i had started my code from dsp5683xx, i renamed a bunch of stuff to names i consider to be better.
i believe no one is using this code, so nobody should be affected. (it's not too late to do this change)
After correcting the reply size counter, it should be safe to rely on it
for the number of bytes expected in the USB read, instead of reading the
endpoint maximum. This doesn't make things go any faster but it's nicer and
removes the local buffer.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Fritiofson <andreas.fritiofson@gmail.com>
Add a helper function for running the queue if it would overflow otherwise.
Use it to simplify the queue fill level checks and optimize in a few cases
that would previously run the queue prematurely.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Fritiofson <andreas.fritiofson@gmail.com>
After the reply_index handling is fixed, there's no need to special case
the out scan.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Fritiofson <andreas.fritiofson@gmail.com>
dtc_queue.reply_index was wrongly being increased during out scans, causing
the queue to be sent before the out buffer was full. This patch increases
raw upload speed by 50% or so.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Fritiofson <andreas.fritiofson@gmail.com>
Indentation was inconsistent and some lines not indented at all. Quickfix
using Eclipse's auto-indentation.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Fritiofson <andreas.fritiofson@gmail.com>
Function mips_m4k_write_memory() does endianess byte swap,
but this procedure break one byte access (temporary array
overwrites content in buffer).
As a fix, this endianess swap and buffer affecting
is preformed only on hword and word accesses (not on byte access).
Pprogram that loads another program into memory is actually writing the
D- side cache.
The instructions it has loaded can't be executed until they reach the
I-cache.
After the instructions have been written, the loader should arrange to
write back any containing D-cache line and invalidate any locations
already in the I-cache.
For the MIPS Architecture Release2 cores, we can use synci command
that does this job.
For Release1 we must use "cache" instruction.
This patch adds MIPS32 CP0 coprocessor R/W routines,
as well as adequate commands to use these routines via
telnet interface.
Now is becomes possible to affect CP0 internal registers
and configure CPU directly from OpenOCD.
For all architectures we use distinct common magic number,
and this should be a uint32_t type.
Otherwise, comparison with macros will yield compilation
warning.
if tap enable/disable failed then a warning was written to the log, but JIM_OK was returned. if using openocd via a TCP interface to the TCL port, there is no way to catch that the command failed (it didn't enable the tap, so it failed)
now it return an error if it fails.
There are some older atmel nor chips which have negated logic for
TopBottom detection. This patch adds a special handling for the old
chips. This is the same mechanism as implemented in linux kernel.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Bießmann <andreas.devel@gmail.com>
before doing anything with the flash module (FM) the clock divider must be set.
if erase_check was the first thing done with the FM after reset then an error would be generated because the clk divider was not set.
now erase_check sets the clk divider.
reorganized code to get rid of compiler warnings
the warning were related to allignment, i do not get these warning on my build system (i've tried setting the compiler flag but it doesn't work, still working on why) so i cannot detect them (yet.)
This corrects two issues found with openocd.
d7f71e7fe9 removed some code that was
being used.
The above then caused even more code to get removed by commit 1cfb2287a6.
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <ntfreak@users.sourceforge.net>
Issue warning when the old cmd is used and redirect to new supported one.
These deprecated cmds will be removed at some point.
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <ntfreak@users.sourceforge.net>
Use consistent names for the stm32 family flash drivers, eg.
stm32x -> stm32f1x
stm32f2xxx -> stm32f2x
this makes it easier to add support for newer stm32 families.
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <ntfreak@users.sourceforge.net>
When building official releases from tarball, git commit info is not
available in the building environment. Thus, automake should not try to
append the git commit to the version string.
Signed-off-by: Luca Bruno <lucab@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <ntfreak@users.sourceforge.net>
The default is -Werror, so warnings become errors
Signed-off-by: Steve Bennett <steveb@workware.net.au>
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <ntfreak@users.sourceforge.net>
This patch extends the cortex_m3 maskisr command by a new option 'auto'.
The 'auto' option handles interrupts during stepping in a way they are
processed but don't disturb the program flow during debugging.
