset,
power cycle)
- update documentation
- update target files
Change-Id: I322cf3969b5407c25d1d3962f9d9b9bc1df067d9
Signed-off-by: Matthias Welwarsky <matthias.welwarsky@sysgo.com>
Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/4468
Tested-by: jenkins
Reviewed-by: Matthias Welwarsky <matthias@welwarsky.de>
This should allow to share common configs for both regular access and
high-level adapters.
Use the newly-added functionality in stlink and icdi drivers, amend
the configs accordingly.
Runtime-tested with a TI tm4c123g board.
Change-Id: Ibb88266a4ca25f06f6c073e916c963f017447bad
Signed-off-by: Paul Fertser <fercerpav@gmail.com>
[gus@projectgus.com: context-specific deprecation warnings]
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <gus@projectgus.com>
[andrew.smirnov@gmail.com: additional nrf51.cfg mods]
Signed-off-by: Andrey Smirnov <andrew.smirnov@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Andrey Skvortsov <andrej.skvortzov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/1664
Tested-by: jenkins
Reviewed-by: Andreas Fritiofson <andreas.fritiofson@gmail.com>
This adds example config and flash driver for russian Cortex-M3
microcontroller model.
Run-time tested on MDR32F9Q2I evaluation board; the flash driver
should be compatible with MDR32F2x (Cortex-M0) too but I lack hardware
to test.
There're no status bits at all, the datasheets specifies some delays
for flash operations instead. All being in <100us range, they're hard
to violate with JTAG, I hope. There're also no flash identification
registers so the flash size and type has to be hardcoded into the
config.
The flashing is considerably complicated because the flash is split
into pages, and each page consists of 4 interleaved non-consecutive
"sectors" (on MDR32F9 only, MDR32F2 is single-sectored), so the
fastest way is to latch the page and sector address and then write
only the part that should go into the current page and current sector.
Performance testing results with adapter_khz 1000 and the chip running
on its default HSI 8MHz oscillator:
When working area is specified, a target helper algorithm is used:
wrote 131072 bytes from file testfile.bin in 3.698427s (34.609 KiB/s)
This can theoretically be sped up by ~1.4 times if the helper
algorithm is fed some kind of "loader instructions stream" to allow
sector-by-sector writing.
Pure JTAG implementation (when target memory area is not available)
flashes all the 128k memory in 49.5s.
Flashing "info" memory region is also implemented, but due to the
overlapping memory addresses (resulting in incorrect memory map
calculations for GDB) it can't be used at the same time, so OpenOCD
needs to be started this way: -c "set IMEMORY true" -f
target/mdr32f9q2i.cfg
It also can't be read/verified because it's not memory-mapped anywhere
ever, and OpenOCD NOR framework doesn't really allow to provide a
custom handler that would be used when verifying.
Change-Id: I80c0632da686d49856fdbf9e05d908846dd44316
Signed-off-by: Paul Fertser <fercerpav@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/1532
Tested-by: jenkins
Reviewed-by: Spencer Oliver <spen@spen-soft.co.uk>