8c935583d25fa2d20b532ae3b760f3955852d906
[openocd.git] / doc / openocd.texi
1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c %**start of header
3 @setfilename openocd.info
4 @settitle OpenOCD User's Guide
5 @dircategory Development
6 @direntry
7 * OpenOCD: (openocd). OpenOCD User's Guide
8 @end direntry
9 @paragraphindent 0
10 @c %**end of header
11
12 @include version.texi
13
14 @copying
15
16 This User's Guide documents
17 release @value{VERSION},
18 dated @value{UPDATED},
19 of the Open On-Chip Debugger (OpenOCD).
20
21 @itemize @bullet
22 @item Copyright @copyright{} 2008 The OpenOCD Project
23 @item Copyright @copyright{} 2007-2008 Spencer Oliver @email{spen@@spen-soft.co.uk}
24 @item Copyright @copyright{} 2008 Oyvind Harboe @email{oyvind.harboe@@zylin.com}
25 @item Copyright @copyright{} 2008 Duane Ellis @email{openocd@@duaneellis.com}
26 @item Copyright @copyright{} 2009 David Brownell
27 @end itemize
28
29 @quotation
30 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
31 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
32 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
33 Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover
34 Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
35 Free Documentation License''.
36 @end quotation
37 @end copying
38
39 @titlepage
40 @titlefont{@emph{Open On-Chip Debugger:}}
41 @sp 1
42 @title OpenOCD User's Guide
43 @subtitle for release @value{VERSION}
44 @subtitle @value{UPDATED}
45
46 @page
47 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
48 @insertcopying
49 @end titlepage
50
51 @summarycontents
52 @contents
53
54 @ifnottex
55 @node Top
56 @top OpenOCD User's Guide
57
58 @insertcopying
59 @end ifnottex
60
61 @menu
62 * About:: About OpenOCD
63 * Developers:: OpenOCD Developers
64 * JTAG Hardware Dongles:: JTAG Hardware Dongles
65 * About JIM-Tcl:: About JIM-Tcl
66 * Running:: Running OpenOCD
67 * OpenOCD Project Setup:: OpenOCD Project Setup
68 * Config File Guidelines:: Config File Guidelines
69 * Daemon Configuration:: Daemon Configuration
70 * Interface - Dongle Configuration:: Interface - Dongle Configuration
71 * Reset Configuration:: Reset Configuration
72 * TAP Declaration:: TAP Declaration
73 * CPU Configuration:: CPU Configuration
74 * Flash Commands:: Flash Commands
75 * NAND Flash Commands:: NAND Flash Commands
76 * PLD/FPGA Commands:: PLD/FPGA Commands
77 * General Commands:: General Commands
78 * Architecture and Core Commands:: Architecture and Core Commands
79 * JTAG Commands:: JTAG Commands
80 * Boundary Scan Commands:: Boundary Scan Commands
81 * TFTP:: TFTP
82 * GDB and OpenOCD:: Using GDB and OpenOCD
83 * Tcl Scripting API:: Tcl Scripting API
84 * Upgrading:: Deprecated/Removed Commands
85 * Target Library:: Target Library
86 * FAQ:: Frequently Asked Questions
87 * Tcl Crash Course:: Tcl Crash Course
88 * License:: GNU Free Documentation License
89
90 @comment DO NOT use the plain word ``Index'', reason: CYGWIN filename
91 @comment case issue with ``Index.html'' and ``index.html''
92 @comment Occurs when creating ``--html --no-split'' output
93 @comment This fix is based on: http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2006-05/msg00215.html
94 * OpenOCD Concept Index:: Concept Index
95 * Command and Driver Index:: Command and Driver Index
96 @end menu
97
98 @node About
99 @unnumbered About
100 @cindex about
101
102 OpenOCD was created by Dominic Rath as part of a diploma thesis written at the
103 University of Applied Sciences Augsburg (@uref{http://www.fh-augsburg.de}).
104 Since that time, the project has grown into an active open-source project,
105 supported by a diverse community of software and hardware developers from
106 around the world.
107
108 @section What is OpenOCD?
109 @cindex TAP
110 @cindex JTAG
111
112 The Open On-Chip Debugger (OpenOCD) aims to provide debugging,
113 in-system programming and boundary-scan testing for embedded target
114 devices.
115
116 @b{JTAG:} OpenOCD uses a ``hardware interface dongle'' to communicate
117 with the JTAG (IEEE 1149.1) compliant TAPs on your target board.
118 A @dfn{TAP} is a ``Test Access Port'', a module which processes
119 special instructions and data. TAPs are daisy-chained within and
120 between chips and boards.
121
122 @b{Dongles:} OpenOCD currently supports many types of hardware dongles: USB
123 based, parallel port based, and other standalone boxes that run
124 OpenOCD internally. @xref{JTAG Hardware Dongles}.
125
126 @b{GDB Debug:} It allows ARM7 (ARM7TDMI and ARM720t), ARM9 (ARM920T,
127 ARM922T, ARM926EJ--S, ARM966E--S), XScale (PXA25x, IXP42x) and
128 Cortex-M3 (Stellaris LM3 and ST STM32) based cores to be
129 debugged via the GDB protocol.
130
131 @b{Flash Programing:} Flash writing is supported for external CFI
132 compatible NOR flashes (Intel and AMD/Spansion command set) and several
133 internal flashes (LPC1700, LPC2000, AT91SAM7, AT91SAM3U, STR7x, STR9x, LM3, and
134 STM32x). Preliminary support for various NAND flash controllers
135 (LPC3180, Orion, S3C24xx, more) controller is included.
136
137 @section OpenOCD Web Site
138
139 The OpenOCD web site provides the latest public news from the community:
140
141 @uref{http://openocd.berlios.de/web/}
142
143 @section Latest User's Guide:
144
145 The user's guide you are now reading may not be the latest one
146 available. A version for more recent code may be available.
147 Its HTML form is published irregularly at:
148
149 @uref{http://openocd.berlios.de/doc/html/index.html}
150
151 PDF form is likewise published at:
152
153 @uref{http://openocd.berlios.de/doc/pdf/openocd.pdf}
154
155 @section OpenOCD User's Forum
156
157 There is an OpenOCD forum (phpBB) hosted by SparkFun:
158
159 @uref{http://forum.sparkfun.com/viewforum.php?f=18}
160
161
162 @node Developers
163 @chapter OpenOCD Developer Resources
164 @cindex developers
165
166 If you are interested in improving the state of OpenOCD's debugging and
167 testing support, new contributions will be welcome. Motivated developers
168 can produce new target, flash or interface drivers, improve the
169 documentation, as well as more conventional bug fixes and enhancements.
170
171 The resources in this chapter are available for developers wishing to explore
172 or expand the OpenOCD source code.
173
174 @section OpenOCD Subversion Repository
175
176 You can download the current SVN version with an SVN client of your
177 choice from the following repositories:
178
179 @uref{svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk}
180
181 or
182
183 @uref{http://svn.berlios.de/svnroot/repos/openocd/trunk}
184
185 Using the SVN command line client, you can use the following command to
186 fetch the latest version (make sure there is no (non-svn) directory
187 called "openocd" in the current directory):
188
189 svn checkout svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk openocd
190
191 If you prefer GIT based tools, the @command{git-svn} package works too:
192
193 git svn clone -s svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd
194
195 The ``README'' file contains the instructions for building the project
196 from the repository.
197
198 Developers that want to contribute patches to the OpenOCD system are
199 @b{strongly} encouraged to base their work off of the most recent trunk
200 revision. Patches created against older versions may require additional
201 work from their submitter in order to be updated for newer releases.
202
203 @section Doxygen Developer Manual
204
205 During the development of the 0.2.0 release, the OpenOCD project began
206 providing a Doxygen reference manual. This document contains more
207 technical information about the software internals, development
208 processes, and similar documentation:
209
210 @uref{http://openocd.berlios.de/doc/doxygen/index.html}
211
212 This document is a work-in-progress, but contributions would be welcome
213 to fill in the gaps. All of the source files are provided in-tree,
214 listed in the Doxyfile configuration in the top of the repository trunk.
215
216 @section OpenOCD Developer Mailing List
217
218 The OpenOCD Developer Mailing List provides the primary means of
219 communication between developers:
220
221 @uref{https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/openocd-development}
222
223 All drivers developers are enouraged to also subscribe to the list of
224 SVN commits to keep pace with the ongoing changes:
225
226 @uref{https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/openocd-svn}
227
228
229 @node JTAG Hardware Dongles
230 @chapter JTAG Hardware Dongles
231 @cindex dongles
232 @cindex FTDI
233 @cindex wiggler
234 @cindex zy1000
235 @cindex printer port
236 @cindex USB Adapter
237 @cindex RTCK
238
239 Defined: @b{dongle}: A small device that plugins into a computer and serves as
240 an adapter .... [snip]
241
242 In the OpenOCD case, this generally refers to @b{a small adapater} one
243 attaches to your computer via USB or the Parallel Printer Port. The
244 execption being the Zylin ZY1000 which is a small box you attach via
245 an ethernet cable. The Zylin ZY1000 has the advantage that it does not
246 require any drivers to be installed on the developer PC. It also has
247 a built in web interface. It supports RTCK/RCLK or adaptive clocking
248 and has a built in relay to power cycle targets remotely.
249
250
251 @section Choosing a Dongle
252
253 There are three things you should keep in mind when choosing a dongle.
254
255 @enumerate
256 @item @b{Voltage} What voltage is your target? 1.8, 2.8, 3.3, or 5V? Does your dongle support it?
257 @item @b{Connection} Printer Ports - Does your computer have one?
258 @item @b{Connection} Is that long printer bit-bang cable practical?
259 @item @b{RTCK} Do you require RTCK? Also known as ``adaptive clocking''
260 @end enumerate
261
262 @section Stand alone Systems
263
264 @b{ZY1000} See: @url{http://www.zylin.com/zy1000.html} Technically, not a
265 dongle, but a standalone box. The ZY1000 has the advantage that it does
266 not require any drivers installed on the developer PC. It also has
267 a built in web interface. It supports RTCK/RCLK or adaptive clocking
268 and has a built in relay to power cycle targets remotely.
269
270 @section USB FT2232 Based
271
272 There are many USB JTAG dongles on the market, many of them are based
273 on a chip from ``Future Technology Devices International'' (FTDI)
274 known as the FTDI FT2232; this is a USB full speed (12 Mbps) chip.
275 See: @url{http://www.ftdichip.com} for more information.
276 In summer 2009, USB high speed (480 Mbps) versions of these FTDI
277 chips are starting to become available in JTAG adapters.
278
279 @itemize @bullet
280 @item @b{usbjtag}
281 @* Link @url{http://www.hs-augsburg.de/~hhoegl/proj/usbjtag/usbjtag.html}
282 @item @b{jtagkey}
283 @* See: @url{http://www.amontec.com/jtagkey.shtml}
284 @item @b{oocdlink}
285 @* See: @url{http://www.oocdlink.com} By Joern Kaipf
286 @item @b{signalyzer}
287 @* See: @url{http://www.signalyzer.com}
288 @item @b{evb_lm3s811}
289 @* See: @url{http://www.luminarymicro.com} - The Stellaris LM3S811 eval board has an FTD2232C chip built in.
290 @item @b{luminary_icdi}
291 @* See: @url{http://www.luminarymicro.com} - Luminary In-Circuit Debug Interface (ICDI) Board, included in the Stellaris LM3S9B90 and LM3S9B92 Evaluation Kits.
292 @item @b{olimex-jtag}
293 @* See: @url{http://www.olimex.com}
294 @item @b{flyswatter}
295 @* See: @url{http://www.tincantools.com}
296 @item @b{turtelizer2}
297 @* See:
298 @uref{http://www.ethernut.de/en/hardware/turtelizer/index.html, Turtelizer 2}, or
299 @url{http://www.ethernut.de}
300 @item @b{comstick}
301 @* Link: @url{http://www.hitex.com/index.php?id=383}
302 @item @b{stm32stick}
303 @* Link @url{http://www.hitex.com/stm32-stick}
304 @item @b{axm0432_jtag}
305 @* Axiom AXM-0432 Link @url{http://www.axman.com}
306 @item @b{cortino}
307 @* Link @url{http://www.hitex.com/index.php?id=cortino}
308 @end itemize
309
310 @section USB JLINK based
311 There are several OEM versions of the Segger @b{JLINK} adapter. It is
312 an example of a micro controller based JTAG adapter, it uses an
313 AT91SAM764 internally.
314
315 @itemize @bullet
316 @item @b{ATMEL SAMICE} Only works with ATMEL chips!
317 @* Link: @url{http://www.atmel.com/dyn/products/tools_card.asp?tool_id=3892}
318 @item @b{SEGGER JLINK}
319 @* Link: @url{http://www.segger.com/jlink.html}
320 @item @b{IAR J-Link}
321 @* Link: @url{http://www.iar.com/website1/1.0.1.0/369/1/index.php}
322 @end itemize
323
324 @section USB RLINK based
325 Raisonance has an adapter called @b{RLink}. It exists in a stripped-down form on the STM32 Primer, permanently attached to the JTAG lines. It also exists on the STM32 Primer2, but that is wired for SWD and not JTAG, thus not supported.
326
327 @itemize @bullet
328 @item @b{Raisonance RLink}
329 @* Link: @url{http://www.raisonance.com/products/RLink.php}
330 @item @b{STM32 Primer}
331 @* Link: @url{http://www.stm32circle.com/resources/stm32primer.php}
332 @item @b{STM32 Primer2}
333 @* Link: @url{http://www.stm32circle.com/resources/stm32primer2.php}
334 @end itemize
335
336 @section USB Other
337 @itemize @bullet
338 @item @b{USBprog}
339 @* Link: @url{http://www.embedded-projects.net/usbprog} - which uses an Atmel MEGA32 and a UBN9604
340
341 @item @b{USB - Presto}
342 @* Link: @url{http://tools.asix.net/prg_presto.htm}
343
344 @item @b{Versaloon-Link}
345 @* Link: @url{http://www.simonqian.com/en/Versaloon}
346
347 @item @b{ARM-JTAG-EW}
348 @* Link: @url{http://www.olimex.com/dev/arm-jtag-ew.html}
349 @end itemize
350
351 @section IBM PC Parallel Printer Port Based
352
353 The two well known ``JTAG Parallel Ports'' cables are the Xilnx DLC5
354 and the MacGraigor Wiggler. There are many clones and variations of
355 these on the market.
356
357 @itemize @bullet
358
359 @item @b{Wiggler} - There are many clones of this.
360 @* Link: @url{http://www.macraigor.com/wiggler.htm}
361
362 @item @b{DLC5} - From XILINX - There are many clones of this
363 @* Link: Search the web for: ``XILINX DLC5'' - it is no longer
364 produced, PDF schematics are easily found and it is easy to make.
365
366 @item @b{Amontec - JTAG Accelerator}
367 @* Link: @url{http://www.amontec.com/jtag_accelerator.shtml}
368
369 @item @b{GW16402}
370 @* Link: @url{http://www.gateworks.com/products/avila_accessories/gw16042.php}
371
372 @item @b{Wiggler2}
373 @*@uref{http://www.ccac.rwth-aachen.de/@/~michaels/@/index.php/hardware/@/armjtag,
374 Improved parallel-port wiggler-style JTAG adapter}
375
376 @item @b{Wiggler_ntrst_inverted}
377 @* Yet another variation - See the source code, src/jtag/parport.c
378
379 @item @b{old_amt_wiggler}
380 @* Unknown - probably not on the market today
381
382 @item @b{arm-jtag}
383 @* Link: Most likely @url{http://www.olimex.com/dev/arm-jtag.html} [another wiggler clone]
384
385 @item @b{chameleon}
386 @* Link: @url{http://www.amontec.com/chameleon.shtml}
387
388 @item @b{Triton}
389 @* Unknown.
390
391 @item @b{Lattice}
392 @* ispDownload from Lattice Semiconductor
393 @url{http://www.latticesemi.com/lit/docs/@/devtools/dlcable.pdf}
394
395 @item @b{flashlink}
396 @* From ST Microsystems;
397 @uref{http://www.st.com/stonline/@/products/literature/um/7889.pdf,
398 FlashLINK JTAG programing cable for PSD and uPSD}
399
400 @end itemize
401
402 @section Other...
403 @itemize @bullet
404
405 @item @b{ep93xx}
406 @* An EP93xx based Linux machine using the GPIO pins directly.
407
408 @item @b{at91rm9200}
409 @* Like the EP93xx - but an ATMEL AT91RM9200 based solution using the GPIO pins on the chip.
410
411 @end itemize
412
413 @node About JIM-Tcl
414 @chapter About JIM-Tcl
415 @cindex JIM Tcl
416 @cindex tcl
417
418 OpenOCD includes a small ``Tcl Interpreter'' known as JIM-Tcl.
419 This programming language provides a simple and extensible
420 command interpreter.
421
422 All commands presented in this Guide are extensions to JIM-Tcl.
423 You can use them as simple commands, without needing to learn
424 much of anything about Tcl.
425 Alternatively, can write Tcl programs with them.
426
427 You can learn more about JIM at its website, @url{http://jim.berlios.de}.
428
429 @itemize @bullet
430 @item @b{JIM vs. Tcl}
431 @* JIM-TCL is a stripped down version of the well known Tcl language,
432 which can be found here: @url{http://www.tcl.tk}. JIM-Tcl has far
433 fewer features. JIM-Tcl is a single .C file and a single .H file and
434 implements the basic Tcl command set. In contrast: Tcl 8.6 is a
435 4.2 MB .zip file containing 1540 files.
436
437 @item @b{Missing Features}
438 @* Our practice has been: Add/clone the real Tcl feature if/when
439 needed. We welcome JIM Tcl improvements, not bloat.
440
441 @item @b{Scripts}
442 @* OpenOCD configuration scripts are JIM Tcl Scripts. OpenOCD's
443 command interpreter today is a mixture of (newer)
444 JIM-Tcl commands, and (older) the orginal command interpreter.
445
446 @item @b{Commands}
447 @* At the OpenOCD telnet command line (or via the GDB mon command) one
448 can type a Tcl for() loop, set variables, etc.
449 Some of the commands documented in this guide are implemented
450 as Tcl scripts, from a @file{startup.tcl} file internal to the server.
451
452 @item @b{Historical Note}
453 @* JIM-Tcl was introduced to OpenOCD in spring 2008.
454
455 @item @b{Need a crash course in Tcl?}
456 @*@xref{Tcl Crash Course}.
457 @end itemize
458
459 @node Running
460 @chapter Running
461 @cindex command line options
462 @cindex logfile
463 @cindex directory search
464
465 The @option{--help} option shows:
466 @verbatim
467 bash$ openocd --help
468
469 --help | -h display this help
470 --version | -v display OpenOCD version
471 --file | -f use configuration file <name>
472 --search | -s dir to search for config files and scripts
473 --debug | -d set debug level <0-3>
474 --log_output | -l redirect log output to file <name>
475 --command | -c run <command>
476 --pipe | -p use pipes when talking to gdb
477 @end verbatim
478
479 By default OpenOCD reads the file configuration file ``openocd.cfg''
480 in the current directory. To specify a different (or multiple)
481 configuration file, you can use the ``-f'' option. For example:
482
483 @example
484 openocd -f config1.cfg -f config2.cfg -f config3.cfg
485 @end example
486
487 Once started, OpenOCD runs as a daemon, waiting for connections from
488 clients (Telnet, GDB, Other).
489
490 If you are having problems, you can enable internal debug messages via
491 the ``-d'' option.
492
493 Also it is possible to interleave JIM-Tcl commands w/config scripts using the
494 @option{-c} command line switch.
495
496 To enable debug output (when reporting problems or working on OpenOCD
497 itself), use the @option{-d} command line switch. This sets the
498 @option{debug_level} to "3", outputting the most information,
499 including debug messages. The default setting is "2", outputting only
500 informational messages, warnings and errors. You can also change this
501 setting from within a telnet or gdb session using @command{debug_level
502 <n>} (@pxref{debug_level}).
503
504 You can redirect all output from the daemon to a file using the
505 @option{-l <logfile>} switch.
506
507 Search paths for config/script files can be added to OpenOCD by using
508 the @option{-s <search>} switch. The current directory and the OpenOCD
509 target library is in the search path by default.
510
511 For details on the @option{-p} option. @xref{Connecting to GDB}.
512
513 Note! OpenOCD will launch the GDB & telnet server even if it can not
514 establish a connection with the target. In general, it is possible for
515 the JTAG controller to be unresponsive until the target is set up
516 correctly via e.g. GDB monitor commands in a GDB init script.
517
518 @node OpenOCD Project Setup
519 @chapter OpenOCD Project Setup
520
521 To use OpenOCD with your development projects, you need to do more than
522 just connecting the JTAG adapter hardware (dongle) to your development board
523 and then starting the OpenOCD server.
524 You also need to configure that server so that it knows
525 about that adapter and board, and helps your work.
526
527 @section Hooking up the JTAG Adapter
528
529 Today's most common case is a dongle with a JTAG cable on one side
530 (such as a ribbon cable with a 10-pin or 20-pin IDC connector)
531 and a USB cable on the other.
532 Instead of USB, some cables use Ethernet;
533 older ones may use a PC parallel port, or even a serial port.
534
535 @enumerate
536 @item @emph{Start with power to your target board turned off},
537 and nothing connected to your JTAG adapter.
538 If you're particularly paranoid, unplug power to the board.
539 It's important to have the ground signal properly set up,
540 unless you are using a JTAG adapter which provides
541 galvanic isolation between the target board and the
542 debugging host.
543
544 @item @emph{Be sure it's the right kind of JTAG connector.}
545 If your dongle has a 20-pin ARM connector, you need some kind
546 of adapter (or octopus, see below) to hook it up to
547 boards using 14-pin or 10-pin connectors ... or to 20-pin
548 connectors which don't use ARM's pinout.
549
550 In the same vein, make sure the voltage levels are compatible.
551 Not all JTAG adapters have the level shifters needed to work
552 with 1.2 Volt boards.
553
554 @item @emph{Be certain the cable is properly oriented} or you might
555 damage your board. In most cases there are only two possible
556 ways to connect the cable.
557 Connect the JTAG cable from your adapter to the board.
558 Be sure it's firmly connected.
559
560 In the best case, the connector is keyed to physically
561 prevent you from inserting it wrong.
562 This is most often done using a slot on the board's male connector
563 housing, which must match a key on the JTAG cable's female connector.
564 If there's no housing, then you must look carefully and
565 make sure pin 1 on the cable hooks up to pin 1 on the board.
566 Ribbon cables are frequently all grey except for a wire on one
567 edge, which is red. The red wire is pin 1.
568
569 Sometimes dongles provide cables where one end is an ``octopus'' of
570 color coded single-wire connectors, instead of a connector block.
571 These are great when converting from one JTAG pinout to another,
572 but are tedious to set up.
573 Use these with connector pinout diagrams to help you match up the
574 adapter signals to the right board pins.
575
576 @item @emph{Connect the adapter's other end} once the JTAG cable is connected.
577 A USB, parallel, or serial port connector will go to the host which
578 you are using to run OpenOCD.
579 For Ethernet, consult the documentation and your network administrator.
580
581 For USB based JTAG adapters you have an easy sanity check at this point:
582 does the host operating system see the JTAG adapter?
583
584 @item @emph{Connect the adapter's power supply, if needed.}
585 This step is primarily for non-USB adapters,
586 but sometimes USB adapters need extra power.
587
588 @item @emph{Power up the target board.}
589 Unless you just let the magic smoke escape,
590 you're now ready to set up the OpenOCD server
591 so you can use JTAG to work with that board.
592
593 @end enumerate
594
595 Talk with the OpenOCD server using
596 telnet (@code{telnet localhost 4444} on many systems) or GDB.
597 @xref{GDB and OpenOCD}.
598
599 @section Project Directory
600
601 There are many ways you can configure OpenOCD and start it up.
602
603 A simple way to organize them all involves keeping a
604 single directory for your work with a given board.
605 When you start OpenOCD from that directory,
606 it searches there first for configuration files, scripts,
607 and for code you upload to the target board.
608 It is also the natural place to write files,
609 such as log files and data you download from the board.
610
611 @section Configuration Basics
612
613 There are two basic ways of configuring OpenOCD, and
614 a variety of ways you can mix them.
615 Think of the difference as just being how you start the server:
616
617 @itemize
618 @item Many @option{-f file} or @option{-c command} options on the command line
619 @item No options, but a @dfn{user config file}
620 in the current directory named @file{openocd.cfg}
621 @end itemize
622
623 Here is an example @file{openocd.cfg} file for a setup
624 using a Signalyzer FT2232-based JTAG adapter to talk to
625 a board with an Atmel AT91SAM7X256 microcontroller:
626
627 @example
628 source [find interface/signalyzer.cfg]
629
630 # GDB can also flash my flash!
631 gdb_memory_map enable
632 gdb_flash_program enable
633
634 source [find target/sam7x256.cfg]
635 @end example
636
637 Here is the command line equivalent of that configuration:
638
639 @example
640 openocd -f interface/signalyzer.cfg \
641 -c "gdb_memory_map enable" \
642 -c "gdb_flash_program enable" \
643 -f target/sam7x256.cfg
644 @end example
645
646 You could wrap such long command lines in shell scripts,
647 each supporting a different development task.
648 One might re-flash the board with a specific firmware version.
649 Another might set up a particular debugging or run-time environment.
650
651 Here we will focus on the simpler solution: one user config
652 file, including basic configuration plus any TCL procedures
653 to simplify your work.
654
655 @section User Config Files
656 @cindex config file, user
657 @cindex user config file
658 @cindex config file, overview
659
660 A user configuration file ties together all the parts of a project
661 in one place.
662 One of the following will match your situation best:
663
664 @itemize
665 @item Ideally almost everything comes from configuration files
666 provided by someone else.
667 For example, OpenOCD distributes a @file{scripts} directory
668 (probably in @file{/usr/share/openocd/scripts} on Linux).
669 Board and tool vendors can provide these too, as can individual
670 user sites; the @option{-s} command line option lets you say
671 where to find these files. (@xref{Running}.)
672 The AT91SAM7X256 example above works this way.
673
674 Three main types of non-user configuration file each have their
675 own subdirectory in the @file{scripts} directory:
676
677 @enumerate
678 @item @b{interface} -- one for each kind of JTAG adapter/dongle
679 @item @b{board} -- one for each different board
680 @item @b{target} -- the chips which integrate CPUs and other JTAG TAPs
681 @end enumerate
682
683 Best case: include just two files, and they handle everything else.
684 The first is an interface config file.
685 The second is board-specific, and it sets up the JTAG TAPs and
686 their GDB targets (by deferring to some @file{target.cfg} file),
687 declares all flash memory, and leaves you nothing to do except
688 meet your deadline:
689
690 @example
691 source [find interface/olimex-jtag-tiny.cfg]
692 source [find board/csb337.cfg]
693 @end example
694
695 Boards with a single microcontroller often won't need more
696 than the target config file, as in the AT91SAM7X256 example.
697 That's because there is no external memory (flash, DDR RAM), and
698 the board differences are encapsulated by application code.
699
700 @item You can often reuse some standard config files but
701 need to write a few new ones, probably a @file{board.cfg} file.
702 You will be using commands described later in this User's Guide,
703 and working with the guidelines in the next chapter.
704
705 For example, there may be configuration files for your JTAG adapter
706 and target chip, but you need a new board-specific config file
707 giving access to your particular flash chips.
708 Or you might need to write another target chip configuration file
709 for a new chip built around the Cortex M3 core.
710
711 @quotation Note
712 When you write new configuration files, please submit
713 them for inclusion in the next OpenOCD release.
714 For example, a @file{board/newboard.cfg} file will help the
715 next users of that board, and a @file{target/newcpu.cfg}
716 will help support users of any board using that chip.
717 @end quotation
718
719 @item
720 You may may need to write some C code.
721 It may be as simple as a supporting a new ft2232 or parport
722 based dongle; a bit more involved, like a NAND or NOR flash
723 controller driver; or a big piece of work like supporting
724 a new chip architecture.
725 @end itemize
726
727 Reuse the existing config files when you can.
728 Look first in the @file{scripts/boards} area, then @file{scripts/targets}.
729 You may find a board configuration that's a good example to follow.
730
731 When you write config files, separate the reusable parts
732 (things every user of that interface, chip, or board needs)
733 from ones specific to your environment and debugging approach.
734
735 For example, a @code{gdb-attach} event handler that invokes
736 the @command{reset init} command will interfere with debugging
737 early boot code, which performs some of the same actions
738 that the @code{reset-init} event handler does.
739 Likewise, the @command{arm9tdmi vector_catch} command (or
740 @cindex vector_catch
741 its siblings @command{xscale vector_catch}
742 and @command{cortex_m3 vector_catch}) can be a timesaver
743 during some debug sessions, but don't make everyone use that either.
744 Keep those kinds of debugging aids in your user config file,
745 along with messaging and tracing setup.
746 (@xref{Software Debug Messages and Tracing}.)
747
748 TCP/IP port configuration is another example of something which
749 is environment-specific, and should only appear in
750 a user config file. @xref{TCP/IP Ports}.
751
752 @section Project-Specific Utilities
753
754 A few project-specific utility
755 routines may well speed up your work.