Before one had to choose to either enable or disable interrupts. The former
steps into interrupt handlers when they trigger. This disturbs the flow during
debugging, making it hard to follow some piece of code when interrupts occur
often.
When interrupts are disabled, the flow isn't disturbed but code relying on
interrupt handlers to be processed will stop working. For example a delay
function counting the number of timer interrupts will never complete, RTOS
task switching will not occur and output I/O queues of interrupt driven
I/O will stall or overflow.
Using the 'maskisr' command also typically requires gdb hooks to be supplied
by the user to switch interrupts off during the step and to enable them again
afterward.
The new 'auto' option of the 'maskisr' command solves the above problems. When
set, the step command allows pending interrupt handlers to be executed before
the step, then the step is taken with interrupts disabled and finally interrupts
are enabled again. This way interrupt processing stays in the background without
disturbing the flow of debugging. No gdb hooks are required. The 'auto'
option is the default, since it's believed that handling interrupts in this
way is suitable for most users.
The principle used for interrupt handling could probably be used for other
targets too.
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <ntfreak@users.sourceforge.net>
In order to compare data read from the target with some marcros or data
defined on the host, we must transform this read data from target
endianess to host endianess.
target_read_memory() gets bytes from target to the host, but keeps them in _target_
endianess. This is OK if we just want to temporary keep this data on the
host, like keeping breakpoint->orig_instr. But if we want to use this
data for any ispections and comparisons on the host side, we must
transform it to _host_ endianess, by using target_buffer_get_u32()
function.
Currently this transformation is missing, and check current_instr ==
MIPS32_SDBBP will never pass if target and host endianess differ,
because current_instr will be kept in _target_ endianess and
MIPS32_SDBBP will be kept in _host_ endianess,
The patch fix this issue by using target_buffer_get_u32() to transform current_instr to
_host_ endianess before comparison.
Use "git revert <commit>" to revert this commit, then build and
repair and post patch to the mailing list.
Warnings generated with:
nios2-elf-gcc (GCC) 3.4.6 (Altera Nios II 9.1 b222)
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c: In function 'eonce_rx_upper_data':
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c:252: warning: cast increases required
alignment of target type
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c: In function 'eonce_rx_lower_data':
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c:268: warning: cast increases required
alignment of target type
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c: In function 'eonce_pc_store':
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c:508: warning: dereferencing type-punned
pointer will break strict-aliasing rules
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c: In function 'dsp5680xx_read':
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c:736: warning: cast increases required
alignment of target type
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c:737: warning: cast increases required
alignment of target type
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c: In function 'dsp5680xx_write_8':
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c:823: warning: cast increases required
alignment of target type
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c: In function 'dsp5680xx_write':
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c:938: warning: cast increases required
alignment of target type
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c:941: warning: cast increases required
alignment of target type
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c: In function 'dsp5680xx_f_wr':
openocd/src/target/dsp5680xx.c:1355: warning: cast increases required
alignment of target type
This patch extends the cortex_m3 maskisr command by a new option 'auto'.
The 'auto' option handles interrupts during stepping in a way they are
processed but don't disturb the program flow during debugging.
Before one had to choose to either enable or disable interrupts. The former
steps into interrupt handlers when they trigger. This disturbs the flow during
debugging, making it hard to follow some piece of code when interrupts occur
often.
When interrupts are disabled, the flow isn't disturbed but code relying on
interrupt handlers to be processed will stop working. For example a delay
function counting the number of timer interrupts will never complete, RTOS
task switching will not occur and output I/O queues of interrupt driven
I/O will stall or overflow.
Using the 'maskisr' command also typically requires gdb hooks to be supplied
by the user to switch interrupts off during the step and to enable them again
afterward.
The new 'auto' option of the 'maskisr' command solves the above problems. When
set, the step command allows pending interrupt handlers to be executed before
the step, then the step is taken with interrupts disabled and finally interrupts
are enabled again. This way interrupt processing stays in the background without
disturbing the flow of debugging. No gdb hooks are required. The 'auto'
option is the default, since it's believed that handling interrupts in this
way is suitable for most users.