756 Write them, and keep them in your project's user config file.
757
758 For example, if you are making a boot loader work on a
759 board, it's nice to be able to debug the ``after it's
760 loaded to RAM'' parts separately from the finicky early
761 code which sets up the DDR RAM controller and clocks.
762 A script like this one, or a more GDB-aware sibling,
763 may help:
764
765 @example
766 proc ramboot @{ @} @{
767 # Reset, running the target's "reset-init" scripts
768 # to initialize clocks and the DDR RAM controller.
769 # Leave the CPU halted.
770 reset init
771
772 # Load CONFIG_SKIP_LOWLEVEL_INIT version into DDR RAM.
773 load_image u-boot.bin 0x20000000
774
775 # Start running.
776 resume 0x20000000
777 @}
778 @end example
779
780 Then once that code is working you will need to make it
781 boot from NOR flash; a different utility would help.
782 Alternatively, some developers write to flash using GDB.
783 (You might use a similar script if you're working with a flash
784 based microcontroller application instead of a boot loader.)
785
786 @example
787 proc newboot @{ @} @{
788 # Reset, leaving the CPU halted. The "reset-init" event
789 # proc gives faster access to the CPU and to NOR flash;
790 # "reset halt" would be slower.
791 reset init
792
793 # Write standard version of U-Boot into the first two
794 # sectors of NOR flash ... the standard version should
795 # do the same lowlevel init as "reset-init".
796 flash protect 0 0 1 off
797 flash erase_sector 0 0 1
798 flash write_bank 0 u-boot.bin 0x0
799 flash protect 0 0 1 on
800
801 # Reboot from scratch using that new boot loader.
802 reset run
803 @}
804 @end example
805
806 You may need more complicated utility procedures when booting
807 from NAND.
808 That often involves an extra bootloader stage,
809 running from on-chip SRAM to perform DDR RAM setup so it can load
810 the main bootloader code (which won't fit into that SRAM).
811
812 Other helper scripts might be used to write production system images,
813 involving considerably more than just a three stage bootloader.
814
815
816 @node Config File Guidelines
817 @chapter Config File Guidelines
818
819 This chapter is aimed at any user who needs to write a config file,
820 including developers and integrators of OpenOCD and any user who
821 needs to get a new board working smoothly.
822 It provides guidelines for creating those files.
823
824 You should find the following directories under @t{$(INSTALLDIR)/scripts}:
825
826 @itemize @bullet
827 @item @file{interface} ...
828 think JTAG Dongle. Files that configure JTAG adapters go here.
829 @item @file{board} ...
830 think Circuit Board, PWA, PCB, they go by many names. Board files
831 contain initialization items that are specific to a board. For
832 example, the SDRAM initialization sequence for the board, or the type
833 of external flash and what address it uses. Any initialization
834 sequence to enable that external flash or SDRAM should be found in the
835 board file. Boards may also contain multiple targets: two CPUs; or
836 a CPU and an FPGA or CPLD.
837 @item @file{target} ...
838 think chip. The ``target'' directory represents the JTAG TAPs
839 on a chip
840 which OpenOCD should control, not a board. Two common types of targets
841 are ARM chips and FPGA or CPLD chips.
842 When a chip has multiple TAPs (maybe it has both ARM and DSP cores),
843 the target config file defines all of them.
844 @end itemize
845
846 The @file{openocd.cfg} user config
847 file may override features in any of the above files by
848 setting variables before sourcing the target file, or by adding
849 commands specific to their situation.
850
851 @section Interface Config Files
852
853 The user config file
854 should be able to source one of these files with a command like this:
855
856 @example
857 source [find interface/FOOBAR.cfg]
858 @end example
859
860 A preconfigured interface file should exist for every interface in use
861 today, that said, perhaps some interfaces have only been used by the
862 sole developer who created it.
863
864 A separate chapter gives information about how to set these up.
865 @xref{Interface - Dongle Configuration}.
866 Read the OpenOCD source code if you have a new kind of hardware interface
867 and need to provide a driver for it.
868
869 @section Board Config Files
870 @cindex config file, board
871 @cindex board config file
872
873 The user config file
874 should be able to source one of these files with a command like this:
875
876 @example
877 source [find board/FOOBAR.cfg]
878 @end example
879
880 The point of a board config file is to package everything
881 about a given board that user config files need to know.
882 In summary the board files should contain (if present)
883
884 @enumerate
885 @item One or more @command{source [target/...cfg]} statements
886 @item NOR flash configuration (@pxref{NOR Configuration})
887 @item NAND flash configuration (@pxref{NAND Configuration})
888 @item Target @code{reset} handlers for SDRAM and I/O configuration
889 @item JTAG adapter reset configuration (@pxref{Reset Configuration})
890 @item All things that are not ``inside a chip''
891 @end enumerate
892
893 Generic things inside target chips belong in target config files,
894 not board config files. So for example a @code{reset-init} event
895 handler should know board-specific oscillator and PLL parameters,
896 which it passes to target-specific utility code.
897
898 The most complex task of a board config file is creating such a
899 @code{reset-init} event handler.
900 Define those handlers last, after you verify the rest of the board
901 configuration works.
902
903 @subsection Communication Between Config files
904
905 In addition to target-specific utility code, another way that
906 board and target config files communicate is by following a
907 convention on how to use certain variables.
908
909 The full Tcl/Tk language supports ``namespaces'', but JIM-Tcl does not.
910 Thus the rule we follow in OpenOCD is this: Variables that begin with
911 a leading underscore are temporary in nature, and can be modified and
912 used at will within a target configuration file.
913
914 Complex board config files can do the things like this,
915 for a board with three chips:
916
917 @example
918 # Chip #1: PXA270 for network side, big endian
919 set CHIPNAME network
920 set ENDIAN big
921 source [find target/pxa270.cfg]
922 # on return: _TARGETNAME = network.cpu
923 # other commands can refer to the "network.cpu" target.
924 $_TARGETNAME configure .... events for this CPU..
925
926 # Chip #2: PXA270 for video side, little endian
927 set CHIPNAME video
928 set ENDIAN little
929 source [find target/pxa270.cfg]
930 # on return: _TARGETNAME = video.cpu
931 # other commands can refer to the "video.cpu" target.
932 $_TARGETNAME configure .... events for this CPU..
933
934 # Chip #3: Xilinx FPGA for glue logic
935 set CHIPNAME xilinx
936 unset ENDIAN
937 source [find target/spartan3.cfg]
938 @end example
939
940 That example is oversimplified because it doesn't show any flash memory,
941 or the @code{reset-init} event handlers to initialize external DRAM
942 or (assuming it needs it) load a configuration into the FPGA.
943 Such features are usually needed for low-level work with many boards,
944 where ``low level'' implies that the board initialization software may
945 not be working. (That's a common reason to need JTAG tools. Another
946 is to enable working with microcontroller-based systems, which often
947 have no debugging support except a JTAG connector.)
948
949 Target config files may also export utility functions to board and user
950 config files. Such functions should use name prefixes, to help avoid
951 naming collisions.
952
953 Board files could also accept input variables from user config files.
954 For example, there might be a @code{J4_JUMPER} setting used to identify
955 what kind of flash memory a development board is using, or how to set
956 up other clocks and peripherals.
957
958 @subsection Variable Naming Convention
959 @cindex variable names
960
961 Most boards have only one instance of a chip.
962 However, it should be easy to create a board with more than
963 one such chip (as shown above).
964 Accordingly, we encourage these conventions for naming
965 variables associated with different @file{target.cfg} files,
966 to promote consistency and
967 so that board files can override target defaults.
968
969 Inputs to target config files include:
970
971 @itemize @bullet
972 @item @code{CHIPNAME} ...
973 This gives a name to the overall chip, and is used as part of
974 tap identifier dotted names.
975 While the default is normally provided by the chip manufacturer,
976 board files may need to distinguish between instances of a chip.
977 @item @code{ENDIAN} ...
978 By default @option{little} - although chips may hard-wire @option{big}.
979 Chips that can't change endianness don't need to use this variable.
980 @item @code{CPUTAPID} ...
981 When OpenOCD examines the JTAG chain, it can be told verify the
982 chips against the JTAG IDCODE register.
983 The target file will hold one or more defaults, but sometimes the
984 chip in a board will use a different ID (perhaps a newer revision).
985 @end itemize
986
987 Outputs from target config files include:
988
989 @itemize @bullet
990 @item @code{_TARGETNAME} ...
991 By convention, this variable is created by the target configuration
992 script. The board configuration file may make use of this variable to
993 configure things like a ``reset init'' script, or other things
994 specific to that board and that target.
995 If the chip has 2 targets, the names are @code{_TARGETNAME0},
996 @code{_TARGETNAME1}, ... etc.
997 @end itemize
998
999 @subsection The reset-init Event Handler
1000 @cindex event, reset-init
1001 @cindex reset-init handler
1002
1003 Board config files run in the OpenOCD configuration stage;
1004 they can't use TAPs or targets, since they haven't been
1005 fully set up yet.
1006 This means you can't write memory or access chip registers;
1007 you can't even verify that a flash chip is present.
1008 That's done later in event handlers, of which the target @code{reset-init}
1009 handler is one of the most important.
1010
1011 Except on microcontrollers, the basic job of @code{reset-init} event
1012 handlers is setting up flash and DRAM, as normally handled by boot loaders.
1013 Microcontrollers rarely use boot loaders; they run right out of their
1014 on-chip flash and SRAM memory. But they may want to use one of these
1015 handlers too, if just for developer convenience.
1016
1017 @quotation Note
1018 Because this is so very board-specific, and chip-specific, no examples
1019 are included here.
1020 Instead, look at the board config files distributed with OpenOCD.
1021 If you have a boot loader, its source code may also be useful.
1022 @end quotation
1023
1024 Some of this code could probably be shared between different boards.
1025 For example, setting up a DRAM controller often doesn't differ by
1026 much except the bus width (16 bits or 32?) and memory timings, so a
1027 reusable TCL procedure loaded by the @file{target.cfg} file might take
1028 those as parameters.
1029 Similarly with oscillator, PLL, and clock setup;
1030 and disabling the watchdog.
1031 Structure the code cleanly, and provide comments to help
1032 the next developer doing such work.
1033 (@emph{You might be that next person} trying to reuse init code!)
1034
1035 The last thing normally done in a @code{reset-init} handler is probing
1036 whatever flash memory was configured. For most chips that needs to be
1037 done while the associated target is halted, either because JTAG memory
1038 access uses the CPU or to prevent conflicting CPU access.
1039
1040 @subsection JTAG Clock Rate
1041
1042 Before your @code{reset-init} handler has set up
1043 the PLLs and clocking, you may need to use
1044 a low JTAG clock rate; then you'd increase it later.
1045 (The rule of thumb for ARM-based processors is 1/8 the CPU clock.)
1046 If the board supports adaptive clocking, use the @command{jtag_rclk}
1047 command, in case your board is used with JTAG adapter which
1048 also supports it. Otherwise use @command{jtag_khz}.
1049 Set the slow rate at the beginning of the reset sequence,
1050 and the faster rate as soon as the clocks are at full speed.
1051
1052 @section Target Config Files
1053 @cindex config file, target
1054 @cindex target config file
1055
1056 Board config files communicate with target config files using
1057 naming conventions as described above, and may source one or
1058 more target config files like this:
1059
1060 @example
1061 source [find target/FOOBAR.cfg]
1062 @end example
1063
1064 The point of a target config file is to package everything
1065 about a given chip that board config files need to know.
1066 In summary the target files should contain
1067
1068 @enumerate
1069 @item Set defaults
1070 @item Add TAPs to the scan chain
1071 @item Add CPU targets (includes GDB support)
1072 @item CPU/Chip/CPU-Core specific features
1073 @item On-Chip flash
1074 @end enumerate
1075
1076 As a rule of thumb, a target file sets up only one chip.
1077 For a microcontroller, that will often include a single TAP,
1078 which is a CPU needing a GDB target, and its on-chip flash.
1079
1080 More complex chips may include multiple TAPs, and the target
1081 config file may need to define them all before OpenOCD
1082 can talk to the chip.
1083 For example, some phone chips have JTAG scan chains that include
1084 an ARM core for operating system use, a DSP,
1085 another ARM core embedded in an image processing engine,
1086 and other processing engines.
1087
1088 @subsection Default Value Boiler Plate Code
1089
1090 All target configuration files should start with code like this,
1091 letting board config files express environment-specific
1092 differences in how things should be set up.
1093
1094 @example
1095 # Boards may override chip names, perhaps based on role,
1096 # but the default should match what the vendor uses
1097 if @{ [info exists CHIPNAME] @} @{
1098 set _CHIPNAME $CHIPNAME
1099 @} else @{
1100 set _CHIPNAME sam7x256
1101 @}
1102
1103 # ONLY use ENDIAN with targets that can change it.
1104 if @{ [info exists ENDIAN] @} @{
1105 set _ENDIAN $ENDIAN
1106 @} else @{
1107 set _ENDIAN little
1108 @}
1109
1110 # TAP identifiers may change as chips mature, for example with
1111 # new revision fields (the "3" here). Pick a good default; you
1112 # can pass several such identifiers to the "jtag newtap" command.
1113 if @{ [info exists CPUTAPID ] @} @{
1114 set _CPUTAPID $CPUTAPID
1115 @} else @{
1116 set _CPUTAPID 0x3f0f0f0f
1117 @}
1118 @end example
1119 @c but 0x3f0f0f0f is for an str73x part ...
1120
1121 @emph{Remember:} Board config files may include multiple target
1122 config files, or the same target file multiple times
1123 (changing at least @code{CHIPNAME}).
1124
1125 Likewise, the target configuration file should define
1126 @code{_TARGETNAME} (or @code{_TARGETNAME0} etc) and
1127 use it later on when defining debug targets:
1128
1129 @example
1130 set _TARGETNAME $_CHIPNAME.cpu
1131 target create $_TARGETNAME arm7tdmi -chain-position $_TARGETNAME
1132 @end example
1133
1134 @subsection Adding TAPs to the Scan Chain
1135 After the ``defaults'' are set up,
1136 add the TAPs on each chip to the JTAG scan chain.
1137 @xref{TAP Declaration}, and the naming convention
1138 for taps.
1139
1140 In the simplest case the chip has only one TAP,
1141 probably for a CPU or FPGA.
1142 The config file for the Atmel AT91SAM7X256
1143 looks (in part) like this:
1144
1145 @example
1146 jtag newtap $_CHIPNAME cpu -irlen 4 -ircapture 0x1 -irmask 0xf \
1147 -expected-id $_CPUTAPID
1148 @end example
1149
1150 A board with two such at91sam7 chips would be able
1151 to source such a config file twice, with different
1152 values for @code{CHIPNAME}, so
1153 it adds a different TAP each time.
1154
1155 If there are one or more nonzero @option{-expected-id} values,
1156 OpenOCD attempts to verify the actual tap id against those values.
1157 It will issue error messages if there is mismatch, which
1158 can help to pinpoint problems in OpenOCD configurations.
1159
1160 @example
1161 JTAG tap: sam7x256.cpu tap/device found: 0x3f0f0f0f
1162 (Manufacturer: 0x787, Part: 0xf0f0, Version: 0x3)
1163 ERROR: Tap: sam7x256.cpu - Expected id: 0x12345678, Got: 0x3f0f0f0f
1164 ERROR: expected: mfg: 0x33c, part: 0x2345, ver: 0x1
1165 ERROR: got: mfg: 0x787, part: 0xf0f0, ver: 0x3
1166 @end example
1167
1168 There are more complex examples too, with chips that have
1169 multiple TAPs. Ones worth looking at include:
1170
1171 @itemize
1172 @item @file{target/omap3530.cfg} -- with disabled ARM and DSP,
1173 plus a JRC to enable them
1174 @item @file{target/str912.cfg} -- with flash, CPU, and boundary scan
1175 @item @file{target/ti_dm355.cfg} -- with ETM, ARM, and JRC (this JRC
1176 is not currently used)
1177 @end itemize
1178
1179 @subsection Add CPU targets
1180
1181 After adding a TAP for a CPU, you should set it up so that
1182 GDB and other commands can use it.
1183 @xref{CPU Configuration}.
1184 For the at91sam7 example above, the command can look like this;
1185 note that @code{$_ENDIAN} is not needed, since OpenOCD defaults
1186 to little endian, and this chip doesn't support changing that.
1187
1188 @example
1189 set _TARGETNAME $_CHIPNAME.cpu
1190 target create $_TARGETNAME arm7tdmi -chain-position $_TARGETNAME
1191 @end example
1192
1193 Work areas are small RAM areas associated with CPU targets.
1194 They are used by OpenOCD to speed up downloads,
1195 and to download small snippets of code to program flash chips.
1196 If the chip includes a form of ``on-chip-ram'' - and many do - define
1197 a work area if you can.
1198 Again using the at91sam7 as an example, this can look like:
1199
1200 @example
1201 $_TARGETNAME configure -work-area-phys 0x00200000 \
1202 -work-area-size 0x4000 -work-area-backup 0
1203 @end example
1204
1205 @subsection Chip Reset Setup
1206
1207 As a rule, you should put the @command{reset_config} command
1208 into the board file. Most things you think you know about a
1209 chip can be tweaked by the board.
1210
1211 Some chips have specific ways the TRST and SRST signals are
1212 managed. In the unusual case that these are @emph{chip specific}
1213 and can never be changed by board wiring, they could go here.
1214
1215 Some chips need special attention during reset handling if
1216 they're going to be used with JTAG.
1217 An example might be needing to send some commands right
1218 after the target's TAP has been reset, providing a
1219 @code{reset-deassert-post} event handler that writes a chip
1220 register to report that JTAG debugging is being done.
1221
1222 @subsection ARM Core Specific Hacks
1223
1224 If the chip has a DCC, enable it. If the chip is an ARM9 with some
1225 special high speed download features - enable it.
1226
1227 If present, the MMU, the MPU and the CACHE should be disabled.
1228
1229 Some ARM cores are equipped with trace support, which permits
1230 examination of the instruction and data bus activity. Trace
1231 activity is controlled through an ``Embedded Trace Module'' (ETM)
1232 on one of the core's scan chains. The ETM emits voluminous data
1233 through a ``trace port''. (@xref{ARM Hardware Tracing}.)
1234 If you are using an external trace port,
1235 configure it in your board config file.
1236 If you are using an on-chip ``Embedded Trace Buffer'' (ETB),
1237 configure it in your target config file.
1238
1239 @example
1240 etm config $_TARGETNAME 16 normal full etb
1241 etb config $_TARGETNAME $_CHIPNAME.etb
1242 @end example
1243
1244 @subsection Internal Flash Configuration
1245
1246 This applies @b{ONLY TO MICROCONTROLLERS} that have flash built in.
1247
1248 @b{Never ever} in the ``target configuration file'' define any type of
1249 flash that is external to the chip. (For example a BOOT flash on
1250 Chip Select 0.) Such flash information goes in a board file - not
1251 the TARGET (chip) file.
1252
1253 Examples:
1254 @itemize @bullet
1255 @item at91sam7x256 - has 256K flash YES enable it.
1256 @item str912 - has flash internal YES enable it.
1257 @item imx27 - uses boot flash on CS0 - it goes in the board file.
1258 @item pxa270 - again - CS0 flash - it goes in the board file.
1259 @end itemize
1260
1261 @node Daemon Configuration
1262 @chapter Daemon Configuration
1263 @cindex initialization
1264 The commands here are commonly found in the openocd.cfg file and are
1265 used to specify what TCP/IP ports are used, and how GDB should be
1266 supported.
1267
1268 @section Configuration Stage
1269 @cindex configuration stage
1270 @cindex config command
1271
1272 When the OpenOCD server process starts up, it enters a
1273 @emph{configuration stage} which is the only time that
1274 certain commands, @emph{configuration commands}, may be issued.
1275 In this manual, the definition of a configuration command is
1276 presented as a @emph{Config Command}, not as a @emph{Command}
1277 which may be issued interactively.
1278
1279 Those configuration commands include declaration of TAPs,
1280 flash banks,
1281 the interface used for JTAG communication,
1282 and other basic setup.
1283 The server must leave the configuration stage before it
1284 may access or activate TAPs.
1285 After it leaves this stage, configuration commands may no
1286 longer be issued.
1287
1288 @deffn {Config Command} init
1289 This command terminates the configuration stage and
1290 enters the normal command mode. This can be useful to add commands to
1291 the startup scripts and commands such as resetting the target,
1292 programming flash, etc. To reset the CPU upon startup, add "init" and
1293 "reset" at the end of the config script or at the end of the OpenOCD
1294 command line using the @option{-c} command line switch.
1295
1296 If this command does not appear in any startup/configuration file
1297 OpenOCD executes the command for you after processing all
1298 configuration files and/or command line options.
1299
1300 @b{NOTE:} This command normally occurs at or near the end of your
1301 openocd.cfg file to force OpenOCD to ``initialize'' and make the
1302 targets ready. For example: If your openocd.cfg file needs to
1303 read/write memory on your target, @command{init} must occur before
1304 the memory read/write commands. This includes @command{nand probe}.
1305 @end deffn
1306
1307 @anchor{TCP/IP Ports}
1308 @section TCP/IP Ports
1309 @cindex TCP port
1310 @cindex server
1311 @cindex port
1312 @cindex security
1313 The OpenOCD server accepts remote commands in several syntaxes.
1314 Each syntax uses a different TCP/IP port, which you may specify
1315 only during configuration (before those ports are opened).
1316
1317 For reasons including security, you may wish to prevent remote
1318 access using one or more of these ports.
1319 In such cases, just specify the relevant port number as zero.
1320 If you disable all access through TCP/IP, you will need to
1321 use the command line @option{-pipe} option.
1322
1323 @deffn {Command} gdb_port (number)
1324 @cindex GDB server
1325 Specify or query the first port used for incoming GDB connections.
1326 The GDB port for the
1327 first target will be gdb_port, the second target will listen on gdb_port + 1, and so on.
1328 When not specified during the configuration stage,
1329 the port @var{number} defaults to 3333.
1330 When specified as zero, this port is not activated.
1331 @end deffn
1332
1333 @deffn {Command} tcl_port (number)
1334 Specify or query the port used for a simplified RPC
1335 connection that can be used by clients to issue TCL commands and get the
1336 output from the Tcl engine.
1337 Intended as a machine interface.
1338 When not specified during the configuration stage,
1339 the port @var{number} defaults to 6666.
1340 When specified as zero, this port is not activated.
1341 @end deffn
1342
1343 @deffn {Command} telnet_port (number)
1344 Specify or query the
1345 port on which to listen for incoming telnet connections.
1346 This port is intended for interaction with one human through TCL commands.
1347 When not specified during the configuration stage,
1348 the port @var{number} defaults to 4444.
1349 When specified as zero, this port is not activated.
1350 @end deffn
1351
1352 @anchor{GDB Configuration}
1353 @section GDB Configuration
1354 @cindex GDB
1355 @cindex GDB configuration
1356 You can reconfigure some GDB behaviors if needed.
1357 The ones listed here are static and global.
1358 @xref{Target Configuration}, about configuring individual targets.
1359 @xref{Target Events}, about configuring target-specific event handling.
1360
1361 @anchor{gdb_breakpoint_override}
1362 @deffn {Command} gdb_breakpoint_override [@option{hard}|@option{soft}|@option{disable}]
1363 Force breakpoint type for gdb @command{break} commands.
1364 This option supports GDB GUIs which don't
1365 distinguish hard versus soft breakpoints, if the default OpenOCD and
1366 GDB behaviour is not sufficient. GDB normally uses hardware
1367 breakpoints if the memory map has been set up for flash regions.
1368 @end deffn
1369
1370 @deffn {Config Command} gdb_detach (@option{resume}|@option{reset}|@option{halt}|@option{nothing})
1371 Configures what OpenOCD will do when GDB detaches from the daemon.
1372 Default behaviour is @option{resume}.
1373 @end deffn
1374
1375 @anchor{gdb_flash_program}
1376 @deffn {Config Command} gdb_flash_program (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
1377 Set to @option{enable} to cause OpenOCD to program the flash memory when a
1378 vFlash packet is received.
1379 The default behaviour is @option{enable}.
1380 @end deffn
1381
1382 @deffn {Config Command} gdb_memory_map (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
1383 Set to @option{enable} to cause OpenOCD to send the memory configuration to GDB when
1384 requested. GDB will then know when to set hardware breakpoints, and program flash
1385 using the GDB load command. @command{gdb_flash_program enable} must also be enabled
1386 for flash programming to work.
1387 Default behaviour is @option{enable}.
1388 @xref{gdb_flash_program}.
1389 @end deffn
1390
1391 @deffn {Config Command} gdb_report_data_abort (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
1392 Specifies whether data aborts cause an error to be reported
1393 by GDB memory read packets.
1394 The default behaviour is @option{disable};
1395 use @option{enable} see these errors reported.
1396 @end deffn
1397
1398 @anchor{Event Polling}
1399 @section Event Polling
1400
1401 Hardware debuggers are parts of asynchronous systems,
1402 where significant events can happen at any time.
1403 The OpenOCD server needs to detect some of these events,
1404 so it can report them to through TCL command line
1405 or to GDB.
1406
1407 Examples of such events include:
1408
1409 @itemize
1410 @item One of the targets can stop running ... maybe it triggers
1411 a code breakpoint or data watchpoint, or halts itself.
1412 @item Messages may be sent over ``debug message'' channels ... many
1413 targets support such messages sent over JTAG,
1414 for receipt by the person debugging or tools.
1415 @item Loss of power ... some adapters can detect these events.
1416 @item Resets not issued through JTAG ... such reset sources
1417 can include button presses or other system hardware, sometimes
1418 including the target itself (perhaps through a watchdog).
1419 @item Debug instrumentation sometimes supports event triggering
1420 such as ``trace buffer full'' (so it can quickly be emptied)
1421 or other signals (to correlate with code behavior).
1422 @end itemize
1423
1424 None of those events are signaled through standard JTAG signals.
1425 However, most conventions for JTAG connectors include voltage
1426 level and system reset (SRST) signal detection.
1427 Some connectors also include instrumentation signals, which
1428 can imply events when those signals are inputs.
1429
1430 In general, OpenOCD needs to periodically check for those events,
1431 either by looking at the status of signals on the JTAG connector
1432 or by sending synchronous ``tell me your status'' JTAG requests
1433 to the various active targets.
1434 There is a command to manage and monitor that polling,
1435 which is normally done in the background.
1436
1437 @deffn Command poll [@option{on}|@option{off}]
1438 Poll the current target for its current state.
1439 (Also, @pxref{target curstate}.)
1440 If that target is in debug mode, architecture
1441 specific information about the current state is printed.
1442 An optional parameter
1443 allows background polling to be enabled and disabled.
1444
1445 You could use this from the TCL command shell, or
1446 from GDB using @command{monitor poll} command.
1447 @example
1448 > poll
1449 background polling: on
1450 target state: halted
1451 target halted in ARM state due to debug-request, \
1452 current mode: Supervisor
1453 cpsr: 0x800000d3 pc: 0x11081bfc
1454 MMU: disabled, D-Cache: disabled, I-Cache: enabled
1455 >
1456 @end example
1457 @end deffn
1458
1459 @node Interface - Dongle Configuration
1460 @chapter Interface - Dongle Configuration
1461 @cindex config file, interface
1462 @cindex interface config file
1463
1464 JTAG Adapters/Interfaces/Dongles are normally configured
1465 through commands in an interface configuration
1466 file which is sourced by your @file{openocd.cfg} file, or
1467 through a command line @option{-f interface/....cfg} option.
1468
1469 @example
1470 source [find interface/olimex-jtag-tiny.cfg]
1471 @end example
1472
1473 These commands tell
1474 OpenOCD what type of JTAG adapter you have, and how to talk to it.
1475 A few cases are so simple that you only need to say what driver to use:
1476
1477 @example
1478 # jlink interface
1479 interface jlink
1480 @end example
1481
1482 Most adapters need a bit more configuration than that.
1483
1484
1485 @section Interface Configuration
1486
1487 The interface command tells OpenOCD what type of JTAG dongle you are
1488 using. Depending on the type of dongle, you may need to have one or
1489 more additional commands.
1490
1491 @deffn {Config Command} {interface} name
1492 Use the interface driver @var{name} to connect to the
1493 target.
1494 @end deffn
1495
1496 @deffn Command {interface_list}
1497 List the interface drivers that have been built into
1498 the running copy of OpenOCD.
1499 @end deffn
1500
1501 @deffn Command {jtag interface}
1502 Returns the name of the interface driver being used.
1503 @end deffn
1504
1505 @section Interface Drivers
1506
1507 Each of the interface drivers listed here must be explicitly
1508 enabled when OpenOCD is configured, in order to be made
1509 available at run time.
1510
1511 @deffn {Interface Driver} {amt_jtagaccel}
1512 Amontec Chameleon in its JTAG Accelerator configuration,
1513 connected to a PC's EPP mode parallel port.
1514 This defines some driver-specific commands:
1515
1516 @deffn {Config Command} {parport_port} number
1517 Specifies either the address of the I/O port (default: 0x378 for LPT1) or
1518 the number of the @file{/dev/parport} device.
1519 @end deffn
1520
1521 @deffn {Config Command} rtck [@option{enable}|@option{disable}]
1522 Displays status of RTCK option.
1523 Optionally sets that option first.
1524 @end deffn
1525 @end deffn
1526
1527 @deffn {Interface Driver} {arm-jtag-ew}
1528 Olimex ARM-JTAG-EW USB adapter
1529 This has one driver-specific command:
1530
1531 @deffn Command {armjtagew_info}
1532 Logs some status
1533 @end deffn
1534 @end deffn
1535
1536 @deffn {Interface Driver} {at91rm9200}
1537 Supports bitbanged JTAG from the local system,
1538 presuming that system is an Atmel AT91rm9200
1539 and a specific set of GPIOs is used.
1540 @c command: at91rm9200_device NAME
1541 @c chooses among list of bit configs ... only one option
1542 @end deffn
1543
1544 @deffn {Interface Driver} {dummy}
1545 A dummy software-only driver for debugging.
1546 @end deffn
1547
1548 @deffn {Interface Driver} {ep93xx}
1549 Cirrus Logic EP93xx based single-board computer bit-banging (in development)
1550 @end deffn
1551
1552 @deffn {Interface Driver} {ft2232}
1553 FTDI FT2232 (USB) based devices over one of the userspace libraries.
1554 These interfaces have several commands, used to configure the driver
1555 before initializing the JTAG scan chain:
1556
1557 @deffn {Config Command} {ft2232_device_desc} description
1558 Provides the USB device description (the @emph{iProduct string})
1559 of the FTDI FT2232 device. If not
1560 specified, the FTDI default value is used. This setting is only valid
1561 if compiled with FTD2XX support.
1562 @end deffn
1563
1564 @deffn {Config Command} {ft2232_serial} serial-number
1565 Specifies the @var{serial-number} of the FTDI FT2232 device to use,
1566 in case the vendor provides unique IDs and more than one FT2232 device
1567 is connected to the host.
1568 If not specified, serial numbers are not considered.
1569 (Note that USB serial numbers can be arbitrary Unicode strings,
1570 and are not restricted to containing only decimal digits.)
1571 @end deffn
1572
1573 @deffn {Config Command} {ft2232_layout} name
1574 Each vendor's FT2232 device can use different GPIO signals
1575 to control output-enables, reset signals, and LEDs.
1576 Currently valid layout @var{name} values include:
1577 @itemize @minus
1578 @item @b{axm0432_jtag} Axiom AXM-0432
1579 @item @b{comstick} Hitex STR9 comstick
1580 @item @b{cortino} Hitex Cortino JTAG interface
1581 @item @b{evb_lm3s811} Luminary Micro EVB_LM3S811 as a JTAG interface,
1582 either for the local Cortex-M3 (SRST only)
1583 or in a passthrough mode (neither SRST nor TRST)
1584 @item @b{luminary_icdi} Luminary In-Circuit Debug Interface (ICDI) Board
1585 @item @b{flyswatter} Tin Can Tools Flyswatter
1586 @item @b{icebear} ICEbear JTAG adapter from Section 5
1587 @item @b{jtagkey} Amontec JTAGkey and JTAGkey-Tiny (and compatibles)
1588 @item @b{m5960} American Microsystems M5960
1589 @item @b{olimex-jtag} Olimex ARM-USB-OCD and ARM-USB-Tiny
1590 @item @b{oocdlink} OOCDLink
1591 @c oocdlink ~= jtagkey_prototype_v1
1592 @item @b{sheevaplug} Marvell Sheevaplug development kit
1593 @item @b{signalyzer} Xverve Signalyzer
1594 @item @b{stm32stick} Hitex STM32 Performance Stick
1595 @item @b{turtelizer2} egnite Software turtelizer2
1596 @item @b{usbjtag} "USBJTAG-1" layout described in the OpenOCD diploma thesis
1597 @end itemize
1598 @end deffn
1599
1600 @deffn {Config Command} {ft2232_vid_pid} [vid pid]+
1601 The vendor ID and product ID of the FTDI FT2232 device. If not specified, the FTDI
1602 default values are used.
1603 Currently, up to eight [@var{vid}, @var{pid}] pairs may be given, e.g.
1604 @example
1605 ft2232_vid_pid 0x0403 0xcff8 0x15ba 0x0003
1606 @end example
1607 @end deffn
1608
1609 @deffn {Config Command} {ft2232_latency} ms
1610 On some systems using FT2232 based JTAG interfaces the FT_Read function call in
1611 ft2232_read() fails to return the expected number of bytes. This can be caused by
1612 USB communication delays and has proved hard to reproduce and debug. Setting the
1613 FT2232 latency timer to a larger value increases delays for short USB packets but it
1614 also reduces the risk of timeouts before receiving the expected number of bytes.
1615 The OpenOCD default value is 2 and for some systems a value of 10 has proved useful.
1616 @end deffn
1617
1618 For example, the interface config file for a
1619 Turtelizer JTAG Adapter looks something like this:
1620
1621 @example
1622 interface ft2232
1623 ft2232_device_desc "Turtelizer JTAG/RS232 Adapter"
1624 ft2232_layout turtelizer2
1625 ft2232_vid_pid 0x0403 0xbdc8
1626 @end example
1627 @end deffn
1628
1629 @deffn {Interface Driver} {gw16012}
1630 Gateworks GW16012 JTAG programmer.
1631 This has one driver-specific command:
1632
1633 @deffn {Config Command} {parport_port} number
1634 Specifies either the address of the I/O port (default: 0x378 for LPT1) or
1635 the number of the @file{/dev/parport} device.
1636 @end deffn
1637 @end deffn
1638
1639 @deffn {Interface Driver} {jlink}
1640 Segger jlink USB adapter
1641 @c command: jlink_info
1642 @c dumps status
1643 @c command: jlink_hw_jtag (2|3)
1644 @c sets version 2 or 3
1645 @end deffn
1646
1647 @deffn {Interface Driver} {parport}
1648 Supports PC parallel port bit-banging cables:
1649 Wigglers, PLD download cable, and more.
1650 These interfaces have several commands, used to configure the driver
1651 before initializing the JTAG scan chain:
1652
1653 @deffn {Config Command} {parport_cable} name
1654 The layout of the parallel port cable used to connect to the target.
1655 Currently valid cable @var{name} values include:
1656
1657 @itemize @minus
1658 @item @b{altium} Altium Universal JTAG cable.
1659 @item @b{arm-jtag} Same as original wiggler except SRST and
1660 TRST connections reversed and TRST is also inverted.
1661 @item @b{chameleon} The Amontec Chameleon's CPLD when operated
1662 in configuration mode. This is only used to
1663 program the Chameleon itself, not a connected target.
1664 @item @b{dlc5} The Xilinx Parallel cable III.
1665 @item @b{flashlink} The ST Parallel cable.
1666 @item @b{lattice} Lattice ispDOWNLOAD Cable
1667 @item @b{old_amt_wiggler} The Wiggler configuration that comes with
1668 some versions of
1669 Amontec's Chameleon Programmer. The new version available from
1670 the website uses the original Wiggler layout ('@var{wiggler}')
1671 @item @b{triton} The parallel port adapter found on the
1672 ``Karo Triton 1 Development Board''.
1673 This is also the layout used by the HollyGates design
1674 (see @uref{http://www.lartmaker.nl/projects/jtag/}).
1675 @item @b{wiggler} The original Wiggler layout, also supported by
1676 several clones, such as the Olimex ARM-JTAG
1677 @item @b{wiggler2} Same as original wiggler except an led is fitted on D5.
1678 @item @b{wiggler_ntrst_inverted} Same as original wiggler except TRST is inverted.
1679 @end itemize
1680 @end deffn
1681
1682 @deffn {Config Command} {parport_port} number
1683 Either the address of the I/O port (default: 0x378 for LPT1) or the number of
1684 the @file{/dev/parport} device
1685
1686 When using PPDEV to access the parallel port, use the number of the parallel port:
1687 @option{parport_port 0} (the default). If @option{parport_port 0x378} is specified
1688 you may encounter a problem.
1689 @end deffn
1690
1691 @deffn {Config Command} {parport_write_on_exit} (on|off)
1692 This will configure the parallel driver to write a known
1693 cable-specific value to the parallel interface on exiting OpenOCD
1694 @end deffn
1695
1696 For example, the interface configuration file for a
1697 classic ``Wiggler'' cable might look something like this:
1698
1699 @example
1700 interface parport
1701 parport_port 0xc8b8
1702 parport_cable wiggler
1703 @end example
1704 @end deffn
1705
1706 @deffn {Interface Driver} {presto}
1707 ASIX PRESTO USB JTAG programmer.
1708 @c command: presto_serial str
1709 @c sets serial number
1710 @end deffn
1711
1712 @deffn {Interface Driver} {rlink}
1713 Raisonance RLink USB adapter
1714 @end deffn
1715
1716 @deffn {Interface Driver} {usbprog}
1717 usbprog is a freely programmable USB adapter.
1718 @end deffn
1719
1720 @deffn {Interface Driver} {vsllink}
1721 vsllink is part of Versaloon which is a versatile USB programmer.
1722
1723 @quotation Note
1724 This defines quite a few driver-specific commands,
1725 which are not currently documented here.
1726 @end quotation
1727 @end deffn
1728
1729 @deffn {Interface Driver} {ZY1000}
1730 This is the Zylin ZY1000 JTAG debugger.
1731
1732 @quotation Note
1733 This defines some driver-specific commands,
1734 which are not currently documented here.
1735 @end quotation
1736
1737 @deffn Command power [@option{on}|@option{off}]
1738 Turn power switch to target on/off.
1739 No arguments: print status.
1740 @end deffn
1741
1742 @end deffn
1743
1744 @anchor{JTAG Speed}
1745 @section JTAG Speed
1746 JTAG clock setup is part of system setup.
1747 It @emph{does not belong with interface setup} since any interface
1748 only knows a few of the constraints for the JTAG clock speed.
1749 Sometimes the JTAG speed is
1750 changed during the target initialization process: (1) slow at
1751 reset, (2) program the CPU clocks, (3) run fast.
1752 Both the "slow" and "fast" clock rates are functions of the
1753 oscillators used, the chip, the board design, and sometimes
1754 power management software that may be active.
1755
1756 The speed used during reset can be adjusted using pre_reset
1757 and post_reset event handlers.
1758 @xref{Target Events}.
1759
1760 If your system supports adaptive clocking (RTCK), configuring
1761 JTAG to use that is probably the most robust approach.
1762 However, it introduces delays to synchronize clocks; so it
1763 may not be the fastest solution.
1764
1765 @b{NOTE:} Script writers should consider using @command{jtag_rclk}
1766 instead of @command{jtag_khz}.
1767
1768 @deffn {Command} jtag_khz max_speed_kHz
1769 A non-zero speed is in KHZ. Hence: 3000 is 3mhz.
1770 JTAG interfaces usually support a limited number of
1771 speeds. The speed actually used won't be faster
1772 than the speed specified.
1773
1774 As a rule of thumb, if you specify a clock rate make
1775 sure the JTAG clock is no more than @math{1/6th CPU-Clock}.
1776 This is especially true for synthesized cores (ARMxxx-S).
1777
1778 Speed 0 (khz) selects RTCK method.
1779 @xref{FAQ RTCK}.
1780 If your system uses RTCK, you won't need to change the
1781 JTAG clocking after setup.
1782 Not all interfaces, boards, or targets support ``rtck''.
1783 If the interface device can not
1784 support it, an error is returned when you try to use RTCK.
1785 @end deffn
1786
1787 @defun jtag_rclk fallback_speed_kHz
1788 @cindex RTCK
1789 This Tcl proc (defined in @file{startup.tcl}) attempts to enable RTCK/RCLK.
1790 If that fails (maybe the interface, board, or target doesn't
1791 support it), falls back to the specified frequency.
1792 @example
1793 # Fall back to 3mhz if RTCK is not supported
1794 jtag_rclk 3000
1795 @end example
1796 @end defun
1797
1798 @node Reset Configuration
1799 @chapter Reset Configuration
1800 @cindex Reset Configuration
1801
1802 Every system configuration may require a different reset
1803 configuration. This can also be quite confusing.
1804 Resets also interact with @var{reset-init} event handlers,
1805 which do things like setting up clocks and DRAM, and
1806 JTAG clock rates. (@xref{JTAG Speed}.)
1807 They can also interact with JTAG routers.
1808 Please see the various board files for examples.
1809
1810 @quotation Note
1811 To maintainers and integrators:
1812 Reset configuration touches several things at once.
1813 Normally the board configuration file
1814 should define it and assume that the JTAG adapter supports
1815 everything that's wired up to the board's JTAG connector.
1816
1817 However, the target configuration file could also make note
1818 of something the silicon vendor has done inside the chip,
1819 which will be true for most (or all) boards using that chip.
1820 And when the JTAG adapter doesn't support everything, the
1821 user configuration file will need to override parts of
1822 the reset configuration provided by other files.
1823 @end quotation
1824
1825 @section Types of Reset
1826
1827 There are many kinds of reset possible through JTAG, but
1828 they may not all work with a given board and adapter.
1829 That's part of why reset configuration can be error prone.
1830
1831 @itemize @bullet
1832 @item
1833 @emph{System Reset} ... the @emph{SRST} hardware signal
1834 resets all chips connected to the JTAG adapter, such as processors,
1835 power management chips, and I/O controllers. Normally resets triggered
1836 with this signal behave exactly like pressing a RESET button.
1837 @item
1838 @emph{JTAG TAP Reset} ... the @emph{TRST} hardware signal resets
1839 just the TAP controllers connected to the JTAG adapter.
1840 Such resets should not be visible to the rest of the system; resetting a
1841 device's the TAP controller just puts that controller into a known state.
1842 @item
1843 @emph{Emulation Reset} ... many devices can be reset through JTAG
1844 commands. These resets are often distinguishable from system
1845 resets, either explicitly (a "reset reason" register says so)
1846 or implicitly (not all parts of the chip get reset).
1847 @item
1848 @emph{Other Resets} ... system-on-chip devices often support
1849 several other types of reset.
1850 You may need to arrange that a watchdog timer stops
1851 while debugging, preventing a watchdog reset.
1852 There may be individual module resets.
1853 @end itemize
1854
1855 In the best case, OpenOCD can hold SRST, then reset
1856 the TAPs via TRST and send commands through JTAG to halt the
1857 CPU at the reset vector before the 1st instruction is executed.
1858 Then when it finally releases the SRST signal, the system is
1859 halted under debugger control before any code has executed.
1860 This is the behavior required to support the @command{reset halt}
1861 and @command{reset init} commands; after @command{reset init} a
1862 board-specific script might do things like setting up DRAM.
1863 (@xref{Reset Command}.)
1864
1865 @anchor{SRST and TRST Issues}
1866 @section SRST and TRST Issues
1867
1868 Because SRST and TRST are hardware signals, they can have a
1869 variety of system-specific constraints. Some of the most
1870 common issues are:
1871
1872 @itemize @bullet
1873
1874 @item @emph{Signal not available} ... Some boards don't wire
1875 SRST or TRST to the JTAG connector. Some JTAG adapters don't
1876 support such signals even if they are wired up.
1877 Use the @command{reset_config} @var{signals} options to say
1878 when either of those signals is not connected.
1879 When SRST is not available, your code might not be able to rely
1880 on controllers having been fully reset during code startup.
1881 Missing TRST is not a problem, since JTAG level resets can
1882 be triggered using with TMS signaling.
1883
1884 @item @emph{Signals shorted} ... Sometimes a chip, board, or
1885 adapter will connect SRST to TRST, instead of keeping them separate.
1886 Use the @command{reset_config} @var{combination} options to say
1887 when those signals aren't properly independent.
1888
1889 @item @emph{Timing} ... Reset circuitry like a resistor/capacitor
1890 delay circuit, reset supervisor, or on-chip features can extend
1891 the effect of a JTAG adapter's reset for some time after the adapter
1892 stops issuing the reset. For example, there may be chip or board
1893 requirements that all reset pulses last for at least a
1894 certain amount of time; and reset buttons commonly have
1895 hardware debouncing.
1896 Use the @command{jtag_nsrst_delay} and @command{jtag_ntrst_delay}
1897 commands to say when extra delays are needed.
1898
1899 @item @emph{Drive type} ... Reset lines often have a pullup
1900 resistor, letting the JTAG interface treat them as open-drain
1901 signals. But that's not a requirement, so the adapter may need
1902 to use push/pull output drivers.
1903 Also, with weak pullups it may be advisable to drive
1904 signals to both levels (push/pull) to minimize rise times.
1905 Use the @command{reset_config} @var{trst_type} and
1906 @var{srst_type} parameters to say how to drive reset signals.
1907
1908 @item @emph{Special initialization} ... Targets sometimes need
1909 special JTAG initialization sequences to handle chip-specific
1910 issues (not limited to errata).
1911 For example, certain JTAG commands might need to be issued while
1912 the system as a whole is in a reset state (SRST active)
1913 but the JTAG scan chain is usable (TRST inactive).
1914 (@xref{JTAG Commands}, where the @command{jtag_reset}
1915 command is presented.)
1916 @end itemize
1917
1918 There can also be other issues.
1919 Some devices don't fully conform to the JTAG specifications.
1920 Trivial system-specific differences are common, such as
1921 SRST and TRST using slightly different names.
1922 There are also vendors who distribute key JTAG documentation for
1923 their chips only to developers who have signed a Non-Disclosure
1924 Agreement (NDA).
1925
1926 Sometimes there are chip-specific extensions like a requirement to use
1927 the normally-optional TRST signal (precluding use of JTAG adapters which
1928 don't pass TRST through), or needing extra steps to complete a TAP reset.
1929
1930 In short, SRST and especially TRST handling may be very finicky,
1931 needing to cope with both architecture and board specific constraints.
1932
1933 @section Commands for Handling Resets
1934
1935 @deffn {Command} jtag_nsrst_delay milliseconds
1936 How long (in milliseconds) OpenOCD should wait after deasserting
1937 nSRST (active-low system reset) before starting new JTAG operations.
1938 When a board has a reset button connected to SRST line it will
1939 probably have hardware debouncing, implying you should use this.
1940 @end deffn
1941
1942 @deffn {Command} jtag_ntrst_delay milliseconds
1943 How long (in milliseconds) OpenOCD should wait after deasserting
1944 nTRST (active-low JTAG TAP reset) before starting new JTAG operations.
1945 @end deffn
1946
1947 @deffn {Command} reset_config mode_flag ...
1948 This command tells OpenOCD the reset configuration
1949 of your combination of JTAG board and target in target
1950 configuration scripts.
1951
1952 Information earlier in this section describes the kind of problems
1953 the command is intended to address (@pxref{SRST and TRST Issues}).
1954 As a rule this command belongs only in board config files,
1955 describing issues like @emph{board doesn't connect TRST};
1956 or in user config files, addressing limitations derived
1957 from a particular combination of interface and board.
1958 (An unlikely example would be using a TRST-only adapter
1959 with a board that only wires up SRST.)
1960
1961 The @var{mode_flag} options can be specified in any order, but only one
1962 of each type -- @var{signals}, @var{combination}, @var{trst_type},
1963 and @var{srst_type} -- may be specified at a time.
1964 If you don't provide a new value for a given type, its previous
1965 value (perhaps the default) is unchanged.
1966 For example, this means that you don't need to say anything at all about
1967 TRST just to declare that if the JTAG adapter should want to drive SRST,
1968 it must explicitly be driven high (@option{srst_push_pull}).
1969
1970 @var{signals} can specify which of the reset signals are connected.
1971 For example, If the JTAG interface provides SRST, but the board doesn't
1972 connect that signal properly, then OpenOCD can't use it.
1973 Possible values are @option{none} (the default), @option{trst_only},
1974 @option{srst_only} and @option{trst_and_srst}.
1975
1976 @quotation Tip
1977 If your board provides SRST or TRST through the JTAG connector,
1978 you must declare that or else those signals will not be used.
1979 @end quotation
1980
1981 The @var{combination} is an optional value specifying broken reset
1982 signal implementations.
1983 The default behaviour if no option given is @option{separate},
1984 indicating everything behaves normally.
1985 @option{srst_pulls_trst} states that the
1986 test logic is reset together with the reset of the system (e.g. Philips
1987 LPC2000, "broken" board layout), @option{trst_pulls_srst} says that
1988 the system is reset together with the test logic (only hypothetical, I
1989 haven't seen hardware with such a bug, and can be worked around).
1990 @option{combined} implies both @option{srst_pulls_trst} and
1991 @option{trst_pulls_srst}.
1992
1993 The optional @var{trst_type} and @var{srst_type} parameters allow the
1994 driver mode of each reset line to be specified. These values only affect
1995 JTAG interfaces with support for different driver modes, like the Amontec
1996 JTAGkey and JTAGAccelerator. Also, they are necessarily ignored if the
1997 relevant signal (TRST or SRST) is not connected.
1998
1999 Possible @var{trst_type} driver modes for the test reset signal (TRST)
2000 are @option{trst_push_pull} (default) and @option{trst_open_drain}.
2001 Most boards connect this signal to a pulldown, so the JTAG TAPs
2002 never leave reset unless they are hooked up to a JTAG adapter.
2003
2004 Possible @var{srst_type} driver modes for the system reset signal (SRST)
2005 are the default @option{srst_open_drain}, and @option{srst_push_pull}.
2006 Most boards connect this signal to a pullup, and allow the
2007 signal to be pulled low by various events including system
2008 powerup and pressing a reset button.
2009 @end deffn
2010
2011
2012 @node TAP Declaration
2013 @chapter TAP Declaration
2014 @cindex TAP declaration
2015 @cindex TAP configuration
2016
2017 @emph{Test Access Ports} (TAPs) are the core of JTAG.
2018 TAPs serve many roles, including:
2019
2020 @itemize @bullet
2021 @item @b{Debug Target} A CPU TAP can be used as a GDB debug target
2022 @item @b{Flash Programing} Some chips program the flash directly via JTAG.
2023 Others do it indirectly, making a CPU do it.
2024 @item @b{Program Download} Using the same CPU support GDB uses,
2025 you can initialize a DRAM controller, download code to DRAM, and then
2026 start running that code.
2027 @item @b{Boundary Scan} Most chips support boundary scan, which
2028 helps test for board assembly problems like solder bridges
2029 and missing connections
2030 @end itemize
2031
2032 OpenOCD must know about the active TAPs on your board(s).
2033 Setting up the TAPs is the core task of your configuration files.
2034 Once those TAPs are set up, you can pass their names to code
2035 which sets up CPUs and exports them as GDB targets,
2036 probes flash memory, performs low-level JTAG operations, and more.
2037
2038 @section Scan Chains
2039 @cindex scan chain
2040
2041 TAPs are part of a hardware @dfn{scan chain},
2042 which is daisy chain of TAPs.
2043 They also need to be added to
2044 OpenOCD's software mirror of that hardware list,
2045 giving each member a name and associating other data with it.
2046 Simple scan chains, with a single TAP, are common in
2047 systems with a single microcontroller or microprocessor.
2048 More complex chips may have several TAPs internally.
2049 Very complex scan chains might have a dozen or more TAPs:
2050 several in one chip, more in the next, and connecting
2051 to other boards with their own chips and TAPs.
2052
2053 You can display the list with the @command{scan_chain} command.
2054 (Don't confuse this with the list displayed by the @command{targets}
2055 command, presented in the next chapter.
2056 That only displays TAPs for CPUs which are configured as
2057 debugging targets.)
2058 Here's what the scan chain might look like for a chip more than one TAP:
2059
2060 @verbatim
2061 TapName Enabled IdCode Expected IrLen IrCap IrMask Instr
2062 -- ------------------ ------- ---------- ---------- ----- ----- ------ -----
2063 0 omap5912.dsp Y 0x03df1d81 0x03df1d81 38 0 0 0x...
2064 1 omap5912.arm Y 0x0692602f 0x0692602f 4 0x1 0 0xc
2065 2 omap5912.unknown Y 0x00000000 0x00000000 8 0 0 0xff
2066 @end verbatim
2067
2068 Unfortunately those TAPs can't always be autoconfigured,
2069 because not all devices provide good support for that.
2070 JTAG doesn't require supporting IDCODE instructions, and
2071 chips with JTAG routers may not link TAPs into the chain
2072 until they are told to do so.
2073
2074 The configuration mechanism currently supported by OpenOCD
2075 requires explicit configuration of all TAP devices using
2076 @command{jtag newtap} commands, as detailed later in this chapter.
2077 A command like this would declare one tap and name it @code{chip1.cpu}:
2078
2079 @example
2080 jtag newtap chip1 cpu -irlen 7 -ircapture 0x01 -irmask 0x55
2081 @end example
2082
2083 Each target configuration file lists the TAPs provided
2084 by a given chip.
2085 Board configuration files combine all the targets on a board,
2086 and so forth.
2087 Note that @emph{the order in which TAPs are declared is very important.}
2088 It must match the order in the JTAG scan chain, both inside
2089 a single chip and between them.
2090 @xref{FAQ TAP Order}.
2091
2092 For example, the ST Microsystems STR912 chip has
2093 three separate TAPs@footnote{See the ST
2094 document titled: @emph{STR91xFAxxx, Section 3.15 Jtag Interface, Page:
2095 28/102, Figure 3: JTAG chaining inside the STR91xFA}.
2096 @url{http://eu.st.com/stonline/products/literature/ds/13495.pdf}}.
2097 To configure those taps, @file{target/str912.cfg}
2098 includes commands something like this:
2099
2100 @example
2101 jtag newtap str912 flash ... params ...
2102 jtag newtap str912 cpu ... params ...
2103 jtag newtap str912 bs ... params ...
2104 @end example
2105
2106 Actual config files use a variable instead of literals like
2107 @option{str912}, to support more than one chip of each type.
2108 @xref{Config File Guidelines}.
2109
2110 @deffn Command {jtag names}
2111 Returns the names of all current TAPs in the scan chain.
2112 Use @command{jtag cget} or @command{jtag tapisenabled}
2113 to examine attributes and state of each TAP.
2114 @example
2115 foreach t [jtag names] @{
2116 puts [format "TAP: %s\n" $t]
2117 @}
2118 @end example
2119 @end deffn
2120
2121 @deffn Command {scan_chain}
2122 Displays the TAPs in the scan chain configuration,
2123 and their status.
2124 The set of TAPs listed by this command is fixed by
2125 exiting the OpenOCD configuration stage,
2126 but systems with a JTAG router can
2127 enable or disable TAPs dynamically.
2128 In addition to the enable/disable status, the contents of
2129 each TAP's instruction register can also change.
2130 @end deffn
2131
2132 @c FIXME! "jtag cget" should be able to return all TAP
2133 @c attributes, like "$target_name cget" does for targets.
2134
2135 @c Probably want "jtag eventlist", and a "tap-reset" event
2136 @c (on entry to RESET state).
2137
2138 @section TAP Names
2139 @cindex dotted name
2140
2141 When TAP objects are declared with @command{jtag newtap},
2142 a @dfn{dotted.name} is created for the TAP, combining the
2143 name of a module (usually a chip) and a label for the TAP.
2144 For example: @code{xilinx.tap}, @code{str912.flash},
2145 @code{omap3530.jrc}, @code{dm6446.dsp}, or @code{stm32.cpu}.
2146 Many other commands use that dotted.name to manipulate or
2147 refer to the TAP. For example, CPU configuration uses the
2148 name, as does declaration of NAND or NOR flash banks.
2149
2150 The components of a dotted name should follow ``C'' symbol
2151 name rules: start with an alphabetic character, then numbers
2152 and underscores are OK; while others (including dots!) are not.
2153
2154 @quotation Tip
2155 In older code, JTAG TAPs were numbered from 0..N.
2156 This feature is still present.
2157 However its use is highly discouraged, and
2158 should not be relied on; it will be removed by mid-2010.
2159 Update all of your scripts to use TAP names rather than numbers,
2160 by paying attention to the runtime warnings they trigger.
2161 Using TAP numbers in target configuration scripts prevents
2162 reusing those scripts on boards with multiple targets.
2163 @end quotation
2164
2165 @section TAP Declaration Commands
2166
2167 @c shouldn't this be(come) a {Config Command}?
2168 @anchor{jtag newtap}
2169 @deffn Command {jtag newtap} chipname tapname configparams...
2170 Declares a new TAP with the dotted name @var{chipname}.@var{tapname},
2171 and configured according to the various @var{configparams}.
2172
2173 The @var{chipname} is a symbolic name for the chip.
2174 Conventionally target config files use @code{$_CHIPNAME},
2175 defaulting to the model name given by the chip vendor but
2176 overridable.
2177
2178 @cindex TAP naming convention
2179 The @var{tapname} reflects the role of that TAP,
2180 and should follow this convention:
2181
2182 @itemize @bullet
2183 @item @code{bs} -- For boundary scan if this is a seperate TAP;
2184 @item @code{cpu} -- The main CPU of the chip, alternatively
2185 @code{arm} and @code{dsp} on chips with both ARM and DSP CPUs,
2186 @code{arm1} and @code{arm2} on chips two ARMs, and so forth;
2187 @item @code{etb} -- For an embedded trace buffer (example: an ARM ETB11);
2188 @item @code{flash} -- If the chip has a flash TAP, like the str912;
2189 @item @code{jrc} -- For JTAG route controller (example: the ICEpick modules
2190 on many Texas Instruments chips, like the OMAP3530 on Beagleboards);
2191 @item @code{tap} -- Should be used only FPGA or CPLD like devices
2192 with a single TAP;
2193 @item @code{unknownN} -- If you have no idea what the TAP is for (N is a number);
2194 @item @emph{when in doubt} -- Use the chip maker's name in their data sheet.