The principle used for interrupt handling could probably be used for other
targets too.
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <ntfreak@users.sourceforge.net>
A new variable "nobase_dist_pkglib_DATA" is introduced to install
the OpenULINK firmware image to $PREFIX/lib/openocd/OpenULINK/ulink_firmware.hex
Also, the variable "EXTRA_DIST" is used to include the OpenULINK firmware source
in the OpenOCD source distribution.
So far image_load command tries to load ELF binaries to address
discovered by reading p_paddr member of a Program header of an ELF
segment.
However, ELF specifications says for p_paddr : ...Because System V
ignores physical addressing for application programs, this member has
unspecified contents for executable files and shared objects.
ARM ELF specifiaction goes even further, demanding that this member
be set to zero, using the p_vaddr as a segment load address.
To avoid the cases to wrong addr where p_paddr is zero,
we are now using p_vaddr to as a load destination in case that *all*
p_paddr == 0. Basically, this patch re-implements the approach present in
BDF's elf.c, which is used by GDB also (so that we can be consistent).
cygwin does not define sleep, so use our internal win32 version.
caused by commit 9d4aec6bda
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <ntfreak@users.sourceforge.net>
there was a check in clearing the status register that
called exit() if the target was running. target_write_memory()
has such a check and will report the error correctly.
Signed-off-by: Øyvind Harboe <oyvind.harboe@zylin.com>
only set jtag global pointer if jtag->init() succeeds. Less code,
more clear what the rules are.
Fix nit that error value from init() was not propagated unmodified.
Signed-off-by: Øyvind Harboe <oyvind.harboe@zylin.com>
- works on Cortex-M3 with ThreadX and FreeRTOS
Compared to original patch a few nits were fixed:
- remove stricmp usage
- unsigned compare fix
- printf formatting fixes
- fixed a bug with overrunning a memory buffer allocated with malloc.
Update devices as per the latest programming manual.
We now use the full DEVID to identify the target. Previously we used
a 8bit id but that has now been changed in the manual.
Signed-off-by: Spencer Oliver <ntfreak@users.sourceforge.net>
Freescale iMX53 doesn't seem to like unaligned accesses to his memory
mapped registers.
Anyway this patch makes dump_image/load_image 4X faster for every
access through APB.
Signed-off-by: Luca Ellero <lroluk@gmail.com>
accidentally invoked return jtag_execute_queue() in the
middle of a fn. Hmm.... I would have expected gcc or
at least lint to catch this.
Signed-off-by: Øyvind Harboe <oyvind.harboe@zylin.com>
the patchup code would get false positives when checking
whether a dbgbase had to be corrected.
The solution is to have autodetect default, with manual override
in scripts.
Signed-off-by: Øyvind Harboe <oyvind.harboe@zylin.com>
Could this cause confusion as data sent to write would be flipped
and then if the caller subsequently used the data, e.g. a
compare mismatch might happen?
Signed-off-by: Øyvind Harboe <oyvind.harboe@zylin.com>
Really a Cortex-A specific option, but there is no
system in place to support target specific options
currently and there has been no need for such a system
until now.
Signed-off-by: Øyvind Harboe <oyvind.harboe@zylin.com>
production processor versions increment, thus the version
bits should be ignored for future proofing. e.g.
Engineering sample version == 0x00, production version 0x01
The patch below fixes step <address> on mips_m4k.
Spencer Oliver <spen@spen-soft.co.uk>:
The current code is used on all other arch's - is
there a underlying issue with those aswell ?
I don't think dsp563xx_once_read_register() would ever
be called with len==0, but it would have been broken in
that case.
Signed-off-by: Øyvind Harboe <oyvind.harboe@zylin.com>
Problem is, trying to print "Hello, world!\n" just prints endless H's, because r1 is never incremented.
One way to fix it would be to add a "++" after "r1".
Fix a bunch of typos.
Most are in code comments, so nothing should break. UNKOWN_COMMAND and
CMD_UNKOWN are not used elsewhere, so correcting the spelling should
also not break anything.