2195 For example, the Freescale IMX31 has a SDMA (Smart DMA) with
2196 a JTAG TAP; that TAP should be named @code{sdma}.
2197 @end itemize
2198
2199 Every TAP requires at least the following @var{configparams}:
2200
2201 @itemize @bullet
2202 @item @code{-ircapture} @var{NUMBER}
2203 @*The bit pattern loaded by the TAP into the JTAG shift register
2204 on entry to the @sc{ircapture} state, such as 0x01.
2205 JTAG requires the two LSBs of this value to be 01.
2206 The value is used to verify that instruction scans work correctly.
2207 @item @code{-irlen} @var{NUMBER}
2208 @*The length in bits of the
2209 instruction register, such as 4 or 5 bits.
2210 @item @code{-irmask} @var{NUMBER}
2211 @*A mask for the IR register.
2212 For some devices, there are bits in the IR that aren't used.
2213 This lets OpenOCD mask them off when doing IDCODE comparisons.
2214 In general, this should just be all ones for the size of the IR.
2215 @end itemize
2216
2217 A TAP may also provide optional @var{configparams}:
2218
2219 @itemize @bullet
2220 @item @code{-disable} (or @code{-enable})
2221 @*Use the @code{-disable} parameter to flag a TAP which is not
2222 linked in to the scan chain after a reset using either TRST
2223 or the JTAG state machine's @sc{reset} state.
2224 You may use @code{-enable} to highlight the default state
2225 (the TAP is linked in).
2226 @xref{Enabling and Disabling TAPs}.
2227 @item @code{-expected-id} @var{number}
2228 @*A non-zero value represents the expected 32-bit IDCODE
2229 found when the JTAG chain is examined.
2230 These codes are not required by all JTAG devices.
2231 @emph{Repeat the option} as many times as required if more than one
2232 ID code could appear (for example, multiple versions).
2233 @end itemize
2234 @end deffn
2235
2236 @c @deffn Command {jtag arp_init-reset}
2237 @c ... more or less "init" ?
2238
2239 @anchor{Enabling and Disabling TAPs}
2240 @section Enabling and Disabling TAPs
2241 @cindex TAP events
2242 @cindex JTAG Route Controller
2243 @cindex jrc
2244
2245 In some systems, a @dfn{JTAG Route Controller} (JRC)
2246 is used to enable and/or disable specific JTAG TAPs.
2247 Many ARM based chips from Texas Instruments include
2248 an ``ICEpick'' module, which is a JRC.
2249 Such chips include DaVinci and OMAP3 processors.
2250
2251 A given TAP may not be visible until the JRC has been
2252 told to link it into the scan chain; and if the JRC
2253 has been told to unlink that TAP, it will no longer
2254 be visible.
2255 Such routers address problems that JTAG ``bypass mode''
2256 ignores, such as:
2257
2258 @itemize
2259 @item The scan chain can only go as fast as its slowest TAP.
2260 @item Having many TAPs slows instruction scans, since all
2261 TAPs receive new instructions.
2262 @item TAPs in the scan chain must be powered up, which wastes
2263 power and prevents debugging some power management mechanisms.
2264 @end itemize
2265
2266 The IEEE 1149.1 JTAG standard has no concept of a ``disabled'' tap,
2267 as implied by the existence of JTAG routers.
2268 However, the upcoming IEEE 1149.7 framework (layered on top of JTAG)
2269 does include a kind of JTAG router functionality.
2270
2271 @c (a) currently the event handlers don't seem to be able to
2272 @c fail in a way that could lead to no-change-of-state.
2273 @c (b) eventually non-event configuration should be possible,
2274 @c in which case some this documentation must move.
2275
2276 @deffn Command {jtag cget} dotted.name @option{-event} name
2277 @deffnx Command {jtag configure} dotted.name @option{-event} name string
2278 At this writing this mechanism is used only for event handling,
2279 and the only two events relate to TAP enabling and disabling.
2280
2281 The @code{configure} subcommand assigns an event handler,
2282 a TCL string which is evaluated when the event is triggered.
2283 The @code{cget} subcommand returns that handler.
2284 The two possible values for an event @var{name}
2285 are @option{tap-disable} and @option{tap-enable}.
2286
2287 So for example, when defining a TAP for a CPU connected to
2288 a JTAG router, you should define TAP event handlers using
2289 code that looks something like this:
2290
2291 @example
2292 jtag configure CHIP.cpu -event tap-enable @{
2293 echo "Enabling CPU TAP"
2294 ... jtag operations using CHIP.jrc
2295 @}
2296 jtag configure CHIP.cpu -event tap-disable @{
2297 echo "Disabling CPU TAP"
2298 ... jtag operations using CHIP.jrc
2299 @}
2300 @end example
2301 @end deffn
2302
2303 @deffn Command {jtag tapdisable} dotted.name
2304 @deffnx Command {jtag tapenable} dotted.name
2305 @deffnx Command {jtag tapisenabled} dotted.name
2306 These three commands all return the string "1" if the tap
2307 specified by @var{dotted.name} is enabled,
2308 and "0" if it is disbabled.
2309 The @command{tapenable} variant first enables the tap
2310 by sending it a @option{tap-enable} event.
2311 The @command{tapdisable} variant first disables the tap
2312 by sending it a @option{tap-disable} event.
2313
2314 @quotation Note
2315 Humans will find the @command{scan_chain} command more helpful
2316 than the script-oriented @command{tapisenabled}
2317 for querying the state of the JTAG taps.
2318 @end quotation
2319 @end deffn
2320
2321 @node CPU Configuration
2322 @chapter CPU Configuration
2323 @cindex GDB target
2324
2325 This chapter discusses how to set up GDB debug targets for CPUs.
2326 You can also access these targets without GDB
2327 (@pxref{Architecture and Core Commands},
2328 and @ref{Target State handling}) and
2329 through various kinds of NAND and NOR flash commands.
2330 If you have multiple CPUs you can have multiple such targets.
2331
2332 We'll start by looking at how to examine the targets you have,
2333 then look at how to add one more target and how to configure it.
2334
2335 @section Target List
2336 @cindex target, current
2337 @cindex target, list
2338
2339 All targets that have been set up are part of a list,
2340 where each member has a name.
2341 That name should normally be the same as the TAP name.
2342 You can display the list with the @command{targets}
2343 (plural!) command.
2344 This display often has only one CPU; here's what it might
2345 look like with more than one:
2346 @verbatim
2347 TargetName Type Endian TapName State
2348 -- ------------------ ---------- ------ ------------------ ------------
2349 0* at91rm9200.cpu arm920t little at91rm9200.cpu running
2350 1 MyTarget cortex_m3 little mychip.foo tap-disabled
2351 @end verbatim
2352
2353 One member of that list is the @dfn{current target}, which
2354 is implicitly referenced by many commands.
2355 It's the one marked with a @code{*} near the target name.
2356 In particular, memory addresses often refer to the address
2357 space seen by that current target.
2358 Commands like @command{mdw} (memory display words)
2359 and @command{flash erase_address} (erase NOR flash blocks)
2360 are examples; and there are many more.
2361
2362 Several commands let you examine the list of targets:
2363
2364 @deffn Command {target count}
2365 Returns the number of targets, @math{N}.
2366 The highest numbered target is @math{N - 1}.
2367 @example
2368 set c [target count]
2369 for @{ set x 0 @} @{ $x < $c @} @{ incr x @} @{
2370 # Assuming you have created this function
2371 print_target_details $x
2372 @}
2373 @end example
2374 @end deffn
2375
2376 @deffn Command {target current}
2377 Returns the name of the current target.
2378 @end deffn
2379
2380 @deffn Command {target names}
2381 Lists the names of all current targets in the list.
2382 @example
2383 foreach t [target names] @{
2384 puts [format "Target: %s\n" $t]
2385 @}
2386 @end example
2387 @end deffn
2388
2389 @deffn Command {target number} number
2390 The list of targets is numbered starting at zero.
2391 This command returns the name of the target at index @var{number}.
2392 @example
2393 set thename [target number $x]
2394 puts [format "Target %d is: %s\n" $x $thename]
2395 @end example
2396 @end deffn
2397
2398 @c yep, "target list" would have been better.
2399 @c plus maybe "target setdefault".
2400
2401 @deffn Command targets [name]
2402 @emph{Note: the name of this command is plural. Other target
2403 command names are singular.}
2404
2405 With no parameter, this command displays a table of all known
2406 targets in a user friendly form.
2407
2408 With a parameter, this command sets the current target to
2409 the given target with the given @var{name}; this is
2410 only relevant on boards which have more than one target.
2411 @end deffn
2412
2413 @section Target CPU Types and Variants
2414 @cindex target type
2415 @cindex CPU type
2416 @cindex CPU variant
2417
2418 Each target has a @dfn{CPU type}, as shown in the output of
2419 the @command{targets} command. You need to specify that type
2420 when calling @command{target create}.
2421 The CPU type indicates more than just the instruction set.
2422 It also indicates how that instruction set is implemented,
2423 what kind of debug support it integrates,
2424 whether it has an MMU (and if so, what kind),
2425 what core-specific commands may be available
2426 (@pxref{Architecture and Core Commands}),
2427 and more.
2428
2429 For some CPU types, OpenOCD also defines @dfn{variants} which
2430 indicate differences that affect their handling.
2431 For example, a particular implementation bug might need to be
2432 worked around in some chip versions.
2433
2434 It's easy to see what target types are supported,
2435 since there's a command to list them.
2436 However, there is currently no way to list what target variants
2437 are supported (other than by reading the OpenOCD source code).
2438
2439 @anchor{target types}
2440 @deffn Command {target types}
2441 Lists all supported target types.
2442 At this writing, the supported CPU types and variants are:
2443
2444 @itemize @bullet
2445 @item @code{arm11} -- this is a generation of ARMv6 cores
2446 @item @code{arm720t} -- this is an ARMv4 core
2447 @item @code{arm7tdmi} -- this is an ARMv4 core
2448 @item @code{arm920t} -- this is an ARMv5 core
2449 @item @code{arm926ejs} -- this is an ARMv5 core
2450 @item @code{arm966e} -- this is an ARMv5 core
2451 @item @code{arm9tdmi} -- this is an ARMv4 core
2452 @item @code{avr} -- implements Atmel's 8-bit AVR instruction set.
2453 (Support for this is preliminary and incomplete.)
2454 @item @code{cortex_a8} -- this is an ARMv7 core
2455 @item @code{cortex_m3} -- this is an ARMv7 core, supporting only the
2456 compact Thumb2 instruction set. It supports one variant:
2457 @itemize @minus
2458 @item @code{lm3s} ... Use this when debugging older Stellaris LM3S targets.
2459 This will cause OpenOCD to use a software reset rather than asserting
2460 SRST, to avoid a issue with clearing the debug registers.
2461 This is fixed in Fury Rev B, DustDevil Rev B, Tempest; these revisions will
2462 be detected and the normal reset behaviour used.
2463 @end itemize
2464 @item @code{fa526} -- resembles arm920 (w/o Thumb)
2465 @item @code{feroceon} -- resembles arm926
2466 @item @code{mips_m4k} -- a MIPS core. This supports one variant:
2467 @itemize @minus
2468 @item @code{ejtag_srst} ... Use this when debugging targets that do not
2469 provide a functional SRST line on the EJTAG connector. This causes
2470 OpenOCD to instead use an EJTAG software reset command to reset the
2471 processor.
2472 You still need to enable @option{srst} on the @command{reset_config}
2473 command to enable OpenOCD hardware reset functionality.
2474 @end itemize
2475 @item @code{xscale} -- this is actually an architecture,
2476 not a CPU type. It is based on the ARMv5 architecture.
2477 There are several variants defined:
2478 @itemize @minus
2479 @item @code{ixp42x}, @code{ixp45x}, @code{ixp46x},
2480 @code{pxa27x} ... instruction register length is 7 bits
2481 @item @code{pxa250}, @code{pxa255},
2482 @code{pxa26x} ... instruction register length is 5 bits
2483 @end itemize
2484 @end itemize
2485 @end deffn
2486
2487 To avoid being confused by the variety of ARM based cores, remember
2488 this key point: @emph{ARM is a technology licencing company}.
2489 (See: @url{http://www.arm.com}.)
2490 The CPU name used by OpenOCD will reflect the CPU design that was
2491 licenced, not a vendor brand which incorporates that design.
2492 Name prefixes like arm7, arm9, arm11, and cortex
2493 reflect design generations;
2494 while names like ARMv4, ARMv5, ARMv6, and ARMv7
2495 reflect an architecture version implemented by a CPU design.
2496
2497 @anchor{Target Configuration}
2498 @section Target Configuration
2499
2500 Before creating a ``target'', you must have added its TAP to the scan chain.
2501 When you've added that TAP, you will have a @code{dotted.name}
2502 which is used to set up the CPU support.
2503 The chip-specific configuration file will normally configure its CPU(s)
2504 right after it adds all of the chip's TAPs to the scan chain.
2505
2506 Although you can set up a target in one step, it's often clearer if you
2507 use shorter commands and do it in two steps: create it, then configure
2508 optional parts.
2509 All operations on the target after it's created will use a new
2510 command, created as part of target creation.
2511
2512 The two main things to configure after target creation are
2513 a work area, which usually has target-specific defaults even
2514 if the board setup code overrides them later;
2515 and event handlers (@pxref{Target Events}), which tend
2516 to be much more board-specific.
2517 The key steps you use might look something like this
2518
2519 @example
2520 target create MyTarget cortex_m3 -chain-position mychip.cpu
2521 $MyTarget configure -work-area-phys 0x08000 -work-area-size 8096
2522 $MyTarget configure -event reset-deassert-pre @{ jtag_rclk 5 @}
2523 $MyTarget configure -event reset-init @{ myboard_reinit @}
2524 @end example
2525
2526 You should specify a working area if you can; typically it uses some
2527 on-chip SRAM.
2528 Such a working area can speed up many things, including bulk
2529 writes to target memory;
2530 flash operations like checking to see if memory needs to be erased;
2531 GDB memory checksumming;
2532 and more.
2533
2534 @quotation Warning
2535 On more complex chips, the work area can become
2536 inaccessible when application code
2537 (such as an operating system)
2538 enables or disables the MMU.
2539 For example, the particular MMU context used to acess the virtual
2540 address will probably matter ... and that context might not have
2541 easy access to other addresses needed.
2542 At this writing, OpenOCD doesn't have much MMU intelligence.
2543 @end quotation
2544
2545 It's often very useful to define a @code{reset-init} event handler.
2546 For systems that are normally used with a boot loader,
2547 common tasks include updating clocks and initializing memory
2548 controllers.
2549 That may be needed to let you write the boot loader into flash,
2550 in order to ``de-brick'' your board; or to load programs into
2551 external DDR memory without having run the boot loader.
2552
2553 @deffn Command {target create} target_name type configparams...
2554 This command creates a GDB debug target that refers to a specific JTAG tap.
2555 It enters that target into a list, and creates a new
2556 command (@command{@var{target_name}}) which is used for various
2557 purposes including additional configuration.
2558
2559 @itemize @bullet
2560 @item @var{target_name} ... is the name of the debug target.
2561 By convention this should be the same as the @emph{dotted.name}
2562 of the TAP associated with this target, which must be specified here
2563 using the @code{-chain-position @var{dotted.name}} configparam.
2564
2565 This name is also used to create the target object command,
2566 referred to here as @command{$target_name},
2567 and in other places the target needs to be identified.
2568 @item @var{type} ... specifies the target type. @xref{target types}.
2569 @item @var{configparams} ... all parameters accepted by
2570 @command{$target_name configure} are permitted.
2571 If the target is big-endian, set it here with @code{-endian big}.
2572 If the variant matters, set it here with @code{-variant}.
2573
2574 You @emph{must} set the @code{-chain-position @var{dotted.name}} here.
2575 @end itemize
2576 @end deffn
2577
2578 @deffn Command {$target_name configure} configparams...
2579 The options accepted by this command may also be
2580 specified as parameters to @command{target create}.
2581 Their values can later be queried one at a time by
2582 using the @command{$target_name cget} command.
2583
2584 @emph{Warning:} changing some of these after setup is dangerous.
2585 For example, moving a target from one TAP to another;
2586 and changing its endianness or variant.
2587
2588 @itemize @bullet
2589
2590 @item @code{-chain-position} @var{dotted.name} -- names the TAP
2591 used to access this target.
2592
2593 @item @code{-endian} (@option{big}|@option{little}) -- specifies
2594 whether the CPU uses big or little endian conventions
2595
2596 @item @code{-event} @var{event_name} @var{event_body} --
2597 @xref{Target Events}.
2598 Note that this updates a list of named event handlers.
2599 Calling this twice with two different event names assigns
2600 two different handlers, but calling it twice with the
2601 same event name assigns only one handler.
2602
2603 @item @code{-variant} @var{name} -- specifies a variant of the target,
2604 which OpenOCD needs to know about.
2605
2606 @item @code{-work-area-backup} (@option{0}|@option{1}) -- says
2607 whether the work area gets backed up; by default, it doesn't.
2608 When possible, use a working_area that doesn't need to be backed up,
2609 since performing a backup slows down operations.
2610
2611 @item @code{-work-area-size} @var{size} -- specify/set the work area
2612
2613 @item @code{-work-area-phys} @var{address} -- set the work area
2614 base @var{address} to be used when no MMU is active.
2615
2616 @item @code{-work-area-virt} @var{address} -- set the work area
2617 base @var{address} to be used when an MMU is active.
2618
2619 @end itemize
2620 @end deffn
2621
2622 @section Other $target_name Commands
2623 @cindex object command
2624
2625 The Tcl/Tk language has the concept of object commands,
2626 and OpenOCD adopts that same model for targets.
2627
2628 A good Tk example is a on screen button.
2629 Once a button is created a button
2630 has a name (a path in Tk terms) and that name is useable as a first
2631 class command. For example in Tk, one can create a button and later
2632 configure it like this:
2633
2634 @example
2635 # Create
2636 button .foobar -background red -command @{ foo @}
2637 # Modify
2638 .foobar configure -foreground blue
2639 # Query
2640 set x [.foobar cget -background]
2641 # Report
2642 puts [format "The button is %s" $x]
2643 @end example
2644
2645 In OpenOCD's terms, the ``target'' is an object just like a Tcl/Tk
2646 button, and its object commands are invoked the same way.
2647
2648 @example
2649 str912.cpu mww 0x1234 0x42
2650 omap3530.cpu mww 0x5555 123
2651 @end example
2652
2653 The commands supported by OpenOCD target objects are:
2654
2655 @deffn Command {$target_name arp_examine}
2656 @deffnx Command {$target_name arp_halt}
2657 @deffnx Command {$target_name arp_poll}
2658 @deffnx Command {$target_name arp_reset}
2659 @deffnx Command {$target_name arp_waitstate}
2660 Internal OpenOCD scripts (most notably @file{startup.tcl})
2661 use these to deal with specific reset cases.
2662 They are not otherwise documented here.
2663 @end deffn
2664
2665 @deffn Command {$target_name array2mem} arrayname width address count
2666 @deffnx Command {$target_name mem2array} arrayname width address count
2667 These provide an efficient script-oriented interface to memory.
2668 The @code{array2mem} primitive writes bytes, halfwords, or words;
2669 while @code{mem2array} reads them.
2670 In both cases, the TCL side uses an array, and
2671 the target side uses raw memory.
2672
2673 The efficiency comes from enabling the use of
2674 bulk JTAG data transfer operations.
2675 The script orientation comes from working with data
2676 values that are packaged for use by TCL scripts;
2677 @command{mdw} type primitives only print data they retrieve,
2678 and neither store nor return those values.
2679
2680 @itemize
2681 @item @var{arrayname} ... is the name of an array variable
2682 @item @var{width} ... is 8/16/32 - indicating the memory access size
2683 @item @var{address} ... is the target memory address
2684 @item @var{count} ... is the number of elements to process
2685 @end itemize
2686 @end deffn
2687
2688 @deffn Command {$target_name cget} queryparm
2689 Each configuration parameter accepted by
2690 @command{$target_name configure}
2691 can be individually queried, to return its current value.
2692 The @var{queryparm} is a parameter name
2693 accepted by that command, such as @code{-work-area-phys}.
2694 There are a few special cases:
2695
2696 @itemize @bullet
2697 @item @code{-event} @var{event_name} -- returns the handler for the
2698 event named @var{event_name}.
2699 This is a special case because setting a handler requires
2700 two parameters.
2701 @item @code{-type} -- returns the target type.
2702 This is a special case because this is set using
2703 @command{target create} and can't be changed
2704 using @command{$target_name configure}.
2705 @end itemize
2706
2707 For example, if you wanted to summarize information about
2708 all the targets you might use something like this:
2709
2710 @example
2711 for @{ set x 0 @} @{ $x < [target count] @} @{ incr x @} @{
2712 set name [target number $x]
2713 set y [$name cget -endian]
2714 set z [$name cget -type]
2715 puts [format "Chip %d is %s, Endian: %s, type: %s" \
2716 $x $name $y $z]
2717 @}
2718 @end example
2719 @end deffn
2720
2721 @anchor{target curstate}
2722 @deffn Command {$target_name curstate}
2723 Displays the current target state:
2724 @code{debug-running},
2725 @code{halted},
2726 @code{reset},
2727 @code{running}, or @code{unknown}.
2728 (Also, @pxref{Event Polling}.)
2729 @end deffn
2730
2731 @deffn Command {$target_name eventlist}
2732 Displays a table listing all event handlers
2733 currently associated with this target.
2734 @xref{Target Events}.
2735 @end deffn
2736
2737 @deffn Command {$target_name invoke-event} event_name
2738 Invokes the handler for the event named @var{event_name}.
2739 (This is primarily intended for use by OpenOCD framework
2740 code, for example by the reset code in @file{startup.tcl}.)
2741 @end deffn
2742
2743 @deffn Command {$target_name mdw} addr [count]
2744 @deffnx Command {$target_name mdh} addr [count]
2745 @deffnx Command {$target_name mdb} addr [count]
2746 Display contents of address @var{addr}, as
2747 32-bit words (@command{mdw}), 16-bit halfwords (@command{mdh}),
2748 or 8-bit bytes (@command{mdb}).
2749 If @var{count} is specified, displays that many units.
2750 (If you want to manipulate the data instead of displaying it,
2751 see the @code{mem2array} primitives.)
2752 @end deffn
2753
2754 @deffn Command {$target_name mww} addr word
2755 @deffnx Command {$target_name mwh} addr halfword
2756 @deffnx Command {$target_name mwb} addr byte
2757 Writes the specified @var{word} (32 bits),
2758 @var{halfword} (16 bits), or @var{byte} (8-bit) pattern,
2759 at the specified address @var{addr}.
2760 @end deffn
2761
2762 @anchor{Target Events}
2763 @section Target Events
2764 @cindex events
2765 At various times, certain things can happen, or you want them to happen.
2766 For example:
2767 @itemize @bullet
2768 @item What should happen when GDB connects? Should your target reset?
2769 @item When GDB tries to flash the target, do you need to enable the flash via a special command?
2770 @item During reset, do you need to write to certain memory locations
2771 to set up system clocks or
2772 to reconfigure the SDRAM?
2773 @end itemize
2774
2775 All of the above items can be addressed by target event handlers.
2776 These are set up by @command{$target_name configure -event} or
2777 @command{target create ... -event}.
2778
2779 The programmer's model matches the @code{-command} option used in Tcl/Tk
2780 buttons and events. The two examples below act the same, but one creates
2781 and invokes a small procedure while the other inlines it.
2782
2783 @example
2784 proc my_attach_proc @{ @} @{
2785 echo "Reset..."
2786 reset halt
2787 @}
2788 mychip.cpu configure -event gdb-attach my_attach_proc
2789 mychip.cpu configure -event gdb-attach @{
2790 echo "Reset..."
2791 reset halt
2792 @}
2793 @end example
2794
2795 The following target events are defined:
2796
2797 @itemize @bullet
2798 @item @b{debug-halted}
2799 @* The target has halted for debug reasons (i.e.: breakpoint)
2800 @item @b{debug-resumed}
2801 @* The target has resumed (i.e.: gdb said run)
2802 @item @b{early-halted}
2803 @* Occurs early in the halt process
2804 @ignore
2805 @item @b{examine-end}
2806 @* Currently not used (goal: when JTAG examine completes)
2807 @item @b{examine-start}
2808 @* Currently not used (goal: when JTAG examine starts)
2809 @end ignore
2810 @item @b{gdb-attach}
2811 @* When GDB connects
2812 @item @b{gdb-detach}
2813 @* When GDB disconnects
2814 @item @b{gdb-end}
2815 @* When the target has halted and GDB is not doing anything (see early halt)
2816 @item @b{gdb-flash-erase-start}
2817 @* Before the GDB flash process tries to erase the flash
2818 @item @b{gdb-flash-erase-end}
2819 @* After the GDB flash process has finished erasing the flash
2820 @item @b{gdb-flash-write-start}
2821 @* Before GDB writes to the flash
2822 @item @b{gdb-flash-write-end}
2823 @* After GDB writes to the flash
2824 @item @b{gdb-start}
2825 @* Before the target steps, gdb is trying to start/resume the target
2826 @item @b{halted}
2827 @* The target has halted
2828 @ignore
2829 @item @b{old-gdb_program_config}
2830 @* DO NOT USE THIS: Used internally
2831 @item @b{old-pre_resume}
2832 @* DO NOT USE THIS: Used internally
2833 @end ignore
2834 @item @b{reset-assert-pre}
2835 @* Issued as part of @command{reset} processing
2836 after SRST and/or TRST were activated and deactivated,
2837 but before reset is asserted on the tap.
2838 @item @b{reset-assert-post}
2839 @* Issued as part of @command{reset} processing
2840 when reset is asserted on the tap.
2841 @item @b{reset-deassert-pre}
2842 @* Issued as part of @command{reset} processing
2843 when reset is about to be released on the tap.
2844
2845 For some chips, this may be a good place to make sure
2846 the JTAG clock is slow enough to work before the PLL
2847 has been set up to allow faster JTAG speeds.
2848 @item @b{reset-deassert-post}
2849 @* Issued as part of @command{reset} processing
2850 when reset has been released on the tap.
2851 @item @b{reset-end}
2852 @* Issued as the final step in @command{reset} processing.
2853 @ignore
2854 @item @b{reset-halt-post}
2855 @* Currently not used
2856 @item @b{reset-halt-pre}
2857 @* Currently not used
2858 @end ignore
2859 @item @b{reset-init}
2860 @* Used by @b{reset init} command for board-specific initialization.
2861 This event fires after @emph{reset-deassert-post}.
2862
2863 This is where you would configure PLLs and clocking, set up DRAM so
2864 you can download programs that don't fit in on-chip SRAM, set up pin
2865 multiplexing, and so on.
2866 @item @b{reset-start}
2867 @* Issued as part of @command{reset} processing
2868 before either SRST or TRST are activated.
2869 @ignore
2870 @item @b{reset-wait-pos}
2871 @* Currently not used
2872 @item @b{reset-wait-pre}
2873 @* Currently not used
2874 @end ignore
2875 @item @b{resume-start}
2876 @* Before any target is resumed
2877 @item @b{resume-end}
2878 @* After all targets have resumed
2879 @item @b{resume-ok}
2880 @* Success
2881 @item @b{resumed}
2882 @* Target has resumed
2883 @end itemize
2884
2885
2886 @node Flash Commands
2887 @chapter Flash Commands
2888
2889 OpenOCD has different commands for NOR and NAND flash;
2890 the ``flash'' command works with NOR flash, while
2891 the ``nand'' command works with NAND flash.
2892 This partially reflects different hardware technologies:
2893 NOR flash usually supports direct CPU instruction and data bus access,
2894 while data from a NAND flash must be copied to memory before it can be
2895 used. (SPI flash must also be copied to memory before use.)
2896 However, the documentation also uses ``flash'' as a generic term;
2897 for example, ``Put flash configuration in board-specific files''.
2898
2899 Flash Steps:
2900 @enumerate
2901 @item Configure via the command @command{flash bank}
2902 @* Do this in a board-specific configuration file,
2903 passing parameters as needed by the driver.
2904 @item Operate on the flash via @command{flash subcommand}
2905 @* Often commands to manipulate the flash are typed by a human, or run
2906 via a script in some automated way. Common tasks include writing a
2907 boot loader, operating system, or other data.
2908 @item GDB Flashing
2909 @* Flashing via GDB requires the flash be configured via ``flash
2910 bank'', and the GDB flash features be enabled.
2911 @xref{GDB Configuration}.
2912 @end enumerate
2913
2914 Many CPUs have the ablity to ``boot'' from the first flash bank.
2915 This means that misprogramming that bank can ``brick'' a system,
2916 so that it can't boot.
2917 JTAG tools, like OpenOCD, are often then used to ``de-brick'' the
2918 board by (re)installing working boot firmware.
2919
2920 @anchor{NOR Configuration}
2921 @section Flash Configuration Commands
2922 @cindex flash configuration
2923
2924 @deffn {Config Command} {flash bank} driver base size chip_width bus_width target [driver_options]
2925 Configures a flash bank which provides persistent storage
2926 for addresses from @math{base} to @math{base + size - 1}.
2927 These banks will often be visible to GDB through the target's memory map.
2928 In some cases, configuring a flash bank will activate extra commands;
2929 see the driver-specific documentation.
2930
2931 @itemize @bullet
2932 @item @var{driver} ... identifies the controller driver
2933 associated with the flash bank being declared.
2934 This is usually @code{cfi} for external flash, or else
2935 the name of a microcontroller with embedded flash memory.
2936 @xref{Flash Driver List}.
2937 @item @var{base} ... Base address of the flash chip.
2938 @item @var{size} ... Size of the chip, in bytes.
2939 For some drivers, this value is detected from the hardware.
2940 @item @var{chip_width} ... Width of the flash chip, in bytes;
2941 ignored for most microcontroller drivers.
2942 @item @var{bus_width} ... Width of the data bus used to access the
2943 chip, in bytes; ignored for most microcontroller drivers.
2944 @item @var{target} ... Names the target used to issue
2945 commands to the flash controller.
2946 @comment Actually, it's currently a controller-specific parameter...
2947 @item @var{driver_options} ... drivers may support, or require,
2948 additional parameters. See the driver-specific documentation
2949 for more information.
2950 @end itemize
2951 @quotation Note
2952 This command is not available after OpenOCD initialization has completed.
2953 Use it in board specific configuration files, not interactively.
2954 @end quotation
2955 @end deffn
2956
2957 @comment the REAL name for this command is "ocd_flash_banks"
2958 @comment less confusing would be: "flash list" (like "nand list")
2959 @deffn Command {flash banks}
2960 Prints a one-line summary of each device declared
2961 using @command{flash bank}, numbered from zero.
2962 Note that this is the @emph{plural} form;
2963 the @emph{singular} form is a very different command.
2964 @end deffn
2965
2966 @deffn Command {flash probe} num
2967 Identify the flash, or validate the parameters of the configured flash. Operation
2968 depends on the flash type.
2969 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
2970 Most flash commands will implicitly @emph{autoprobe} the bank;
2971 flash drivers can distinguish between probing and autoprobing,
2972 but most don't bother.
2973 @end deffn
2974
2975 @section Erasing, Reading, Writing to Flash
2976 @cindex flash erasing
2977 @cindex flash reading
2978 @cindex flash writing
2979 @cindex flash programming
2980
2981 One feature distinguishing NOR flash from NAND or serial flash technologies
2982 is that for read access, it acts exactly like any other addressible memory.
2983 This means you can use normal memory read commands like @command{mdw} or
2984 @command{dump_image} with it, with no special @command{flash} subcommands.
2985 @xref{Memory access}, and @ref{Image access}.
2986
2987 Write access works differently. Flash memory normally needs to be erased
2988 before it's written. Erasing a sector turns all of its bits to ones, and
2989 writing can turn ones into zeroes. This is why there are special commands
2990 for interactive erasing and writing, and why GDB needs to know which parts
2991 of the address space hold NOR flash memory.
2992
2993 @quotation Note
2994 Most of these erase and write commands leverage the fact that NOR flash
2995 chips consume target address space. They implicitly refer to the current
2996 JTAG target, and map from an address in that target's address space
2997 back to a flash bank.
2998 @comment In May 2009, those mappings may fail if any bank associated
2999 @comment with that target doesn't succesfuly autoprobe ... bug worth fixing?
3000 A few commands use abstract addressing based on bank and sector numbers,
3001 and don't depend on searching the current target and its address space.
3002 Avoid confusing the two command models.
3003 @end quotation
3004
3005 Some flash chips implement software protection against accidental writes,
3006 since such buggy writes could in some cases ``brick'' a system.
3007 For such systems, erasing and writing may require sector protection to be
3008 disabled first.
3009 Examples include CFI flash such as ``Intel Advanced Bootblock flash'',
3010 and AT91SAM7 on-chip flash.
3011 @xref{flash protect}.
3012
3013 @anchor{flash erase_sector}
3014 @deffn Command {flash erase_sector} num first last
3015 Erase sectors in bank @var{num}, starting at sector @var{first} up to and including
3016 @var{last}. Sector numbering starts at 0.
3017 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3018 @end deffn
3019
3020 @deffn Command {flash erase_address} address length
3021 Erase sectors starting at @var{address} for @var{length} bytes.
3022 The flash bank to use is inferred from the @var{address}, and
3023 the specified length must stay within that bank.
3024 As a special case, when @var{length} is zero and @var{address} is
3025 the start of the bank, the whole flash is erased.
3026 @end deffn
3027
3028 @deffn Command {flash fillw} address word length
3029 @deffnx Command {flash fillh} address halfword length
3030 @deffnx Command {flash fillb} address byte length
3031 Fills flash memory with the specified @var{word} (32 bits),
3032 @var{halfword} (16 bits), or @var{byte} (8-bit) pattern,
3033 starting at @var{address} and continuing
3034 for @var{length} units (word/halfword/byte).
3035 No erasure is done before writing; when needed, that must be done
3036 before issuing this command.
3037 Writes are done in blocks of up to 1024 bytes, and each write is
3038 verified by reading back the data and comparing it to what was written.
3039 The flash bank to use is inferred from the @var{address} of
3040 each block, and the specified length must stay within that bank.
3041 @end deffn
3042 @comment no current checks for errors if fill blocks touch multiple banks!
3043
3044 @anchor{flash write_bank}
3045 @deffn Command {flash write_bank} num filename offset
3046 Write the binary @file{filename} to flash bank @var{num},
3047 starting at @var{offset} bytes from the beginning of the bank.
3048 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3049 @end deffn
3050
3051 @anchor{flash write_image}
3052 @deffn Command {flash write_image} [erase] filename [offset] [type]
3053 Write the image @file{filename} to the current target's flash bank(s).
3054 A relocation @var{offset} may be specified, in which case it is added
3055 to the base address for each section in the image.
3056 The file [@var{type}] can be specified
3057 explicitly as @option{bin} (binary), @option{ihex} (Intel hex),
3058 @option{elf} (ELF file), @option{s19} (Motorola s19).
3059 @option{mem}, or @option{builder}.
3060 The relevant flash sectors will be erased prior to programming
3061 if the @option{erase} parameter is given.
3062 The flash bank to use is inferred from the @var{address} of
3063 each image segment.
3064 @end deffn
3065
3066 @section Other Flash commands
3067 @cindex flash protection
3068
3069 @deffn Command {flash erase_check} num
3070 Check erase state of sectors in flash bank @var{num},
3071 and display that status.
3072 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3073 This is the only operation that
3074 updates the erase state information displayed by @option{flash info}. That means you have
3075 to issue an @command{flash erase_check} command after erasing or programming the device
3076 to get updated information.
3077 (Code execution may have invalidated any state records kept by OpenOCD.)
3078 @end deffn
3079
3080 @deffn Command {flash info} num
3081 Print info about flash bank @var{num}
3082 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3083 The information includes per-sector protect status.
3084 @end deffn
3085
3086 @anchor{flash protect}
3087 @deffn Command {flash protect} num first last (on|off)
3088 Enable (@var{on}) or disable (@var{off}) protection of flash sectors
3089 @var{first} to @var{last} of flash bank @var{num}.
3090 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3091 @end deffn
3092
3093 @deffn Command {flash protect_check} num
3094 Check protection state of sectors in flash bank @var{num}.
3095 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3096 @comment @option{flash erase_sector} using the same syntax.
3097 @end deffn
3098
3099 @anchor{Flash Driver List}
3100 @section Flash Drivers, Options, and Commands
3101 As noted above, the @command{flash bank} command requires a driver name,
3102 and allows driver-specific options and behaviors.
3103 Some drivers also activate driver-specific commands.
3104
3105 @subsection External Flash
3106
3107 @deffn {Flash Driver} cfi
3108 @cindex Common Flash Interface
3109 @cindex CFI
3110 The ``Common Flash Interface'' (CFI) is the main standard for
3111 external NOR flash chips, each of which connects to a
3112 specific external chip select on the CPU.
3113 Frequently the first such chip is used to boot the system.
3114 Your board's @code{reset-init} handler might need to
3115 configure additional chip selects using other commands (like: @command{mww} to
3116 configure a bus and its timings) , or
3117 perhaps configure a GPIO pin that controls the ``write protect'' pin
3118 on the flash chip.
3119 The CFI driver can use a target-specific working area to significantly
3120 speed up operation.
3121
3122 The CFI driver can accept the following optional parameters, in any order:
3123
3124 @itemize
3125 @item @var{jedec_probe} ... is used to detect certain non-CFI flash ROMs,
3126 like AM29LV010 and similar types.
3127 @item @var{x16_as_x8} ... when a 16-bit flash is hooked up to an 8-bit bus.
3128 @end itemize
3129
3130 To configure two adjacent banks of 16 MBytes each, both sixteen bits (two bytes)
3131 wide on a sixteen bit bus:
3132
3133 @example
3134 flash bank cfi 0x00000000 0x01000000 2 2 $_TARGETNAME
3135 flash bank cfi 0x01000000 0x01000000 2 2 $_TARGETNAME
3136 @end example
3137 @c "cfi part_id" disabled
3138 @end deffn
3139
3140 @subsection Internal Flash (Microcontrollers)
3141
3142 @deffn {Flash Driver} aduc702x
3143 The ADUC702x analog microcontrollers from Analog Devices
3144 include internal flash and use ARM7TDMI cores.
3145 The aduc702x flash driver works with models ADUC7019 through ADUC7028.
3146 The setup command only requires the @var{target} argument
3147 since all devices in this family have the same memory layout.
3148
3149 @example
3150 flash bank aduc702x 0 0 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
3151 @end example
3152 @end deffn
3153
3154 @deffn {Flash Driver} at91sam3
3155 @cindex at91sam3
3156 All members of the AT91SAM3 microcontroller family from
3157 Atmel include internal flash and use ARM's Cortex-M3 core. The driver
3158 currently (6/22/09) recognizes the AT91SAM3U[1/2/4][C/E] chips. Note
3159 that the driver was orginaly developed and tested using the
3160 AT91SAM3U4E, using a SAM3U-EK eval board. Support for other chips in
3161 the family was cribbed from the data sheet. @emph{Note to future
3162 readers/updaters: Please remove this worrysome comment after other
3163 chips are confirmed.}
3164
3165 The AT91SAM3U4[E/C] (256K) chips have two flash banks; most other chips
3166 have one flash bank. In all cases the flash banks are at
3167 the following fixed locations:
3168
3169 @example
3170 # Flash bank 0 - all chips
3171 flash bank at91sam3 0x00080000 0 1 1 $_TARGETNAME
3172 # Flash bank 1 - only 256K chips
3173 flash bank at91sam3 0x00100000 0 1 1 $_TARGETNAME
3174 @end example
3175
3176 Internally, the AT91SAM3 flash memory is organized as follows.
3177 Unlike the AT91SAM7 chips, these are not used as parameters
3178 to the @command{flash bank} command:
3179
3180 @itemize
3181 @item @emph{N-Banks:} 256K chips have 2 banks, others have 1 bank.
3182 @item @emph{Bank Size:} 128K/64K Per flash bank
3183 @item @emph{Sectors:} 16 or 8 per bank
3184 @item @emph{SectorSize:} 8K Per Sector
3185 @item @emph{PageSize:} 256 bytes per page. Note that OpenOCD operates on 'sector' sizes, not page sizes.
3186 @end itemize
3187
3188 The AT91SAM3 driver adds some additional commands:
3189
3190 @deffn Command {at91sam3 gpnvm}
3191 @deffnx Command {at91sam3 gpnvm clear} number
3192 @deffnx Command {at91sam3 gpnvm set} number
3193 @deffnx Command {at91sam3 gpnvm show} [@option{all}|number]
3194 With no parameters, @command{show} or @command{show all},
3195 shows the status of all GPNVM bits.
3196 With @command{show} @var{number}, displays that bit.
3197
3198 With @command{set} @var{number} or @command{clear} @var{number},
3199 modifies that GPNVM bit.
3200 @end deffn
3201
3202 @deffn Command {at91sam3 info}
3203 This command attempts to display information about the AT91SAM3
3204 chip. @emph{First} it read the @code{CHIPID_CIDR} [address 0x400e0740, see
3205 Section 28.2.1, page 505 of the AT91SAM3U 29/may/2009 datasheet,
3206 document id: doc6430A] and decodes the values. @emph{Second} it reads the
3207 various clock configuration registers and attempts to display how it
3208 believes the chip is configured. By default, the SLOWCLK is assumed to
3209 be 32768 Hz, see the command @command{at91sam3 slowclk}.
3210 @end deffn
3211
3212 @deffn Command {at91sam3 slowclk} [value]
3213 This command shows/sets the slow clock frequency used in the
3214 @command{at91sam3 info} command calculations above.
3215 @end deffn
3216 @end deffn
3217
3218 @deffn {Flash Driver} at91sam7
3219 All members of the AT91SAM7 microcontroller family from Atmel include
3220 internal flash and use ARM7TDMI cores. The driver automatically
3221 recognizes a number of these chips using the chip identification
3222 register, and autoconfigures itself.
3223
3224 @example
3225 flash bank at91sam7 0 0 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
3226 @end example
3227
3228 For chips which are not recognized by the controller driver, you must
3229 provide additional parameters in the following order:
3230
3231 @itemize
3232 @item @var{chip_model} ... label used with @command{flash info}
3233 @item @var{banks}
3234 @item @var{sectors_per_bank}
3235 @item @var{pages_per_sector}
3236 @item @var{pages_size}
3237 @item @var{num_nvm_bits}
3238 @item @var{freq_khz} ... required if an external clock is provided,
3239 optional (but recommended) when the oscillator frequency is known
3240 @end itemize
3241
3242 It is recommended that you provide zeroes for all of those values
3243 except the clock frequency, so that everything except that frequency
3244 will be autoconfigured.
3245 Knowing the frequency helps ensure correct timings for flash access.
3246
3247 The flash controller handles erases automatically on a page (128/256 byte)
3248 basis, so explicit erase commands are not necessary for flash programming.
3249 However, there is an ``EraseAll`` command that can erase an entire flash
3250 plane (of up to 256KB), and it will be used automatically when you issue
3251 @command{flash erase_sector} or @command{flash erase_address} commands.
3252
3253 @deffn Command {at91sam7 gpnvm} bitnum (@option{set}|@option{clear})
3254 Set or clear a ``General Purpose Non-Volatle Memory'' (GPNVM)
3255 bit for the processor. Each processor has a number of such bits,
3256 used for controlling features such as brownout detection (so they
3257 are not truly general purpose).
3258 @quotation Note
3259 This assumes that the first flash bank (number 0) is associated with
3260 the appropriate at91sam7 target.
3261 @end quotation
3262 @end deffn
3263 @end deffn
3264
3265 @deffn {Flash Driver} avr
3266 The AVR 8-bit microcontrollers from Atmel integrate flash memory.
3267 @emph{The current implementation is incomplete.}
3268 @comment - defines mass_erase ... pointless given flash_erase_address
3269 @end deffn
3270
3271 @deffn {Flash Driver} ecosflash
3272 @emph{No idea what this is...}
3273 The @var{ecosflash} driver defines one mandatory parameter,
3274 the name of a modules of target code which is downloaded
3275 and executed.
3276 @end deffn
3277
3278 @deffn {Flash Driver} lpc2000
3279 Most members of the LPC1700 and LPC2000 microcontroller families from NXP
3280 include internal flash and use Cortex-M3 (LPC1700) or ARM7TDMI (LPC2000) cores.
3281 The @var{lpc2000} driver defines two mandatory and one optional parameters,
3282 which must appear in the following order:
3283
3284 @itemize
3285 @item @var{variant} ... required, may be
3286 @var{lpc2000_v1} (older LPC21xx and LPC22xx)
3287 @var{lpc2000_v2} (LPC213x, LPC214x, LPC210[123], LPC23xx and LPC24xx)
3288 or @var{lpc1700} (LPC175x and LPC176x)
3289 @item @var{clock_kHz} ... the frequency, in kiloHertz,
3290 at which the core is running
3291 @item @var{calc_checksum} ... optional (but you probably want to provide this!),
3292 telling the driver to calculate a valid checksum for the exception vector table.
3293 @end itemize
3294
3295 LPC flashes don't require the chip and bus width to be specified.
3296
3297 @example
3298 flash bank lpc2000 0x0 0x7d000 0 0 $_TARGETNAME \
3299 lpc2000_v2 14765 calc_checksum
3300 @end example
3301
3302 @deffn {Command} {lpc2000 part_id} bank
3303 Displays the four byte part identifier associated with
3304 the specified flash @var{bank}.
3305 @end deffn
3306 @end deffn
3307
3308 @deffn {Flash Driver} lpc288x
3309 The LPC2888 microcontroller from NXP needs slightly different flash
3310 support from its lpc2000 siblings.
3311 The @var{lpc288x} driver defines one mandatory parameter,
3312 the programming clock rate in Hz.
3313 LPC flashes don't require the chip and bus width to be specified.
3314
3315 @example
3316 flash bank lpc288x 0 0 0 0 $_TARGETNAME 12000000
3317 @end example
3318 @end deffn
3319
3320 @deffn {Flash Driver} ocl
3321 @emph{No idea what this is, other than using some arm7/arm9 core.}
3322
3323 @example
3324 flash bank ocl 0 0 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
3325 @end example
3326 @end deffn
3327
3328 @deffn {Flash Driver} pic32mx
3329 The PIC32MX microcontrollers are based on the MIPS 4K cores,
3330 and integrate flash memory.
3331 @emph{The current implementation is incomplete.}
3332
3333 @example
3334 flash bank pix32mx 0 0 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
3335 @end example
3336
3337 @comment numerous *disabled* commands are defined:
3338 @comment - chip_erase ... pointless given flash_erase_address
3339 @comment - lock, unlock ... pointless given protect on/off (yes?)
3340 @comment - pgm_word ... shouldn't bank be deduced from address??
3341 Some pic32mx-specific commands are defined:
3342 @deffn Command {pic32mx pgm_word} address value bank
3343 Programs the specified 32-bit @var{value} at the given @var{address}
3344 in the specified chip @var{bank}.
3345 @end deffn
3346 @end deffn
3347
3348 @deffn {Flash Driver} stellaris
3349 All members of the Stellaris LM3Sxxx microcontroller family from
3350 Texas Instruments
3351 include internal flash and use ARM Cortex M3 cores.
3352 The driver automatically recognizes a number of these chips using
3353 the chip identification register, and autoconfigures itself.
3354 @footnote{Currently there is a @command{stellaris mass_erase} command.
3355 That seems pointless since the same effect can be had using the
3356 standard @command{flash erase_address} command.}
3357
3358 @example
3359 flash bank stellaris 0 0 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
3360 @end example
3361 @end deffn
3362
3363 @deffn {Flash Driver} stm32x
3364 All members of the STM32 microcontroller family from ST Microelectronics
3365 include internal flash and use ARM Cortex M3 cores.
3366 The driver automatically recognizes a number of these chips using
3367 the chip identification register, and autoconfigures itself.
3368
3369 @example
3370 flash bank stm32x 0 0 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
3371 @end example
3372
3373 Some stm32x-specific commands
3374 @footnote{Currently there is a @command{stm32x mass_erase} command.
3375 That seems pointless since the same effect can be had using the
3376 standard @command{flash erase_address} command.}
3377 are defined:
3378
3379 @deffn Command {stm32x lock} num
3380 Locks the entire stm32 device.
3381 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3382 @end deffn
3383
3384 @deffn Command {stm32x unlock} num
3385 Unlocks the entire stm32 device.
3386 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3387 @end deffn
3388
3389 @deffn Command {stm32x options_read} num
3390 Read and display the stm32 option bytes written by
3391 the @command{stm32x options_write} command.
3392 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3393 @end deffn
3394
3395 @deffn Command {stm32x options_write} num (@option{SWWDG}|@option{HWWDG}) (@option{RSTSTNDBY}|@option{NORSTSTNDBY}) (@option{RSTSTOP}|@option{NORSTSTOP})
3396 Writes the stm32 option byte with the specified values.
3397 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3398 @end deffn
3399 @end deffn
3400
3401 @deffn {Flash Driver} str7x
3402 All members of the STR7 microcontroller family from ST Microelectronics
3403 include internal flash and use ARM7TDMI cores.
3404 The @var{str7x} driver defines one mandatory parameter, @var{variant},
3405 which is either @code{STR71x}, @code{STR73x} or @code{STR75x}.
3406
3407 @example
3408 flash bank str7x 0x40000000 0x00040000 0 0 $_TARGETNAME STR71x
3409 @end example
3410
3411 @deffn Command {str7x disable_jtag} bank
3412 Activate the Debug/Readout protection mechanism
3413 for the specified flash bank.
3414 @end deffn
3415 @end deffn
3416
3417 @deffn {Flash Driver} str9x
3418 Most members of the STR9 microcontroller family from ST Microelectronics
3419 include internal flash and use ARM966E cores.
3420 The str9 needs the flash controller to be configured using
3421 the @command{str9x flash_config} command prior to Flash programming.
3422
3423 @example
3424 flash bank str9x 0x40000000 0x00040000 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
3425 str9x flash_config 0 4 2 0 0x80000
3426 @end example
3427
3428 @deffn Command {str9x flash_config} num bbsr nbbsr bbadr nbbadr
3429 Configures the str9 flash controller.
3430 The @var{num} parameter is a value shown by @command{flash banks}.
3431
3432 @itemize @bullet
3433 @item @var{bbsr} - Boot Bank Size register
3434 @item @var{nbbsr} - Non Boot Bank Size register
3435 @item @var{bbadr} - Boot Bank Start Address register
3436 @item @var{nbbadr} - Boot Bank Start Address register
3437 @end itemize
3438 @end deffn
3439
3440 @end deffn
3441
3442 @deffn {Flash Driver} tms470
3443 Most members of the TMS470 microcontroller family from Texas Instruments
3444 include internal flash and use ARM7TDMI cores.
3445 This driver doesn't require the chip and bus width to be specified.
3446
3447 Some tms470-specific commands are defined:
3448
3449 @deffn Command {tms470 flash_keyset} key0 key1 key2 key3
3450 Saves programming keys in a register, to enable flash erase and write commands.
3451 @end deffn
3452
3453 @deffn Command {tms470 osc_mhz} clock_mhz
3454 Reports the clock speed, which is used to calculate timings.
3455 @end deffn
3456
3457 @deffn Command {tms470 plldis} (0|1)
3458 Disables (@var{1}) or enables (@var{0}) use of the PLL to speed up
3459 the flash clock.
3460 @end deffn
3461 @end deffn
3462
3463 @subsection str9xpec driver
3464 @cindex str9xpec
3465
3466 Here is some background info to help
3467 you better understand how this driver works. OpenOCD has two flash drivers for
3468 the str9:
3469 @enumerate
3470 @item
3471 Standard driver @option{str9x} programmed via the str9 core. Normally used for
3472 flash programming as it is faster than the @option{str9xpec} driver.
3473 @item
3474 Direct programming @option{str9xpec} using the flash controller. This is an
3475 ISC compilant (IEEE 1532) tap connected in series with the str9 core. The str9
3476 core does not need to be running to program using this flash driver. Typical use
3477 for this driver is locking/unlocking the target and programming the option bytes.
3478 @end enumerate
3479
3480 Before we run any commands using the @option{str9xpec} driver we must first disable
3481 the str9 core. This example assumes the @option{str9xpec} driver has been
3482 configured for flash bank 0.
3483 @example
3484 # assert srst, we do not want core running
3485 # while accessing str9xpec flash driver
3486 jtag_reset 0 1
3487 # turn off target polling
3488 poll off
3489 # disable str9 core
3490 str9xpec enable_turbo 0
3491 # read option bytes
3492 str9xpec options_read 0
3493 # re-enable str9 core
3494 str9xpec disable_turbo 0
3495 poll on
3496 reset halt
3497 @end example
3498 The above example will read the str9 option bytes.
3499 When performing a unlock remember that you will not be able to halt the str9 - it
3500 has been locked. Halting the core is not required for the @option{str9xpec} driver
3501 as mentioned above, just issue the commands above manually or from a telnet prompt.
3502
3503 @deffn {Flash Driver} str9xpec
3504 Only use this driver for locking/unlocking the device or configuring the option bytes.
3505 Use the standard str9 driver for programming.
3506 Before using the flash commands the turbo mode must be enabled using the
3507 @command{str9xpec enable_turbo} command.
3508
3509 Several str9xpec-specific commands are defined:
3510
3511 @deffn Command {str9xpec disable_turbo} num
3512 Restore the str9 into JTAG chain.
3513 @end deffn
3514
3515 @deffn Command {str9xpec enable_turbo} num
3516 Enable turbo mode, will simply remove the str9 from the chain and talk
3517 directly to the embedded flash controller.
3518 @end deffn
3519
3520 @deffn Command {str9xpec lock} num
3521 Lock str9 device. The str9 will only respond to an unlock command that will
3522 erase the device.
3523 @end deffn
3524
3525 @deffn Command {str9xpec part_id} num
3526 Prints the part identifier for bank @var{num}.
3527 @end deffn
3528
3529 @deffn Command {str9xpec options_cmap} num (@option{bank0}|@option{bank1})
3530 Configure str9 boot bank.
3531 @end deffn
3532
3533 @deffn Command {str9xpec options_lvdsel} num (@option{vdd}|@option{vdd_vddq})
3534 Configure str9 lvd source.
3535 @end deffn
3536
3537 @deffn Command {str9xpec options_lvdthd} num (@option{2.4v}|@option{2.7v})
3538 Configure str9 lvd threshold.
3539 @end deffn
3540
3541 @deffn Command {str9xpec options_lvdwarn} bank (@option{vdd}|@option{vdd_vddq})
3542 Configure str9 lvd reset warning source.
3543 @end deffn
3544
3545 @deffn Command {str9xpec options_read} num
3546 Read str9 option bytes.
3547 @end deffn
3548
3549 @deffn Command {str9xpec options_write} num
3550 Write str9 option bytes.
3551 @end deffn
3552
3553 @deffn Command {str9xpec unlock} num
3554 unlock str9 device.
3555 @end deffn
3556
3557 @end deffn
3558
3559
3560 @section mFlash
3561
3562 @subsection mFlash Configuration
3563 @cindex mFlash Configuration
3564
3565 @deffn {Config Command} {mflash bank} soc base RST_pin target
3566 Configures a mflash for @var{soc} host bank at
3567 address @var{base}.
3568 The pin number format depends on the host GPIO naming convention.
3569 Currently, the mflash driver supports s3c2440 and pxa270.
3570
3571 Example for s3c2440 mflash where @var{RST pin} is GPIO B1:
3572
3573 @example
3574 mflash bank s3c2440 0x10000000 1b 0
3575 @end example
3576
3577 Example for pxa270 mflash where @var{RST pin} is GPIO 43:
3578
3579 @example
3580 mflash bank pxa270 0x08000000 43 0
3581 @end example
3582 @end deffn
3583
3584 @subsection mFlash commands
3585 @cindex mFlash commands
3586
3587 @deffn Command {mflash config pll} frequency
3588 Configure mflash PLL.
3589 The @var{frequency} is the mflash input frequency, in Hz.
3590 Issuing this command will erase mflash's whole internal nand and write new pll.
3591 After this command, mflash needs power-on-reset for normal operation.
3592 If pll was newly configured, storage and boot(optional) info also need to be update.
3593 @end deffn
3594
3595 @deffn Command {mflash config boot}
3596 Configure bootable option.
3597 If bootable option is set, mflash offer the first 8 sectors
3598 (4kB) for boot.
3599 @end deffn
3600
3601 @deffn Command {mflash config storage}
3602 Configure storage information.
3603 For the normal storage operation, this information must be
3604 written.
3605 @end deffn
3606
3607 @deffn Command {mflash dump} num filename offset size
3608 Dump @var{size} bytes, starting at @var{offset} bytes from the
3609 beginning of the bank @var{num}, to the file named @var{filename}.
3610 @end deffn
3611
3612 @deffn Command {mflash probe}
3613 Probe mflash.
3614 @end deffn
3615
3616 @deffn Command {mflash write} num filename offset
3617 Write the binary file @var{filename} to mflash bank @var{num}, starting at
3618 @var{offset} bytes from the beginning of the bank.
3619 @end deffn
3620
3621 @node NAND Flash Commands
3622 @chapter NAND Flash Commands
3623 @cindex NAND
3624
3625 Compared to NOR or SPI flash, NAND devices are inexpensive
3626 and high density. Today's NAND chips, and multi-chip modules,
3627 commonly hold multiple GigaBytes of data.
3628
3629 NAND chips consist of a number of ``erase blocks'' of a given
3630 size (such as 128 KBytes), each of which is divided into a
3631 number of pages (of perhaps 512 or 2048 bytes each). Each
3632 page of a NAND flash has an ``out of band'' (OOB) area to hold
3633 Error Correcting Code (ECC) and other metadata, usually 16 bytes
3634 of OOB for every 512 bytes of page data.
3635
3636 One key characteristic of NAND flash is that its error rate
3637 is higher than that of NOR flash. In normal operation, that
3638 ECC is used to correct and detect errors. However, NAND
3639 blocks can also wear out and become unusable; those blocks
3640 are then marked "bad". NAND chips are even shipped from the
3641 manufacturer with a few bad blocks. The highest density chips
3642 use a technology (MLC) that wears out more quickly, so ECC
3643 support is increasingly important as a way to detect blocks
3644 that have begun to fail, and help to preserve data integrity
3645 with techniques such as wear leveling.
3646
3647 Software is used to manage the ECC. Some controllers don't
3648 support ECC directly; in those cases, software ECC is used.
3649 Other controllers speed up the ECC calculations with hardware.
3650 Single-bit error correction hardware is routine. Controllers
3651 geared for newer MLC chips may correct 4 or more errors for
3652 every 512 bytes of data.
3653
3654 You will need to make sure that any data you write using
3655 OpenOCD includes the apppropriate kind of ECC. For example,
3656 that may mean passing the @code{oob_softecc} flag when
3657 writing NAND data, or ensuring that the correct hardware
3658 ECC mode is used.
3659
3660 The basic steps for using NAND devices include:
3661 @enumerate
3662 @item Declare via the command @command{nand device}
3663 @* Do this in a board-specific configuration file,
3664 passing parameters as needed by the controller.
3665 @item Configure each device using @command{nand probe}.
3666 @* Do this only after the associated target is set up,
3667 such as in its reset-init script or in procures defined
3668 to access that device.
3669 @item Operate on the flash via @command{nand subcommand}
3670 @* Often commands to manipulate the flash are typed by a human, or run
3671 via a script in some automated way. Common task include writing a
3672 boot loader, operating system, or other data needed to initialize or
3673 de-brick a board.
3674 @end enumerate
3675
3676 @b{NOTE:} At the time this text was written, the largest NAND
3677 flash fully supported by OpenOCD is 2 GiBytes (16 GiBits).
3678 This is because the variables used to hold offsets and lengths
3679 are only 32 bits wide.
3680 (Larger chips may work in some cases, unless an offset or length
3681 is larger than 0xffffffff, the largest 32-bit unsigned integer.)
3682 Some larger devices will work, since they are actually multi-chip
3683 modules with two smaller chips and individual chipselect lines.
3684
3685 @anchor{NAND Configuration}
3686 @section NAND Configuration Commands
3687 @cindex NAND configuration
3688
3689 NAND chips must be declared in configuration scripts,
3690 plus some additional configuration that's done after
3691 OpenOCD has initialized.
3692
3693 @deffn {Config Command} {nand device} controller target [configparams...]
3694 Declares a NAND device, which can be read and written to
3695 after it has been configured through @command{nand probe}.
3696 In OpenOCD, devices are single chips; this is unlike some
3697 operating systems, which may manage multiple chips as if
3698 they were a single (larger) device.
3699 In some cases, configuring a device will activate extra
3700 commands; see the controller-specific documentation.
3701
3702 @b{NOTE:} This command is not available after OpenOCD
3703 initialization has completed. Use it in board specific
3704 configuration files, not interactively.
3705
3706 @itemize @bullet
3707 @item @var{controller} ... identifies the controller driver
3708 associated with the NAND device being declared.
3709 @xref{NAND Driver List}.
3710 @item @var{target} ... names the target used when issuing
3711 commands to the NAND controller.
3712 @comment Actually, it's currently a controller-specific parameter...
3713 @item @var{configparams} ... controllers may support, or require,
3714 additional parameters. See the controller-specific documentation
3715 for more information.
3716 @end itemize
3717 @end deffn
3718
3719 @deffn Command {nand list}
3720 Prints a one-line summary of each device declared
3721 using @command{nand device}, numbered from zero.
3722 Note that un-probed devices show no details.
3723 @end deffn
3724
3725 @deffn Command {nand probe} num
3726 Probes the specified device to determine key characteristics
3727 like its page and block sizes, and how many blocks it has.
3728 The @var{num} parameter is the value shown by @command{nand list}.
3729 You must (successfully) probe a device before you can use
3730 it with most other NAND commands.
3731 @end deffn
3732
3733 @section Erasing, Reading, Writing to NAND Flash
3734
3735 @deffn Command {nand dump} num filename offset length [oob_option]
3736 @cindex NAND reading
3737 Reads binary data from the NAND device and writes it to the file,
3738 starting at the specified offset.
3739 The @var{num} parameter is the value shown by @command{nand list}.
3740
3741 Use a complete path name for @var{filename}, so you don't depend
3742 on the directory used to start the OpenOCD server.
3743
3744 The @var{offset} and @var{length} must be exact multiples of the
3745 device's page size. They describe a data region; the OOB data
3746 associated with each such page may also be accessed.
3747
3748 @b{NOTE:} At the time this text was written, no error correction
3749 was done on the data that's read, unless raw access was disabled
3750 and the underlying NAND controller driver had a @code{read_page}
3751 method which handled that error correction.
3752
3753 By default, only page data is saved to the specified file.
3754 Use an @var{oob_option} parameter to save OOB data:
3755 @itemize @bullet
3756 @item no oob_* parameter
3757 @*Output file holds only page data; OOB is discarded.
3758 @item @code{oob_raw}
3759 @*Output file interleaves page data and OOB data;
3760 the file will be longer than "length" by the size of the
3761 spare areas associated with each data page.
3762 Note that this kind of "raw" access is different from
3763 what's implied by @command{nand raw_access}, which just
3764 controls whether a hardware-aware access method is used.
3765 @item @code{oob_only}
3766 @*Output file has only raw OOB data, and will
3767 be smaller than "length" since it will contain only the
3768 spare areas associated with each data page.
3769 @end itemize
3770 @end deffn
3771
3772 @deffn Command {nand erase} num offset length
3773 @cindex NAND erasing
3774 @cindex NAND programming
3775 Erases blocks on the specified NAND device, starting at the
3776 specified @var{offset} and continuing for @var{length} bytes.
3777 Both of those values must be exact multiples of the device's
3778 block size, and the region they specify must fit entirely in the chip.
3779 The @var{num} parameter is the value shown by @command{nand list}.
3780
3781 @b{NOTE:} This command will try to erase bad blocks, when told
3782 to do so, which will probably invalidate the manufacturer's bad
3783 block marker.
3784 For the remainder of the current server session, @command{nand info}
3785 will still report that the block ``is'' bad.
3786 @end deffn
3787
3788 @deffn Command {nand write} num filename offset [option...]
3789 @cindex NAND writing
3790 @cindex NAND programming
3791 Writes binary data from the file into the specified NAND device,
3792 starting at the specified offset. Those pages should already
3793 have been erased; you can't change zero bits to one bits.
3794 The @var{num} parameter is the value shown by @command{nand list}.
3795
3796 Use a complete path name for @var{filename}, so you don't depend
3797 on the directory used to start the OpenOCD server.
3798
3799 The @var{offset} must be an exact multiple of the device's page size.
3800 All data in the file will be written, assuming it doesn't run
3801 past the end of the device.
3802 Only full pages are written, and any extra space in the last
3803 page will be filled with 0xff bytes. (That includes OOB data,
3804 if that's being written.)
3805
3806 @b{NOTE:} At the time this text was written, bad blocks are
3807 ignored. That is, this routine will not skip bad blocks,
3808 but will instead try to write them. This can cause problems.
3809
3810 Provide at most one @var{option} parameter. With some
3811 NAND drivers, the meanings of these parameters may change
3812 if @command{nand raw_access} was used to disable hardware ECC.
3813 @itemize @bullet
3814 @item no oob_* parameter
3815 @*File has only page data, which is written.
3816 If raw acccess is in use, the OOB area will not be written.
3817 Otherwise, if the underlying NAND controller driver has
3818 a @code{write_page} routine, that routine may write the OOB
3819 with hardware-computed ECC data.
3820 @item @code{oob_only}
3821 @*File has only raw OOB data, which is written to the OOB area.
3822 Each page's data area stays untouched. @i{This can be a dangerous
3823 option}, since it can invalidate the ECC data.
3824 You may need to force raw access to use this mode.
3825 @item @code{oob_raw}
3826 @*File interleaves data and OOB data, both of which are written
3827 If raw access is enabled, the data is written first, then the
3828 un-altered OOB.
3829 Otherwise, if the underlying NAND controller driver has
3830 a @code{write_page} routine, that routine may modify the OOB
3831 before it's written, to include hardware-computed ECC data.
3832 @item @code{oob_softecc}
3833 @*File has only page data, which is written.
3834 The OOB area is filled with 0xff, except for a standard 1-bit
3835 software ECC code stored in conventional locations.
3836 You might need to force raw access to use this mode, to prevent
3837 the underlying driver from applying hardware ECC.
3838 @item @code{oob_softecc_kw}
3839 @*File has only page data, which is written.
3840 The OOB area is filled with 0xff, except for a 4-bit software ECC
3841 specific to the boot ROM in Marvell Kirkwood SoCs.
3842 You might need to force raw access to use this mode, to prevent
3843 the underlying driver from applying hardware ECC.
3844 @end itemize
3845 @end deffn
3846
3847 @section Other NAND commands
3848 @cindex NAND other commands
3849
3850 @deffn Command {nand check_bad_blocks} [offset length]
3851 Checks for manufacturer bad block markers on the specified NAND
3852 device. If no parameters are provided, checks the whole
3853 device; otherwise, starts at the specified @var{offset} and
3854 continues for @var{length} bytes.
3855 Both of those values must be exact multiples of the device's
3856 block size, and the region they specify must fit entirely in the chip.
3857 The @var{num} parameter is the value shown by @command{nand list}.
3858
3859 @b{NOTE:} Before using this command you should force raw access
3860 with @command{nand raw_access enable} to ensure that the underlying
3861 driver will not try to apply hardware ECC.
3862 @end deffn
3863
3864 @deffn Command {nand info} num
3865 The @var{num} parameter is the value shown by @command{nand list}.
3866 This prints the one-line summary from "nand list", plus for
3867 devices which have been probed this also prints any known
3868 status for each block.
3869 @end deffn
3870
3871 @deffn Command {nand raw_access} num (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
3872 Sets or clears an flag affecting how page I/O is done.
3873 The @var{num} parameter is the value shown by @command{nand list}.
3874
3875 This flag is cleared (disabled) by default, but changing that
3876 value won't affect all NAND devices. The key factor is whether
3877 the underlying driver provides @code{read_page} or @code{write_page}
3878 methods. If it doesn't provide those methods, the setting of
3879 this flag is irrelevant; all access is effectively ``raw''.
3880
3881 When those methods exist, they are normally used when reading
3882 data (@command{nand dump} or reading bad block markers) or
3883 writing it (@command{nand write}). However, enabling
3884 raw access (setting the flag) prevents use of those methods,
3885 bypassing hardware ECC logic.
3886 @i{This can be a dangerous option}, since writing blocks
3887 with the wrong ECC data can cause them to be marked as bad.
3888 @end deffn
3889
3890 @anchor{NAND Driver List}
3891 @section NAND Drivers, Options, and Commands
3892 As noted above, the @command{nand device} command allows
3893 driver-specific options and behaviors.
3894 Some controllers also activate controller-specific commands.
3895
3896 @deffn {NAND Driver} davinci
3897 This driver handles the NAND controllers found on DaVinci family
3898 chips from Texas Instruments.
3899 It takes three extra parameters:
3900 address of the NAND chip;
3901 hardware ECC mode to use (hwecc1, hwecc4, hwecc4_infix);
3902 address of the AEMIF controller on this processor.
3903 @example
3904 nand device davinci dm355.arm 0x02000000 hwecc4 0x01e10000
3905 @end example
3906 All DaVinci processors support the single-bit ECC hardware,
3907 and newer ones also support the four-bit ECC hardware.
3908 The @code{write_page} and @code{read_page} methods are used
3909 to implement those ECC modes, unless they are disabled using
3910 the @command{nand raw_access} command.
3911 @end deffn
3912
3913 @deffn {NAND Driver} lpc3180
3914 These controllers require an extra @command{nand device}
3915 parameter: the clock rate used by the controller.
3916 @deffn Command {lpc3180 select} num [mlc|slc]
3917 Configures use of the MLC or SLC controller mode.
3918 MLC implies use of hardware ECC.
3919 The @var{num} parameter is the value shown by @command{nand list}.
3920 @end deffn
3921
3922 At this writing, this driver includes @code{write_page}
3923 and @code{read_page} methods. Using @command{nand raw_access}
3924 to disable those methods will prevent use of hardware ECC
3925 in the MLC controller mode, but won't change SLC behavior.
3926 @end deffn
3927 @comment current lpc3180 code won't issue 5-byte address cycles
3928
3929 @deffn {NAND Driver} orion
3930 These controllers require an extra @command{nand device}
3931 parameter: the address of the controller.
3932 @example
3933 nand device orion 0xd8000000
3934 @end example
3935 These controllers don't define any specialized commands.
3936 At this writing, their drivers don't include @code{write_page}
3937 or @code{read_page} methods, so @command{nand raw_access} won't
3938 change any behavior.
3939 @end deffn
3940
3941 @deffn {NAND Driver} s3c2410
3942 @deffnx {NAND Driver} s3c2412
3943 @deffnx {NAND Driver} s3c2440
3944 @deffnx {NAND Driver} s3c2443
3945 These S3C24xx family controllers don't have any special
3946 @command{nand device} options, and don't define any
3947 specialized commands.
3948 At this writing, their drivers don't include @code{write_page}
3949 or @code{read_page} methods, so @command{nand raw_access} won't
3950 change any behavior.
3951 @end deffn
3952
3953 @node PLD/FPGA Commands
3954 @chapter PLD/FPGA Commands
3955 @cindex PLD
3956 @cindex FPGA
3957
3958 Programmable Logic Devices (PLDs) and the more flexible
3959 Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) are both types of programmable hardware.
3960 OpenOCD can support programming them.
3961 Although PLDs are generally restrictive (cells are less functional, and
3962 there are no special purpose cells for memory or computational tasks),
3963 they share the same OpenOCD infrastructure.
3964 Accordingly, both are called PLDs here.
3965
3966 @section PLD/FPGA Configuration and Commands
3967
3968 As it does for JTAG TAPs, debug targets, and flash chips (both NOR and NAND),
3969 OpenOCD maintains a list of PLDs available for use in various commands.
3970 Also, each such PLD requires a driver.
3971
3972 They are referenced by the number shown by the @command{pld devices} command,
3973 and new PLDs are defined by @command{pld device driver_name}.
3974
3975 @deffn {Config Command} {pld device} driver_name tap_name [driver_options]
3976 Defines a new PLD device, supported by driver @var{driver_name},
3977 using the TAP named @var{tap_name}.
3978 The driver may make use of any @var{driver_options} to configure its
3979 behavior.
3980 @end deffn
3981
3982 @deffn {Command} {pld devices}
3983 Lists the PLDs and their numbers.
3984 @end deffn
3985
3986 @deffn {Command} {pld load} num filename
3987 Loads the file @file{filename} into the PLD identified by @var{num}.
3988 The file format must be inferred by the driver.
3989 @end deffn
3990
3991 @section PLD/FPGA Drivers, Options, and Commands
3992
3993 Drivers may support PLD-specific options to the @command{pld device}
3994 definition command, and may also define commands usable only with
3995 that particular type of PLD.
3996
3997 @deffn {FPGA Driver} virtex2
3998 Virtex-II is a family of FPGAs sold by Xilinx.
3999 It supports the IEEE 1532 standard for In-System Configuration (ISC).
4000 No driver-specific PLD definition options are used,
4001 and one driver-specific command is defined.
4002
4003 @deffn {Command} {virtex2 read_stat} num
4004 Reads and displays the Virtex-II status register (STAT)
4005 for FPGA @var{num}.
4006 @end deffn
4007 @end deffn
4008
4009 @node General Commands
4010 @chapter General Commands
4011 @cindex commands
4012
4013 The commands documented in this chapter here are common commands that
4014 you, as a human, may want to type and see the output of. Configuration type
4015 commands are documented elsewhere.
4016
4017 Intent:
4018 @itemize @bullet
4019 @item @b{Source Of Commands}
4020 @* OpenOCD commands can occur in a configuration script (discussed
4021 elsewhere) or typed manually by a human or supplied programatically,
4022 or via one of several TCP/IP Ports.
4023
4024 @item @b{From the human}
4025 @* A human should interact with the telnet interface (default port: 4444)
4026 or via GDB (default port 3333).
4027
4028 To issue commands from within a GDB session, use the @option{monitor}
4029 command, e.g. use @option{monitor poll} to issue the @option{poll}
4030 command. All output is relayed through the GDB session.
4031
4032 @item @b{Machine Interface}
4033 The Tcl interface's intent is to be a machine interface. The default Tcl
4034 port is 5555.
4035 @end itemize
4036
4037
4038 @section Daemon Commands
4039
4040 @deffn {Command} exit
4041 Exits the current telnet session.
4042 @end deffn
4043
4044 @c note EXTREMELY ANNOYING word wrap at column 75
4045 @c even when lines are e.g. 100+ columns ...
4046 @c coded in startup.tcl
4047 @deffn {Command} help [string]
4048 With no parameters, prints help text for all commands.
4049 Otherwise, prints each helptext containing @var{string}.
4050 Not every command provides helptext.
4051 @end deffn
4052
4053 @deffn Command sleep msec [@option{busy}]
4054 Wait for at least @var{msec} milliseconds before resuming.
4055 If @option{busy} is passed, busy-wait instead of sleeping.
4056 (This option is strongly discouraged.)
4057 Useful in connection with script files
4058 (@command{script} command and @command{target_name} configuration).
4059 @end deffn
4060
4061 @deffn Command shutdown
4062 Close the OpenOCD daemon, disconnecting all clients (GDB, telnet, other).
4063 @end deffn
4064
4065 @anchor{debug_level}
4066 @deffn Command debug_level [n]
4067 @cindex message level
4068 Display debug level.
4069 If @var{n} (from 0..3) is provided, then set it to that level.
4070 This affects the kind of messages sent to the server log.
4071 Level 0 is error messages only;
4072 level 1 adds warnings;
4073 level 2 adds informational messages;
4074 and level 3 adds debugging messages.
4075 The default is level 2, but that can be overridden on
4076 the command line along with the location of that log
4077 file (which is normally the server's standard output).
4078 @xref{Running}.
4079 @end deffn
4080
4081 @deffn Command fast (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
4082 Default disabled.
4083 Set default behaviour of OpenOCD to be "fast and dangerous".
4084
4085 At this writing, this only affects the defaults for two ARM7/ARM9 parameters:
4086 fast memory access, and DCC downloads. Those parameters may still be
4087 individually overridden.
4088
4089 The target specific "dangerous" optimisation tweaking options may come and go
4090 as more robust and user friendly ways are found to ensure maximum throughput
4091 and robustness with a minimum of configuration.
4092
4093 Typically the "fast enable" is specified first on the command line:
4094
4095 @example
4096 openocd -c "fast enable" -c "interface dummy" -f target/str710.cfg
4097 @end example
4098 @end deffn
4099
4100 @deffn Command echo message
4101 Logs a message at "user" priority.
4102 Output @var{message} to stdout.
4103 @example
4104 echo "Downloading kernel -- please wait"
4105 @end example
4106 @end deffn
4107
4108 @deffn Command log_output [filename]
4109 Redirect logging to @var{filename};
4110 the initial log output channel is stderr.
4111 @end deffn
4112
4113 @anchor{Target State handling}
4114 @section Target State handling
4115 @cindex reset
4116 @cindex halt
4117 @cindex target initialization
4118
4119 In this section ``target'' refers to a CPU configured as
4120 shown earlier (@pxref{CPU Configuration}).
4121 These commands, like many, implicitly refer to
4122 a current target which is used to perform the
4123 various operations. The current target may be changed
4124 by using @command{targets} command with the name of the
4125 target which should become current.
4126
4127 @deffn Command reg [(number|name) [value]]
4128 Access a single register by @var{number} or by its @var{name}.
4129
4130 @emph{With no arguments}:
4131 list all available registers for the current target,
4132 showing number, name, size, value, and cache status.
4133
4134 @emph{With number/name}: display that register's value.
4135
4136 @emph{With both number/name and value}: set register's value.
4137
4138 Cores may have surprisingly many registers in their
4139 Debug and trace infrastructure:
4140
4141 @example
4142 > reg
4143 (0) r0 (/32): 0x0000D3C2 (dirty: 1, valid: 1)
4144 (1) r1 (/32): 0xFD61F31C (dirty: 0, valid: 1)
4145 (2) r2 (/32): 0x00022551 (dirty: 0, valid: 1)
4146 ...
4147 (164) ETM_CONTEXTID_COMPARATOR_MASK (/32): \
4148 0x00000000 (dirty: 0, valid: 0)
4149 >
4150 @end example
4151 @end deffn
4152
4153 @deffn Command halt [ms]
4154 @deffnx Command wait_halt [ms]
4155 The @command{halt} command first sends a halt request to the target,
4156 which @command{wait_halt} doesn't.
4157 Otherwise these behave the same: wait up to @var{ms} milliseconds,
4158 or 5 seconds if there is no parameter, for the target to halt
4159 (and enter debug mode).
4160 Using 0 as the @var{ms} parameter prevents OpenOCD from waiting.
4161 @end deffn
4162
4163 @deffn Command resume [address]
4164 Resume the target at its current code position,
4165 or the optional @var{address} if it is provided.
4166 OpenOCD will wait 5 seconds for the target to resume.
4167 @end deffn
4168
4169 @deffn Command step [address]
4170 Single-step the target at its current code position,
4171 or the optional @var{address} if it is provided.
4172 @end deffn
4173
4174 @anchor{Reset Command}
4175 @deffn Command reset
4176 @deffnx Command {reset run}
4177 @deffnx Command {reset halt}
4178 @deffnx Command {reset init}
4179 Perform as hard a reset as possible, using SRST if possible.
4180 @emph{All defined targets will be reset, and target
4181 events will fire during the reset sequence.}
4182
4183 The optional parameter specifies what should
4184 happen after the reset.
4185 If there is no parameter, a @command{reset run} is executed.
4186 The other options will not work on all systems.
4187 @xref{Reset Configuration}.
4188
4189 @itemize @minus
4190 @item @b{run} Let the target run
4191 @item @b{halt} Immediately halt the target
4192 @item @b{init} Immediately halt the target, and execute the reset-init script
4193 @end itemize
4194 @end deffn
4195
4196 @deffn Command soft_reset_halt
4197 Requesting target halt and executing a soft reset. This is often used
4198 when a target cannot be reset and halted. The target, after reset is
4199 released begins to execute code. OpenOCD attempts to stop the CPU and
4200 then sets the program counter back to the reset vector. Unfortunately
4201 the code that was executed may have left the hardware in an unknown
4202 state.
4203 @end deffn
4204
4205 @section I/O Utilities
4206
4207 These commands are available when
4208 OpenOCD is built with @option{--enable-ioutil}.
4209 They are mainly useful on embedded targets,
4210 notably the ZY1000.
4211 Hosts with operating systems have complementary tools.
4212
4213 @emph{Note:} there are several more such commands.
4214
4215 @deffn Command append_file filename [string]*
4216 Appends the @var{string} parameters to
4217 the text file @file{filename}.
4218 Each string except the last one is followed by one space.
4219 The last string is followed by a newline.
4220 @end deffn
4221
4222 @deffn Command cat filename
4223 Reads and displays the text file @file{filename}.
4224 @end deffn
4225
4226 @deffn Command cp src_filename dest_filename
4227 Copies contents from the file @file{src_filename}
4228 into @file{dest_filename}.
4229 @end deffn
4230
4231 @deffn Command ip
4232 @emph{No description provided.}
4233 @end deffn
4234
4235 @deffn Command ls
4236 @emph{No description provided.}
4237 @end deffn
4238
4239 @deffn Command mac
4240 @emph{No description provided.}
4241 @end deffn
4242
4243 @deffn Command meminfo
4244 Display available RAM memory on OpenOCD host.
4245 Used in OpenOCD regression testing scripts.
4246 @end deffn
4247
4248 @deffn Command peek
4249 @emph{No description provided.}
4250 @end deffn
4251
4252 @deffn Command poke
4253 @emph{No description provided.}
4254 @end deffn
4255
4256 @deffn Command rm filename
4257 @c "rm" has both normal and Jim-level versions??
4258 Unlinks the file @file{filename}.
4259 @end deffn
4260
4261 @deffn Command trunc filename
4262 Removes all data in the file @file{filename}.
4263 @end deffn
4264
4265 @anchor{Memory access}
4266 @section Memory access commands
4267 @cindex memory access
4268
4269 These commands allow accesses of a specific size to the memory
4270 system. Often these are used to configure the current target in some
4271 special way. For example - one may need to write certain values to the
4272 SDRAM controller to enable SDRAM.
4273
4274 @enumerate
4275 @item Use the @command{targets} (plural) command
4276 to change the current target.
4277 @item In system level scripts these commands are deprecated.
4278 Please use their TARGET object siblings to avoid making assumptions
4279 about what TAP is the current target, or about MMU configuration.
4280 @end enumerate
4281
4282 @deffn Command mdw addr [count]
4283 @deffnx Command mdh addr [count]
4284 @deffnx Command mdb addr [count]
4285 Display contents of address @var{addr}, as
4286 32-bit words (@command{mdw}), 16-bit halfwords (@command{mdh}),
4287 or 8-bit bytes (@command{mdb}).
4288 If @var{count} is specified, displays that many units.
4289 (If you want to manipulate the data instead of displaying it,
4290 see the @code{mem2array} primitives.)
4291 @end deffn
4292
4293 @deffn Command mww addr word
4294 @deffnx Command mwh addr halfword
4295 @deffnx Command mwb addr byte
4296 Writes the specified @var{word} (32 bits),
4297 @var{halfword} (16 bits), or @var{byte} (8-bit) pattern,
4298 at the specified address @var{addr}.
4299 @end deffn
4300
4301
4302 @anchor{Image access}
4303 @section Image loading commands
4304 @cindex image loading
4305 @cindex image dumping
4306
4307 @anchor{dump_image}
4308 @deffn Command {dump_image} filename address size
4309 Dump @var{size} bytes of target memory starting at @var{address} to the
4310 binary file named @var{filename}.
4311 @end deffn
4312
4313 @deffn Command {fast_load}
4314 Loads an image stored in memory by @command{fast_load_image} to the
4315 current target. Must be preceeded by fast_load_image.
4316 @end deffn
4317
4318 @deffn Command {fast_load_image} filename address [@option{bin}|@option{ihex}|@option{elf}]
4319 Normally you should be using @command{load_image} or GDB load. However, for
4320 testing purposes or when I/O overhead is significant(OpenOCD running on an embedded
4321 host), storing the image in memory and uploading the image to the target
4322 can be a way to upload e.g. multiple debug sessions when the binary does not change.
4323 Arguments are the same as @command{load_image}, but the image is stored in OpenOCD host
4324 memory, i.e. does not affect target. This approach is also useful when profiling
4325 target programming performance as I/O and target programming can easily be profiled
4326 separately.
4327 @end deffn
4328
4329 @anchor{load_image}
4330 @deffn Command {load_image} filename address [@option{bin}|@option{ihex}|@option{elf}]
4331 Load image from file @var{filename} to target memory at @var{address}.
4332 The file format may optionally be specified
4333 (@option{bin}, @option{ihex}, or @option{elf})
4334 @end deffn
4335
4336 @deffn Command {test_image} filename [address [@option{bin}|@option{ihex}|@option{elf}]]
4337 Displays image section sizes and addresses
4338 as if @var{filename} were loaded into target memory
4339 starting at @var{address} (defaults to zero).
4340 The file format may optionally be specified
4341 (@option{bin}, @option{ihex}, or @option{elf})
4342 @end deffn
4343
4344 @deffn Command {verify_image} filename address [@option{bin}|@option{ihex}|@option{elf}]
4345 Verify @var{filename} against target memory starting at @var{address}.
4346 The file format may optionally be specified
4347 (@option{bin}, @option{ihex}, or @option{elf})
4348 This will first attempt a comparison using a CRC checksum, if this fails it will try a binary compare.
4349 @end deffn
4350
4351
4352 @section Breakpoint and Watchpoint commands
4353 @cindex breakpoint
4354 @cindex watchpoint
4355
4356 CPUs often make debug modules accessible through JTAG, with
4357 hardware support for a handful of code breakpoints and data
4358 watchpoints.
4359 In addition, CPUs almost always support software breakpoints.
4360
4361 @deffn Command {bp} [address len [@option{hw}]]
4362 With no parameters, lists all active breakpoints.
4363 Else sets a breakpoint on code execution starting
4364 at @var{address} for @var{length} bytes.
4365 This is a software breakpoint, unless @option{hw} is specified
4366 in which case it will be a hardware breakpoint.
4367
4368 (@xref{arm9tdmi vector_catch}, or @pxref{xscale vector_catch},
4369 for similar mechanisms that do not consume hardware breakpoints.)
4370 @end deffn
4371
4372 @deffn Command {rbp} address
4373 Remove the breakpoint at @var{address}.
4374 @end deffn
4375
4376 @deffn Command {rwp} address
4377 Remove data watchpoint on @var{address}
4378 @end deffn
4379
4380 @deffn Command {wp} [address len [(@option{r}|@option{w}|@option{a}) [value [mask]]]]
4381 With no parameters, lists all active watchpoints.
4382 Else sets a data watchpoint on data from @var{address} for @var{length} bytes.
4383 The watch point is an "access" watchpoint unless
4384 the @option{r} or @option{w} parameter is provided,
4385 defining it as respectively a read or write watchpoint.
4386 If a @var{value} is provided, that value is used when determining if
4387 the watchpoint should trigger. The value may be first be masked
4388 using @var{mask} to mark ``don't care'' fields.
4389 @end deffn
4390
4391 @section Misc Commands
4392
4393 @cindex profiling
4394 @deffn Command {profile} seconds filename
4395 Profiling samples the CPU's program counter as quickly as possible,
4396 which is useful for non-intrusive stochastic profiling.
4397 Saves up to 10000 sampines in @file{filename} using ``gmon.out'' format.
4398 @end deffn
4399
4400 @deffn Command {version}
4401 Displays a string identifying the version of this OpenOCD server.
4402 @end deffn
4403
4404 @deffn Command {virt2phys} virtual_address
4405 Requests the current target to map the specified @var{virtual_address}
4406 to its corresponding physical address, and displays the result.
4407 @end deffn
4408
4409 @node Architecture and Core Commands
4410 @chapter Architecture and Core Commands
4411 @cindex Architecture Specific Commands
4412 @cindex Core Specific Commands
4413
4414 Most CPUs have specialized JTAG operations to support debugging.
4415 OpenOCD packages most such operations in its standard command framework.
4416 Some of those operations don't fit well in that framework, so they are
4417 exposed here as architecture or implementation (core) specific commands.
4418
4419 @anchor{ARM Hardware Tracing}
4420 @section ARM Hardware Tracing
4421 @cindex tracing
4422 @cindex ETM
4423 @cindex ETB
4424
4425 CPUs based on ARM cores may include standard tracing interfaces,
4426 based on an ``Embedded Trace Module'' (ETM) which sends voluminous
4427 address and data bus trace records to a ``Trace Port''.
4428
4429 @itemize
4430 @item
4431 Development-oriented boards will sometimes provide a high speed
4432 trace connector for collecting that data, when the particular CPU
4433 supports such an interface.
4434 (The standard connector is a 38-pin Mictor, with both JTAG
4435 and trace port support.)
4436 Those trace connectors are supported by higher end JTAG adapters
4437 and some logic analyzer modules; frequently those modules can
4438 buffer several megabytes of trace data.
4439 Configuring an ETM coupled to such an external trace port belongs
4440 in the board-specific configuration file.
4441 @item
4442 If the CPU doesn't provide an external interface, it probably
4443 has an ``Embedded Trace Buffer'' (ETB) on the chip, which is a
4444 dedicated SRAM. 4KBytes is one common ETB size.
4445 Configuring an ETM coupled only to an ETB belongs in the CPU-specific
4446 (target) configuration file, since it works the same on all boards.
4447 @end itemize
4448
4449 ETM support in OpenOCD doesn't seem to be widely used yet.
4450
4451 @quotation Issues
4452 ETM support may be buggy, and at least some @command{etm config}
4453 parameters should be detected by asking the ETM for them.
4454 It seems like a GDB hookup should be possible,
4455 as well as triggering trace on specific events
4456 (perhaps @emph{handling IRQ 23} or @emph{calls foo()}).
4457 There should be GUI tools to manipulate saved trace data and help
4458 analyse it in conjunction with the source code.
4459 It's unclear how much of a common interface is shared
4460 with the current XScale trace support, or should be
4461 shared with eventual Nexus-style trace module support.
4462 @end quotation
4463
4464 @subsection ETM Configuration
4465 ETM setup is coupled with the trace port driver configuration.
4466
4467 @deffn {Config Command} {etm config} target width mode clocking driver
4468 Declares the ETM associated with @var{target}, and associates it
4469 with a given trace port @var{driver}. @xref{Trace Port Drivers}.
4470
4471 Several of the parameters must reflect the trace port configuration.
4472 The @var{width} must be either 4, 8, or 16.
4473 The @var{mode} must be @option{normal}, @option{multiplexted},
4474 or @option{demultiplexted}.
4475 The @var{clocking} must be @option{half} or @option{full}.
4476
4477 @quotation Note
4478 You can see the ETM registers using the @command{reg} command, although
4479 not all of those possible registers are present in every ETM.
4480 @end quotation
4481 @end deffn
4482
4483 @deffn Command {etm info}
4484 Displays information about the current target's ETM.
4485 @end deffn
4486
4487 @deffn Command {etm status}
4488 Displays status of the current target's ETM:
4489 is the ETM idle, or is it collecting data?
4490 Did trace data overflow?
4491 Was it triggered?
4492 @end deffn
4493
4494 @deffn Command {etm tracemode} [type context_id_bits cycle_accurate branch_output]
4495 Displays what data that ETM will collect.
4496 If arguments are provided, first configures that data.
4497 When the configuration changes, tracing is stopped
4498 and any buffered trace data is invalidated.
4499
4500 @itemize
4501 @item @var{type} ... one of
4502 @option{none} (save nothing),
4503 @option{data} (save data),
4504 @option{address} (save addresses),
4505 @option{all} (save data and addresses)
4506 @item @var{context_id_bits} ... 0, 8, 16, or 32
4507 @item @var{cycle_accurate} ... @option{enable} or @option{disable}
4508 @item @var{branch_output} ... @option{enable} or @option{disable}
4509 @end itemize
4510 @end deffn
4511
4512 @deffn Command {etm trigger_percent} percent
4513 @emph{Buggy and effectively a NOP ... @var{percent} from 2..100}
4514 @end deffn
4515
4516 @subsection ETM Trace Operation
4517
4518 After setting up the ETM, you can use it to collect data.
4519 That data can be exported to files for later analysis.
4520 It can also be parsed with OpenOCD, for basic sanity checking.
4521
4522 @deffn Command {etm analyze}
4523 Reads trace data into memory, if it wasn't already present.
4524 Decodes and prints the data that was collected.
4525 @end deffn
4526
4527 @deffn Command {etm dump} filename
4528 Stores the captured trace data in @file{filename}.
4529 @end deffn
4530
4531 @deffn Command {etm image} filename [base_address] [type]
4532 Opens an image file.
4533 @end deffn
4534
4535 @deffn Command {etm load} filename
4536 Loads captured trace data from @file{filename}.
4537 @end deffn
4538
4539 @deffn Command {etm start}
4540 Starts trace data collection.
4541 @end deffn
4542
4543 @deffn Command {etm stop}
4544 Stops trace data collection.
4545 @end deffn
4546
4547 @anchor{Trace Port Drivers}
4548 @subsection Trace Port Drivers
4549
4550 To use an ETM trace port it must be associated with a driver.
4551
4552 @deffn {Trace Port Driver} dummy
4553 Use the @option{dummy} driver if you are configuring an ETM that's
4554 not connected to anything (on-chip ETB or off-chip trace connector).
4555 @emph{This driver lets OpenOCD talk to the ETM, but it does not expose
4556 any trace data collection.}
4557 @deffn {Config Command} {etm_dummy config} target
4558 Associates the ETM for @var{target} with a dummy driver.
4559 @end deffn
4560 @end deffn
4561
4562 @deffn {Trace Port Driver} etb
4563 Use the @option{etb} driver if you are configuring an ETM
4564 to use on-chip ETB memory.
4565 @deffn {Config Command} {etb config} target etb_tap
4566 Associates the ETM for @var{target} with the ETB at @var{etb_tap}.
4567 You can see the ETB registers using the @command{reg} command.
4568 @end deffn
4569 @end deffn
4570
4571 @deffn {Trace Port Driver} oocd_trace
4572 This driver isn't available unless OpenOCD was explicitly configured
4573 with the @option{--enable-oocd_trace} option. You probably don't want
4574 to configure it unless you've built the appropriate prototype hardware;
4575 it's @emph{proof-of-concept} software.
4576
4577 Use the @option{oocd_trace} driver if you are configuring an ETM that's
4578 connected to an off-chip trace connector.
4579
4580 @deffn {Config Command} {oocd_trace config} target tty
4581 Associates the ETM for @var{target} with a trace driver which
4582 collects data through the serial port @var{tty}.
4583 @end deffn
4584
4585 @deffn Command {oocd_trace resync}
4586 Re-synchronizes with the capture clock.
4587 @end deffn
4588
4589 @deffn Command {oocd_trace status}
4590 Reports whether the capture clock is locked or not.
4591 @end deffn
4592 @end deffn
4593
4594
4595 @section ARMv4 and ARMv5 Architecture
4596 @cindex ARMv4
4597 @cindex ARMv5
4598
4599 These commands are specific to ARM architecture v4 and v5,
4600 including all ARM7 or ARM9 systems and Intel XScale.
4601 They are available in addition to other core-specific
4602 commands that may be available.
4603
4604 @deffn Command {armv4_5 core_state} [@option{arm}|@option{thumb}]
4605 Displays the core_state, optionally changing it to process
4606 either @option{arm} or @option{thumb} instructions.
4607 The target may later be resumed in the currently set core_state.
4608 (Processors may also support the Jazelle state, but
4609 that is not currently supported in OpenOCD.)
4610 @end deffn
4611
4612 @deffn Command {armv4_5 disassemble} address count [thumb]
4613 @cindex disassemble
4614 Disassembles @var{count} instructions starting at @var{address}.
4615 If @option{thumb} is specified, Thumb (16-bit) instructions are used;
4616 else ARM (32-bit) instructions are used.
4617 (Processors may also support the Jazelle state, but
4618 those instructions are not currently understood by OpenOCD.)
4619 @end deffn
4620
4621 @deffn Command {armv4_5 reg}
4622 Display a table of all banked core registers, fetching the current value from every
4623 core mode if necessary. OpenOCD versions before rev. 60 didn't fetch the current
4624 register value.
4625 @end deffn
4626
4627 @subsection ARM7 and ARM9 specific commands
4628 @cindex ARM7
4629 @cindex ARM9
4630
4631 These commands are specific to ARM7 and ARM9 cores, like ARM7TDMI, ARM720T,
4632 ARM9TDMI, ARM920T or ARM926EJ-S.
4633 They are available in addition to the ARMv4/5 commands,
4634 and any other core-specific commands that may be available.
4635
4636 @deffn Command {arm7_9 dbgrq} (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
4637 Control use of the EmbeddedIce DBGRQ signal to force entry into debug mode,
4638 instead of breakpoints. This should be
4639 safe for all but ARM7TDMI--S cores (like Philips LPC).
4640 This feature is enabled by default on most ARM9 cores,
4641 including ARM9TDMI, ARM920T, and ARM926EJ-S.
4642 @end deffn
4643
4644 @deffn Command {arm7_9 dcc_downloads} (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
4645 @cindex DCC
4646 Control the use of the debug communications channel (DCC) to write larger (>128 byte)
4647 amounts of memory. DCC downloads offer a huge speed increase, but might be
4648 unsafe, especially with targets running at very low speeds. This command was introduced
4649 with OpenOCD rev. 60, and requires a few bytes of working area.
4650 @end deffn
4651
4652 @anchor{arm7_9 fast_memory_access}
4653 @deffn Command {arm7_9 fast_memory_access} (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
4654 Enable or disable memory writes and reads that don't check completion of
4655 the operation. This provides a huge speed increase, especially with USB JTAG
4656 cables (FT2232), but might be unsafe if used with targets running at very low
4657 speeds, like the 32kHz startup clock of an AT91RM9200.
4658 @end deffn
4659
4660 @deffn {Debug Command} {arm7_9 write_core_reg} num mode word
4661 @emph{This is intended for use while debugging OpenOCD; you probably
4662 shouldn't use it.}
4663
4664 Writes a 32-bit @var{word} to register @var{num} (from 0 to 16)
4665 as used in the specified @var{mode}
4666 (where e.g. mode 16 is "user" and mode 19 is "supervisor";
4667 the M4..M0 bits of the PSR).
4668 Registers 0..15 are the normal CPU registers such as r0(0), r1(1) ... pc(15).
4669 Register 16 is the mode-specific SPSR,
4670 unless the specified mode is 0xffffffff (32-bit all-ones)
4671 in which case register 16 is the CPSR.
4672 The write goes directly to the CPU, bypassing the register cache.
4673 @end deffn
4674
4675 @deffn {Debug Command} {arm7_9 write_xpsr} word (@option{0}|@option{1})
4676 @emph{This is intended for use while debugging OpenOCD; you probably
4677 shouldn't use it.}
4678
4679 If the second parameter is zero, writes @var{word} to the
4680 Current Program Status register (CPSR).
4681 Else writes @var{word} to the current mode's Saved PSR (SPSR).
4682 In both cases, this bypasses the register cache.
4683 @end deffn
4684
4685 @deffn {Debug Command} {arm7_9 write_xpsr_im8} byte rotate (@option{0}|@option{1})
4686 @emph{This is intended for use while debugging OpenOCD; you probably
4687 shouldn't use it.}
4688
4689 Writes eight bits to the CPSR or SPSR,
4690 first rotating them by @math{2*rotate} bits,
4691 and bypassing the register cache.
4692 This has lower JTAG overhead than writing the entire CPSR or SPSR
4693 with @command{arm7_9 write_xpsr}.
4694 @end deffn
4695
4696 @subsection ARM720T specific commands
4697 @cindex ARM720T
4698
4699 These commands are available to ARM720T based CPUs,
4700 which are implementations of the ARMv4T architecture
4701 based on the ARM7TDMI-S integer core.
4702 They are available in addition to the ARMv4/5 and ARM7/ARM9 commands.
4703
4704 @deffn Command {arm720t cp15} regnum [value]
4705 Display cp15 register @var{regnum};
4706 else if a @var{value} is provided, that value is written to that register.
4707 @end deffn
4708
4709 @deffn Command {arm720t mdw_phys} addr [count]
4710 @deffnx Command {arm720t mdh_phys} addr [count]
4711 @deffnx Command {arm720t mdb_phys} addr [count]
4712 Display contents of physical address @var{addr}, as
4713 32-bit words (@command{mdw_phys}), 16-bit halfwords (@command{mdh_phys}),
4714 or 8-bit bytes (@command{mdb_phys}).
4715 If @var{count} is specified, displays that many units.
4716 @end deffn
4717
4718 @deffn Command {arm720t mww_phys} addr word
4719 @deffnx Command {arm720t mwh_phys} addr halfword
4720 @deffnx Command {arm720t mwb_phys} addr byte
4721 Writes the specified @var{word} (32 bits),
4722 @var{halfword} (16 bits), or @var{byte} (8-bit) pattern,
4723 at the specified physical address @var{addr}.
4724 @end deffn
4725
4726 @deffn Command {arm720t virt2phys} va
4727 Translate a virtual address @var{va} to a physical address
4728 and display the result.
4729 @end deffn
4730
4731 @subsection ARM9TDMI specific commands
4732 @cindex ARM9TDMI
4733
4734 Many ARM9-family CPUs are built around ARM9TDMI integer cores,
4735 or processors resembling ARM9TDMI, and can use these commands.
4736 Such cores include the ARM920T, ARM926EJ-S, and ARM966.
4737
4738 @c 9-june-2009: tried this on arm920t, it didn't work.
4739 @c no-params always lists nothing caught, and that's how it acts.
4740
4741 @anchor{arm9tdmi vector_catch}
4742 @deffn Command {arm9tdmi vector_catch} [@option{all}|@option{none}|list]
4743 @cindex vector_catch
4744 Vector Catch hardware provides a sort of dedicated breakpoint
4745 for hardware events such as reset, interrupt, and abort.
4746 You can use this to conserve normal breakpoint resources,
4747 so long as you're not concerned with code that branches directly
4748 to those hardware vectors.
4749
4750 This always finishes by listing the current configuration.
4751 If parameters are provided, it first reconfigures the
4752 vector catch hardware to intercept
4753 @option{all} of the hardware vectors,
4754 @option{none} of them,
4755 or a list with one or more of the following:
4756 @option{reset} @option{undef} @option{swi} @option{pabt} @option{dabt} @option{reserved}
4757 @option{irq} @option{fiq}.
4758 @end deffn
4759
4760 @subsection ARM920T specific commands
4761 @cindex ARM920T
4762
4763 These commands are available to ARM920T based CPUs,
4764 which are implementations of the ARMv4T architecture
4765 built using the ARM9TDMI integer core.
4766 They are available in addition to the ARMv4/5, ARM7/ARM9,
4767 and ARM9TDMI commands.
4768
4769 @deffn Command {arm920t cache_info}
4770 Print information about the caches found. This allows to see whether your target
4771 is an ARM920T (2x16kByte cache) or ARM922T (2x8kByte cache).
4772 @end deffn
4773
4774 @deffn Command {arm920t cp15} regnum [value]
4775 Display cp15 register @var{regnum};
4776 else if a @var{value} is provided, that value is written to that register.
4777 @end deffn
4778
4779 @deffn Command {arm920t cp15i} opcode [value [address]]
4780 Interpreted access using cp15 @var{opcode}.
4781 If no @var{value} is provided, the result is displayed.
4782 Else if that value is written using the specified @var{address},
4783 or using zero if no other address is not provided.
4784 @end deffn
4785
4786 @deffn Command {arm920t mdw_phys} addr [count]
4787 @deffnx Command {arm920t mdh_phys} addr [count]
4788 @deffnx Command {arm920t mdb_phys} addr [count]
4789 Display contents of physical address @var{addr}, as
4790 32-bit words (@command{mdw_phys}), 16-bit halfwords (@command{mdh_phys}),
4791 or 8-bit bytes (@command{mdb_phys}).
4792 If @var{count} is specified, displays that many units.
4793 @end deffn
4794
4795 @deffn Command {arm920t mww_phys} addr word
4796 @deffnx Command {arm920t mwh_phys} addr halfword
4797 @deffnx Command {arm920t mwb_phys} addr byte
4798 Writes the specified @var{word} (32 bits),
4799 @var{halfword} (16 bits), or @var{byte} (8-bit) pattern,
4800 at the specified physical address @var{addr}.
4801 @end deffn
4802
4803 @deffn Command {arm920t read_cache} filename
4804 Dump the content of ICache and DCache to a file named @file{filename}.
4805 @end deffn
4806
4807 @deffn Command {arm920t read_mmu} filename
4808 Dump the content of the ITLB and DTLB to a file named @file{filename}.
4809 @end deffn
4810
4811 @deffn Command {arm920t virt2phys} va
4812 Translate a virtual address @var{va} to a physical address
4813 and display the result.
4814 @end deffn
4815
4816 @subsection ARM926ej-s specific commands
4817 @cindex ARM926ej-s
4818
4819 These commands are available to ARM926ej-s based CPUs,
4820 which are implementations of the ARMv5TEJ architecture
4821 based on the ARM9EJ-S integer core.
4822 They are available in addition to the ARMv4/5, ARM7/ARM9,
4823 and ARM9TDMI commands.
4824
4825 The Feroceon cores also support these commands, although
4826 they are not built from ARM926ej-s designs.
4827
4828 @deffn Command {arm926ejs cache_info}
4829 Print information about the caches found.
4830 @end deffn
4831
4832 @deffn Command {arm926ejs cp15} opcode1 opcode2 CRn CRm regnum [value]
4833 Accesses cp15 register @var{regnum} using
4834 @var{opcode1}, @var{opcode2}, @var{CRn}, and @var{CRm}.
4835 If a @var{value} is provided, that value is written to that register.
4836 Else that register is read and displayed.
4837 @end deffn
4838
4839 @deffn Command {arm926ejs mdw_phys} addr [count]
4840 @deffnx Command {arm926ejs mdh_phys} addr [count]
4841 @deffnx Command {arm926ejs mdb_phys} addr [count]
4842 Display contents of physical address @var{addr}, as
4843 32-bit words (@command{mdw_phys}), 16-bit halfwords (@command{mdh_phys}),
4844 or 8-bit bytes (@command{mdb_phys}).
4845 If @var{count} is specified, displays that many units.
4846 @end deffn
4847
4848 @deffn Command {arm926ejs mww_phys} addr word
4849 @deffnx Command {arm926ejs mwh_phys} addr halfword
4850 @deffnx Command {arm926ejs mwb_phys} addr byte
4851 Writes the specified @var{word} (32 bits),
4852 @var{halfword} (16 bits), or @var{byte} (8-bit) pattern,
4853 at the specified physical address @var{addr}.
4854 @end deffn
4855
4856 @deffn Command {arm926ejs virt2phys} va
4857 Translate a virtual address @var{va} to a physical address
4858 and display the result.
4859 @end deffn
4860
4861 @subsection ARM966E specific commands
4862 @cindex ARM966E
4863
4864 These commands are available to ARM966 based CPUs,
4865 which are implementations of the ARMv5TE architecture.
4866 They are available in addition to the ARMv4/5, ARM7/ARM9,
4867 and ARM9TDMI commands.
4868
4869 @deffn Command {arm966e cp15} regnum [value]
4870 Display cp15 register @var{regnum};
4871 else if a @var{value} is provided, that value is written to that register.
4872 @end deffn
4873
4874 @subsection XScale specific commands
4875 @cindex XScale
4876
4877 These commands are available to XScale based CPUs,
4878 which are implementations of the ARMv5TE architecture.
4879
4880 @deffn Command {xscale analyze_trace}
4881 Displays the contents of the trace buffer.
4882 @end deffn
4883
4884 @deffn Command {xscale cache_clean_address} address
4885 Changes the address used when cleaning the data cache.
4886 @end deffn
4887
4888 @deffn Command {xscale cache_info}
4889 Displays information about the CPU caches.
4890 @end deffn
4891
4892 @deffn Command {xscale cp15} regnum [value]
4893 Display cp15 register @var{regnum};
4894 else if a @var{value} is provided, that value is written to that register.
4895 @end deffn
4896
4897 @deffn Command {xscale debug_handler} target address
4898 Changes the address used for the specified target's debug handler.
4899 @end deffn
4900
4901 @deffn Command {xscale dcache} (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
4902 Enables or disable the CPU's data cache.
4903 @end deffn
4904
4905 @deffn Command {xscale dump_trace} filename
4906 Dumps the raw contents of the trace buffer to @file{filename}.
4907 @end deffn
4908
4909 @deffn Command {xscale icache} (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
4910 Enables or disable the CPU's instruction cache.
4911 @end deffn
4912
4913 @deffn Command {xscale mmu} (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
4914 Enables or disable the CPU's memory management unit.
4915 @end deffn
4916
4917 @deffn Command {xscale trace_buffer} (@option{enable}|@option{disable}) [@option{fill} [n] | @option{wrap}]
4918 Enables or disables the trace buffer,
4919 and controls how it is emptied.
4920 @end deffn
4921
4922 @deffn Command {xscale trace_image} filename [offset [type]]
4923 Opens a trace image from @file{filename}, optionally rebasing
4924 its segment addresses by @var{offset}.
4925 The image @var{type} may be one of
4926 @option{bin} (binary), @option{ihex} (Intel hex),
4927 @option{elf} (ELF file), @option{s19} (Motorola s19),
4928 @option{mem}, or @option{builder}.
4929 @end deffn
4930
4931 @anchor{xscale vector_catch}
4932 @deffn Command {xscale vector_catch} [mask]
4933 @cindex vector_catch
4934 Display a bitmask showing the hardware vectors to catch.
4935 If the optional parameter is provided, first set the bitmask to that value.
4936 @end deffn
4937
4938 @section ARMv6 Architecture
4939 @cindex ARMv6
4940
4941 @subsection ARM11 specific commands
4942 @cindex ARM11
4943
4944 @deffn Command {arm11 mcr} p1 p2 p3 p4 p5
4945 Read coprocessor register
4946 @end deffn
4947
4948 @deffn Command {arm11 memwrite burst} [value]
4949 Displays the value of the memwrite burst-enable flag,
4950 which is enabled by default.
4951 If @var{value} is defined, first assigns that.
4952 @end deffn
4953
4954 @deffn Command {arm11 memwrite error_fatal} [value]
4955 Displays the value of the memwrite error_fatal flag,
4956 which is enabled by default.
4957 If @var{value} is defined, first assigns that.
4958 @end deffn
4959
4960 @deffn Command {arm11 mrc} p1 p2 p3 p4 p5 value
4961 Write coprocessor register
4962 @end deffn
4963
4964 @deffn Command {arm11 no_increment} [value]
4965 Displays the value of the flag controlling whether
4966 some read or write operations increment the pointer
4967 (the default behavior) or not (acting like a FIFO).
4968 If @var{value} is defined, first assigns that.
4969 @end deffn
4970
4971 @deffn Command {arm11 step_irq_enable} [value]
4972 Displays the value of the flag controlling whether
4973 IRQs are enabled during single stepping;
4974 they is disabled by default.
4975 If @var{value} is defined, first assigns that.
4976 @end deffn
4977
4978 @section ARMv7 Architecture
4979 @cindex ARMv7
4980
4981 @subsection ARMv7 Debug Access Port (DAP) specific commands
4982 @cindex Debug Access Port
4983 @cindex DAP
4984 These commands are specific to ARM architecture v7 Debug Access Port (DAP),
4985 included on cortex-m3 and cortex-a8 systems.
4986 They are available in addition to other core-specific commands that may be available.
4987
4988 @deffn Command {dap info} [num]
4989 Displays dap info for ap @var{num}, defaulting to the currently selected AP.
4990 @end deffn
4991
4992 @deffn Command {dap apsel} [num]
4993 Select AP @var{num}, defaulting to 0.
4994 @end deffn
4995
4996 @deffn Command {dap apid} [num]
4997 Displays id register from AP @var{num},
4998 defaulting to the currently selected AP.
4999 @end deffn
5000
5001 @deffn Command {dap baseaddr} [num]
5002 Displays debug base address from AP @var{num},
5003 defaulting to the currently selected AP.
5004 @end deffn
5005
5006 @deffn Command {dap memaccess} [value]
5007 Displays the number of extra tck for mem-ap memory bus access [0-255].
5008 If @var{value} is defined, first assigns that.
5009 @end deffn
5010
5011 @subsection Cortex-M3 specific commands
5012 @cindex Cortex-M3
5013
5014 @deffn Command {cortex_m3 disassemble} address count
5015 @cindex disassemble
5016 Disassembles @var{count} Thumb2 instructions starting at @var{address}.
5017 @end deffn
5018
5019 @deffn Command {cortex_m3 maskisr} (@option{on}|@option{off})
5020 Control masking (disabling) interrupts during target step/resume.
5021 @end deffn
5022
5023 @deffn Command {cortex_m3 vector_catch} [@option{all}|@option{none}|list]
5024 @cindex vector_catch
5025 Vector Catch hardware provides dedicated breakpoints
5026 for certain hardware events.
5027
5028 Parameters request interception of
5029 @option{all} of these hardware event vectors,
5030 @option{none} of them,
5031 or one or more of the following:
5032 @option{hard_err} for a HardFault exception;
5033 @option{mm_err} for a MemManage exception;
5034 @option{bus_err} for a BusFault exception;
5035 @option{irq_err},
5036 @option{state_err},
5037 @option{chk_err}, or
5038 @option{nocp_err} for various UsageFault exceptions; or
5039 @option{reset}.
5040 If NVIC setup code does not enable them,
5041 MemManage, BusFault, and UsageFault exceptions
5042 are mapped to HardFault.
5043 UsageFault checks for
5044 divide-by-zero and unaligned access
5045 must also be explicitly enabled.
5046
5047 This finishes by listing the current vector catch configuration.
5048 @end deffn
5049
5050 @anchor{Software Debug Messages and Tracing}
5051 @section Software Debug Messages and Tracing
5052 @cindex Linux-ARM DCC support
5053 @cindex tracing
5054 @cindex libdcc
5055 @cindex DCC
5056 OpenOCD can process certain requests from target software. Currently
5057 @command{target_request debugmsgs}
5058 is supported only for @option{arm7_9} and @option{cortex_m3} cores.
5059 These messages are received as part of target polling, so
5060 you need to have @command{poll on} active to receive them.
5061 They are intrusive in that they will affect program execution
5062 times. If that is a problem, @pxref{ARM Hardware Tracing}.
5063
5064 See @file{libdcc} in the contrib dir for more details.
5065 In addition to sending strings, characters, and
5066 arrays of various size integers from the target,
5067 @file{libdcc} also exports a software trace point mechanism.
5068 The target being debugged may
5069 issue trace messages which include a 24-bit @dfn{trace point} number.
5070 Trace point support includes two distinct mechanisms,
5071 each supported by a command:
5072
5073 @itemize
5074 @item @emph{History} ... A circular buffer of trace points
5075 can be set up, and then displayed at any time.
5076 This tracks where code has been, which can be invaluable in
5077 finding out how some fault was triggered.
5078
5079 The buffer may overflow, since it collects records continuously.
5080 It may be useful to use some of the 24 bits to represent a
5081 particular event, and other bits to hold data.
5082
5083 @item @emph{Counting} ... An array of counters can be set up,
5084 and then displayed at any time.
5085 This can help establish code coverage and identify hot spots.
5086
5087 The array of counters is directly indexed by the trace point
5088 number, so trace points with higher numbers are not counted.
5089 @end itemize
5090
5091 Linux-ARM kernels have a ``Kernel low-level debugging
5092 via EmbeddedICE DCC channel'' option (CONFIG_DEBUG_ICEDCC,
5093 depends on CONFIG_DEBUG_LL) which uses this mechanism to
5094 deliver messages before a serial console can be activated.
5095 This is not the same format used by @file{libdcc}.
5096 Other software, such as the U-Boot boot loader, sometimes
5097 does the same thing.
5098
5099 @deffn Command {target_request debugmsgs} [@option{enable}|@option{disable}|@option{charmsg}]
5100 Displays current handling of target DCC message requests.
5101 These messages may be sent to the debugger while the target is running.
5102 The optional @option{enable} and @option{charmsg} parameters
5103 both enable the messages, while @option{disable} disables them.
5104
5105 With @option{charmsg} the DCC words each contain one character,
5106 as used by Linux with CONFIG_DEBUG_ICEDCC;
5107 otherwise the libdcc format is used.
5108 @end deffn
5109
5110 @deffn Command {trace history} (@option{clear}|count)
5111 With no parameter, displays all the trace points that have triggered
5112 in the order they triggered.
5113 With the parameter @option{clear}, erases all current trace history records.
5114 With a @var{count} parameter, allocates space for that many
5115 history records.
5116 @end deffn
5117
5118 @deffn Command {trace point} (@option{clear}|identifier)
5119 With no parameter, displays all trace point identifiers and how many times
5120 they have been triggered.
5121 With the parameter @option{clear}, erases all current trace point counters.
5122 With a numeric @var{identifier} parameter, creates a new a trace point counter
5123 and associates it with that identifier.
5124
5125 @emph{Important:} The identifier and the trace point number
5126 are not related except by this command.
5127 These trace point numbers always start at zero (from server startup,
5128 or after @command{trace point clear}) and count up from there.
5129 @end deffn
5130
5131
5132 @node JTAG Commands
5133 @chapter JTAG Commands
5134 @cindex JTAG Commands
5135 Most general purpose JTAG commands have been presented earlier.
5136 (@xref{JTAG Speed}, @ref{Reset Configuration}, and @ref{TAP Declaration}.)
5137 Lower level JTAG commands, as presented here,
5138 may be needed to work with targets which require special
5139 attention during operations such as reset or initialization.
5140
5141 To use these commands you will need to understand some
5142 of the basics of JTAG, including:
5143
5144 @itemize @bullet
5145 @item A JTAG scan chain consists of a sequence of individual TAP
5146 devices such as a CPUs.
5147 @item Control operations involve moving each TAP through the same
5148 standard state machine (in parallel)
5149 using their shared TMS and clock signals.
5150 @item Data transfer involves shifting data through the chain of
5151 instruction or data registers of each TAP, writing new register values
5152 while the reading previous ones.
5153 @item Data register sizes are a function of the instruction active in
5154 a given TAP, while instruction register sizes are fixed for each TAP.
5155 All TAPs support a BYPASS instruction with a single bit data register.
5156 @item The way OpenOCD differentiates between TAP devices is by
5157 shifting different instructions into (and out of) their instruction
5158 registers.
5159 @end itemize
5160
5161 @section Low Level JTAG Commands
5162
5163 These commands are used by developers who need to access
5164 JTAG instruction or data registers, possibly controlling
5165 the order of TAP state transitions.
5166 If you're not debugging OpenOCD internals, or bringing up a
5167 new JTAG adapter or a new type of TAP device (like a CPU or
5168 JTAG router), you probably won't need to use these commands.
5169
5170 @deffn Command {drscan} tap [numbits value]+ [@option{-endstate} tap_state]
5171 Loads the data register of @var{tap} with a series of bit fields
5172 that specify the entire register.
5173 Each field is @var{numbits} bits long with
5174 a numeric @var{value} (hexadecimal encouraged).
5175 The return value holds the original value of each
5176 of those fields.
5177
5178 For example, a 38 bit number might be specified as one
5179 field of 32 bits then one of 6 bits.
5180 @emph{For portability, never pass fields which are more
5181 than 32 bits long. Many OpenOCD implementations do not
5182 support 64-bit (or larger) integer values.}
5183
5184 All TAPs other than @var{tap} must be in BYPASS mode.
5185 The single bit in their data registers does not matter.
5186
5187 When @var{tap_state} is specified, the JTAG state machine is left
5188 in that state.
5189 For example @sc{drpause} might be specified, so that more
5190 instructions can be issued before re-entering the @sc{run/idle} state.
5191 If the end state is not specified, the @sc{run/idle} state is entered.
5192
5193 @quotation Warning
5194 OpenOCD does not record information about data register lengths,
5195 so @emph{it is important that you get the bit field lengths right}.
5196 Remember that different JTAG instructions refer to different
5197 data registers, which may have different lengths.
5198 Moreover, those lengths may not be fixed;
5199 the SCAN_N instruction can change the length of
5200 the register accessed by the INTEST instruction
5201 (by connecting a different scan chain).
5202 @end quotation
5203 @end deffn
5204
5205 @deffn Command {flush_count}
5206 Returns the number of times the JTAG queue has been flushed.
5207 This may be used for performance tuning.
5208
5209 For example, flushing a queue over USB involves a
5210 minimum latency, often several milliseconds, which does
5211 not change with the amount of data which is written.
5212 You may be able to identify performance problems by finding
5213 tasks which waste bandwidth by flushing small transfers too often,
5214 instead of batching them into larger operations.
5215 @end deffn
5216
5217 @deffn Command {irscan} [tap instruction]+ [@option{-endstate} tap_state]
5218 For each @var{tap} listed, loads the instruction register
5219 with its associated numeric @var{instruction}.
5220 (The number of bits in that instruction may be displayed
5221 using the @command{scan_chain} command.)
5222 For other TAPs, a BYPASS instruction is loaded.
5223
5224 When @var{tap_state} is specified, the JTAG state machine is left
5225 in that state.
5226 For example @sc{irpause} might be specified, so the data register
5227 can be loaded before re-entering the @sc{run/idle} state.
5228 If the end state is not specified, the @sc{run/idle} state is entered.
5229
5230 @quotation Note
5231 OpenOCD currently supports only a single field for instruction
5232 register values, unlike data register values.
5233 For TAPs where the instruction register length is more than 32 bits,
5234 portable scripts currently must issue only BYPASS instructions.
5235 @end quotation
5236 @end deffn
5237
5238 @deffn Command {jtag_reset} trst srst
5239 Set values of reset signals.
5240 The @var{trst} and @var{srst} parameter values may be
5241 @option{0}, indicating that reset is inactive (pulled or driven high),
5242 or @option{1}, indicating it is active (pulled or driven low).
5243 The @command{reset_config} command should already have been used
5244 to configure how the board and JTAG adapter treat these two
5245 signals, and to say if either signal is even present.
5246 @xref{Reset Configuration}.
5247 @end deffn
5248
5249 @deffn Command {runtest} @var{num_cycles}
5250 Move to the @sc{run/idle} state, and execute at least
5251 @var{num_cycles} of the JTAG clock (TCK).
5252 Instructions often need some time
5253 to execute before they take effect.
5254 @end deffn
5255
5256 @c tms_sequence (short|long)
5257 @c ... temporary, debug-only, probably gone before 0.2 ships
5258
5259 @deffn Command {verify_ircapture} (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
5260 Verify values captured during @sc{ircapture} and returned
5261 during IR scans. Default is enabled, but this can be
5262 overridden by @command{verify_jtag}.
5263 @end deffn
5264
5265 @deffn Command {verify_jtag} (@option{enable}|@option{disable})
5266 Enables verification of DR and IR scans, to help detect
5267 programming errors. For IR scans, @command{verify_ircapture}
5268 must also be enabled.
5269 Default is enabled.
5270 @end deffn
5271
5272 @section TAP state names
5273 @cindex TAP state names
5274
5275 The @var{tap_state} names used by OpenOCD in the @command{drscan},
5276 and @command{irscan} commands are:
5277
5278 @itemize @bullet
5279 @item @b{RESET} ... should act as if TRST were active
5280 @item @b{RUN/IDLE} ... don't assume this always means IDLE
5281 @item @b{DRSELECT}
5282 @item @b{DRCAPTURE}
5283 @item @b{DRSHIFT} ... TDI/TDO shifting through the data register
5284 @item @b{DREXIT1}
5285 @item @b{DRPAUSE} ... data register ready for update or more shifting
5286 @item @b{DREXIT2}
5287 @item @b{DRUPDATE}
5288 @item @b{IRSELECT}
5289 @item @b{IRCAPTURE}
5290 @item @b{IRSHIFT} ... TDI/TDO shifting through the instruction register
5291 @item @b{IREXIT1}
5292 @item @b{IRPAUSE} ... instruction register ready for update or more shifting
5293 @item @b{IREXIT2}
5294 @item @b{IRUPDATE}
5295 @end itemize
5296
5297 Note that only six of those states are fully ``stable'' in the
5298 face of TMS fixed (low except for @sc{reset})
5299 and a free-running JTAG clock. For all the
5300 others, the next TCK transition changes to a new state.
5301
5302 @itemize @bullet
5303 @item From @sc{drshift} and @sc{irshift}, clock transitions will
5304 produce side effects by changing register contents. The values
5305 to be latched in upcoming @sc{drupdate} or @sc{irupdate} states
5306 may not be as expected.
5307 @item @sc{run/idle}, @sc{drpause}, and @sc{irpause} are reasonable
5308 choices after @command{drscan} or @command{irscan} commands,
5309 since they are free of JTAG side effects.
5310 However, @sc{run/idle} may have side effects that appear at other
5311 levels, such as advancing the ARM9E-S instruction pipeline.
5312 Consult the documentation for the TAP(s) you are working with.
5313 @end itemize
5314
5315 @node Boundary Scan Commands
5316 @chapter Boundary Scan Commands
5317
5318 One of the original purposes of JTAG was to support
5319 boundary scan based hardware testing.
5320 Although its primary focus is to support On-Chip Debugging,
5321 OpenOCD also includes some boundary scan commands.
5322
5323 @section SVF: Serial Vector Format
5324 @cindex Serial Vector Format
5325 @cindex SVF
5326
5327 The Serial Vector Format, better known as @dfn{SVF}, is a
5328 way to represent JTAG test patterns in text files.
5329 OpenOCD supports running such test files.
5330
5331 @deffn Command {svf} filename [@option{quiet}]
5332 This issues a JTAG reset (Test-Logic-Reset) and then
5333 runs the SVF script from @file{filename}.
5334 Unless the @option{quiet} option is specified,
5335 each command is logged before it is executed.
5336 @end deffn
5337
5338 @section XSVF: Xilinx Serial Vector Format
5339 @cindex Xilinx Serial Vector Format
5340 @cindex XSVF
5341
5342 The Xilinx Serial Vector Format, better known as @dfn{XSVF}, is a
5343 binary representation of SVF which is optimized for use with
5344 Xilinx devices.
5345 OpenOCD supports running such test files.
5346
5347 @quotation Important
5348 Not all XSVF commands are supported.
5349 @end quotation
5350
5351 @deffn Command {xsvf} (tapname|@option{plain}) filename [@option{virt2}] [@option{quiet}]
5352 This issues a JTAG reset (Test-Logic-Reset) and then
5353 runs the XSVF script from @file{filename}.
5354 When a @var{tapname} is specified, the commands are directed at
5355 that TAP.
5356 When @option{virt2} is specified, the @sc{xruntest} command counts
5357 are interpreted as TCK cycles instead of microseconds.
5358 Unless the @option{quiet} option is specified,
5359 messages are logged for comments and some retries.
5360 @end deffn
5361
5362 @node TFTP
5363 @chapter TFTP
5364 @cindex TFTP
5365 If OpenOCD runs on an embedded host(as ZY1000 does), then TFTP can
5366 be used to access files on PCs (either the developer's PC or some other PC).
5367
5368 The way this works on the ZY1000 is to prefix a filename by
5369 "/tftp/ip/" and append the TFTP path on the TFTP
5370 server (tftpd). For example,
5371
5372 @example
5373 load_image /tftp/10.0.0.96/c:\temp\abc.elf
5374 @end example
5375
5376 will load c:\temp\abc.elf from the developer pc (10.0.0.96) into memory as
5377 if the file was hosted on the embedded host.
5378
5379 In order to achieve decent performance, you must choose a TFTP server
5380 that supports a packet size bigger than the default packet size (512 bytes). There
5381 are numerous TFTP servers out there (free and commercial) and you will have to do
5382 a bit of googling to find something that fits your requirements.
5383
5384 @node GDB and OpenOCD
5385 @chapter GDB and OpenOCD
5386 @cindex GDB
5387 OpenOCD complies with the remote gdbserver protocol, and as such can be used
5388 to debug remote targets.
5389
5390 @anchor{Connecting to GDB}
5391 @section Connecting to GDB
5392 @cindex Connecting to GDB
5393 Use GDB 6.7 or newer with OpenOCD if you run into trouble. For
5394 instance GDB 6.3 has a known bug that produces bogus memory access
5395 errors, which has since been fixed: look up 1836 in
5396 @url{http://sourceware.org/cgi-bin/gnatsweb.pl?database=gdb}
5397
5398 OpenOCD can communicate with GDB in two ways:
5399
5400 @enumerate
5401 @item
5402 A socket (TCP/IP) connection is typically started as follows:
5403 @example
5404 target remote localhost:3333
5405 @end example
5406 This would cause GDB to connect to the gdbserver on the local pc using port 3333.
5407 @item
5408 A pipe connection is typically started as follows:
5409 @example
5410 target remote | openocd --pipe
5411 @end example
5412 This would cause GDB to run OpenOCD and communicate using pipes (stdin/stdout).
5413 Using this method has the advantage of GDB starting/stopping OpenOCD for the debug
5414 session.
5415 @end enumerate
5416
5417 To list the available OpenOCD commands type @command{monitor help} on the
5418 GDB command line.
5419
5420 OpenOCD supports the gdb @option{qSupported} packet, this enables information
5421 to be sent by the GDB remote server (i.e. OpenOCD) to GDB. Typical information includes
5422 packet size and the device's memory map.
5423
5424 Previous versions of OpenOCD required the following GDB options to increase
5425 the packet size and speed up GDB communication:
5426 @example
5427 set remote memory-write-packet-size 1024
5428 set remote memory-write-packet-size fixed
5429 set remote memory-read-packet-size 1024
5430 set remote memory-read-packet-size fixed
5431 @end example
5432 This is now handled in the @option{qSupported} PacketSize and should not be required.
5433
5434 @section Programming using GDB
5435 @cindex Programming using GDB
5436
5437 By default the target memory map is sent to GDB. This can be disabled by
5438 the following OpenOCD configuration option:
5439 @example
5440 gdb_memory_map disable
5441 @end example
5442 For this to function correctly a valid flash configuration must also be set
5443 in OpenOCD. For faster performance you should also configure a valid
5444 working area.
5445
5446 Informing GDB of the memory map of the target will enable GDB to protect any
5447 flash areas of the target and use hardware breakpoints by default. This means
5448 that the OpenOCD option @command{gdb_breakpoint_override} is not required when
5449 using a memory map. @xref{gdb_breakpoint_override}.
5450
5451 To view the configured memory map in GDB, use the GDB command @option{info mem}
5452 All other unassigned addresses within GDB are treated as RAM.
5453
5454 GDB 6.8 and higher set any memory area not in the memory map as inaccessible.
5455 This can be changed to the old behaviour by using the following GDB command
5456 @example
5457 set mem inaccessible-by-default off
5458 @end example
5459
5460 If @command{gdb_flash_program enable} is also used, GDB will be able to
5461 program any flash memory using the vFlash interface.
5462
5463 GDB will look at the target memory map when a load command is given, if any
5464 areas to be programmed lie within the target flash area the vFlash packets
5465 will be used.
5466
5467 If the target needs configuring before GDB programming, an event
5468 script can be executed:
5469 @example
5470 $_TARGETNAME configure -event EVENTNAME BODY
5471 @end example
5472
5473 To verify any flash programming the GDB command @option{compare-sections}
5474 can be used.
5475
5476 @node Tcl Scripting API
5477 @chapter Tcl Scripting API
5478 @cindex Tcl Scripting API
5479 @cindex Tcl scripts
5480 @section API rules
5481
5482 The commands are stateless. E.g. the telnet command line has a concept
5483 of currently active target, the Tcl API proc's take this sort of state
5484 information as an argument to each proc.
5485
5486 There are three main types of return values: single value, name value
5487 pair list and lists.
5488
5489 Name value pair. The proc 'foo' below returns a name/value pair
5490 list.
5491
5492 @verbatim
5493
5494 > set foo(me) Duane
5495 > set foo(you) Oyvind
5496 > set foo(mouse) Micky
5497 > set foo(duck) Donald
5498
5499 If one does this:
5500
5501 > set foo
5502
5503 The result is:
5504
5505 me Duane you Oyvind mouse Micky duck Donald
5506
5507 Thus, to get the names of the associative array is easy:
5508
5509 foreach { name value } [set foo] {
5510 puts "Name: $name, Value: $value"
5511 }
5512 @end verbatim
5513
5514 Lists returned must be relatively small. Otherwise a range
5515 should be passed in to the proc in question.
5516
5517 @section Internal low-level Commands
5518
5519 By low-level, the intent is a human would not directly use these commands.
5520
5521 Low-level commands are (should be) prefixed with "ocd_", e.g.
5522 @command{ocd_flash_banks}
5523 is the low level API upon which @command{flash banks} is implemented.
5524
5525 @itemize @bullet
5526 @item @b{ocd_mem2array} <@var{varname}> <@var{width}> <@var{addr}> <@var{nelems}>
5527
5528 Read memory and return as a Tcl array for script processing
5529 @item @b{ocd_array2mem} <@var{varname}> <@var{width}> <@var{addr}> <@var{nelems}>
5530
5531 Convert a Tcl array to memory locations and write the values
5532 @item @b{ocd_flash_banks} <@var{driver}> <@var{base}> <@var{size}> <@var{chip_width}> <@var{bus_width}> <@var{target}> [@option{driver options} ...]
5533
5534 Return information about the flash banks
5535 @end itemize
5536
5537 OpenOCD commands can consist of two words, e.g. "flash banks". The
5538 @file{startup.tcl} "unknown" proc will translate this into a Tcl proc
5539 called "flash_banks".
5540
5541 @section OpenOCD specific Global Variables
5542
5543 @subsection HostOS
5544
5545 Real Tcl has ::tcl_platform(), and platform::identify, and many other
5546 variables. JimTCL, as implemented in OpenOCD creates $HostOS which
5547 holds one of the following values:
5548
5549 @itemize @bullet
5550 @item @b{winxx} Built using Microsoft Visual Studio
5551 @item @b{linux} Linux is the underlying operating sytem
5552 @item @b{darwin} Darwin (mac-os) is the underlying operating sytem.
5553 @item @b{cygwin} Running under Cygwin
5554 @item @b{mingw32} Running under MingW32
5555 @item @b{other} Unknown, none of the above.
5556 @end itemize
5557
5558 Note: 'winxx' was choosen because today (March-2009) no distinction is made between Win32 and Win64.
5559
5560 @quotation Note
5561 We should add support for a variable like Tcl variable
5562 @code{tcl_platform(platform)}, it should be called
5563 @code{jim_platform} (because it
5564 is jim, not real tcl).
5565 @end quotation
5566
5567 @node Upgrading
5568 @chapter Deprecated/Removed Commands
5569 @cindex Deprecated/Removed Commands
5570 Certain OpenOCD commands have been deprecated or
5571 removed during the various revisions.
5572
5573 Upgrade your scripts as soon as possible.
5574 These descriptions for old commands may be removed
5575 a year after the command itself was removed.
5576 This means that in January 2010 this chapter may
5577 become much shorter.
5578
5579 @itemize @bullet
5580 @item @b{arm7_9 fast_writes}
5581 @cindex arm7_9 fast_writes
5582 @*Use @command{arm7_9 fast_memory_access} instead.
5583 @xref{arm7_9 fast_memory_access}.
5584 @item @b{endstate}
5585 @cindex endstate
5586 @*An buggy old command that would not really work since background polling would wipe out the global endstate
5587 @item @b{arm7_9 force_hw_bkpts}
5588 @*Use @command{gdb_breakpoint_override} instead. Note that GDB will use hardware breakpoints
5589 for flash if the GDB memory map has been set up(default when flash is declared in
5590 target configuration). @xref{gdb_breakpoint_override}.
5591 @item @b{arm7_9 sw_bkpts}
5592 @*On by default. @xref{gdb_breakpoint_override}.
5593 @item @b{daemon_startup}
5594 @*this config option has been removed, simply adding @option{init} and @option{reset halt} to
5595 the end of your config script will give the same behaviour as using @option{daemon_startup reset}
5596 and @option{target cortex_m3 little reset_halt 0}.
5597 @item @b{dump_binary}
5598 @*use @option{dump_image} command with same args. @xref{dump_image}.
5599 @item @b{flash erase}
5600 @*use @option{flash erase_sector} command with same args. @xref{flash erase_sector}.
5601 @item @b{flash write}
5602 @*use @option{flash write_bank} command with same args. @xref{flash write_bank}.
5603 @item @b{flash write_binary}
5604 @*use @option{flash write_bank} command with same args. @xref{flash write_bank}.
5605 @item @b{flash auto_erase}
5606 @*use @option{flash write_image} command passing @option{erase} as the first parameter. @xref{flash write_image}.
5607
5608 @item @b{jtag_device}
5609 @*use the @command{jtag newtap} command, converting from positional syntax
5610 to named prefixes, and naming the TAP.
5611 @xref{jtag newtap}.
5612 Note that if you try to use the old command, a message will tell you the
5613 right new command to use; and that the fourth parameter in the old syntax
5614 was never actually used.
5615 @example
5616 OLD: jtag_device 8 0x01 0xe3 0xfe
5617 NEW: jtag newtap CHIPNAME TAPNAME \
5618 -irlen 8 -ircapture 0x01 -irmask 0xe3
5619 @end example
5620
5621 @item @b{jtag_speed} value
5622 @*@xref{JTAG Speed}.
5623 Usually, a value of zero means maximum
5624 speed. The actual effect of this option depends on the JTAG interface used.
5625 @itemize @minus
5626 @item wiggler: maximum speed / @var{number}
5627 @item ft2232: 6MHz / (@var{number}+1)
5628 @item amt jtagaccel: 8 / 2**@var{number}
5629 @item jlink: maximum speed in kHz (0-12000), 0 will use RTCK
5630 @item rlink: 24MHz / @var{number}, but only for certain values of @var{number}
5631 @comment end speed list.
5632 @end itemize
5633
5634 @item @b{load_binary}
5635 @*use @option{load_image} command with same args. @xref{load_image}.
5636 @item @b{run_and_halt_time}
5637 @*This command has been removed for simpler reset behaviour, it can be simulated with the
5638 following commands:
5639 @smallexample
5640 reset run
5641 sleep 100
5642 halt
5643 @end smallexample
5644 @item @b{target} <@var{type}> <@var{endian}> <@var{jtag-position}>
5645 @*use the create subcommand of @option{target}.
5646 @item @b{target_script} <@var{target#}> <@var{eventname}> <@var{scriptname}>
5647 @*use <@var{target_name}> configure -event <@var{eventname}> "script <@var{scriptname}>"
5648 @item @b{working_area}
5649 @*use the @option{configure} subcommand of @option{target} to set the work-area-virt, work-area-phy, work-area-size, and work-area-backup properties of the target.
5650 @end itemize
5651
5652 @node FAQ
5653 @chapter FAQ
5654 @cindex faq
5655 @enumerate
5656 @anchor{FAQ RTCK}
5657 @item @b{RTCK, also known as: Adaptive Clocking - What is it?}
5658 @cindex RTCK
5659 @cindex adaptive clocking
5660 @*
5661
5662 In digital circuit design it is often refered to as ``clock
5663 synchronisation'' the JTAG interface uses one clock (TCK or TCLK)
5664 operating at some speed, your target is operating at another. The two
5665 clocks are not synchronised, they are ``asynchronous''
5666
5667 In order for the two to work together they must be synchronised. Otherwise
5668 the two systems will get out of sync with each other and nothing will
5669 work. There are 2 basic options:
5670 @enumerate
5671 @item
5672 Use a special circuit.
5673 @item
5674 One clock must be some multiple slower than the other.
5675 @end enumerate
5676
5677 @b{Does this really matter?} For some chips and some situations, this
5678 is a non-issue (i.e.: A 500MHz ARM926) but for others - for example some
5679 Atmel SAM7 and SAM9 chips start operation from reset at 32kHz -
5680 program/enable the oscillators and eventually the main clock. It is in
5681 those critical times you must slow the JTAG clock to sometimes 1 to
5682 4kHz.
5683
5684 Imagine debugging a 500MHz ARM926 hand held battery powered device
5685 that ``deep sleeps'' at 32kHz between every keystroke. It can be
5686 painful.
5687
5688 @b{Solution #1 - A special circuit}
5689
5690 In order to make use of this, your JTAG dongle must support the RTCK
5691 feature. Not all dongles support this - keep reading!
5692
5693 The RTCK signal often found in some ARM chips is used to help with
5694 this problem. ARM has a good description of the problem described at
5695 this link: @url{http://www.arm.com/support/faqdev/4170.html} [checked
5696 28/nov/2008]. Link title: ``How does the JTAG synchronisation logic
5697 work? / how does adaptive clocking work?''.
5698
5699 The nice thing about adaptive clocking is that ``battery powered hand
5700 held device example'' - the adaptiveness works perfectly all the
5701 time. One can set a break point or halt the system in the deep power
5702 down code, slow step out until the system speeds up.
5703
5704 Note that adaptive clocking may also need to work at the board level,
5705 when a board-level scan chain has multiple chips.
5706 Parallel clock voting schemes are good way to implement this,
5707 both within and between chips, and can easily be implemented
5708 with a CPLD.
5709 It's not difficult to have logic fan a module's input TCK signal out
5710 to each TAP in the scan chain, and then wait until each TAP's RTCK comes
5711 back with the right polarity before changing the output RTCK signal.
5712 Texas Instruments makes some clock voting logic available
5713 for free (with no support) in VHDL form; see
5714 @url{http://tiexpressdsp.com/index.php/Adaptive_Clocking}
5715
5716 @b{Solution #2 - Always works - but may be slower}
5717
5718 Often this is a perfectly acceptable solution.
5719
5720 In most simple terms: Often the JTAG clock must be 1/10 to 1/12 of
5721 the target clock speed. But what that ``magic division'' is varies
5722 depending on the chips on your board. @b{ARM rule of thumb} Most ARM
5723 based systems require an 8:1 division. @b{Xilinx rule of thumb} is
5724 1/12 the clock speed.
5725
5726 Note: Many FTDI2232C based JTAG dongles are limited to 6MHz.
5727
5728 You can still debug the 'low power' situations - you just need to
5729 manually adjust the clock speed at every step. While painful and
5730 tedious, it is not always practical.
5731
5732 It is however easy to ``code your way around it'' - i.e.: Cheat a little,
5733 have a special debug mode in your application that does a ``high power
5734 sleep''. If you are careful - 98% of your problems can be debugged
5735 this way.
5736
5737 To set the JTAG frequency use the command:
5738
5739 @example
5740 # Example: 1.234MHz
5741 jtag_khz 1234
5742 @end example
5743
5744
5745 @item @b{Win32 Pathnames} Why don't backslashes work in Windows paths?
5746
5747 OpenOCD uses Tcl and a backslash is an escape char. Use @{ and @}
5748 around Windows filenames.
5749
5750 @example
5751 > echo \a
5752
5753 > echo @{\a@}
5754 \a
5755 > echo "\a"
5756
5757 >
5758 @end example
5759
5760
5761 @item @b{Missing: cygwin1.dll} OpenOCD complains about a missing cygwin1.dll.
5762
5763 Make sure you have Cygwin installed, or at least a version of OpenOCD that
5764 claims to come with all the necessary DLLs. When using Cygwin, try launching
5765 OpenOCD from the Cygwin shell.
5766
5767 @item @b{Breakpoint Issue} I'm trying to set a breakpoint using GDB (or a frontend like Insight or
5768 Eclipse), but OpenOCD complains that "Info: arm7_9_common.c:213
5769 arm7_9_add_breakpoint(): sw breakpoint requested, but software breakpoints not enabled".
5770
5771 GDB issues software breakpoints when a normal breakpoint is requested, or to implement
5772 source-line single-stepping. On ARMv4T systems, like ARM7TDMI, ARM720T or ARM920T,
5773 software breakpoints consume one of the two available hardware breakpoints.
5774
5775 @item @b{LPC2000 Flash} When erasing or writing LPC2000 on-chip flash, the operation fails at random.
5776
5777 Make sure the core frequency specified in the @option{flash lpc2000} line matches the
5778 clock at the time you're programming the flash. If you've specified the crystal's
5779 frequency, make sure the PLL is disabled. If you've specified the full core speed
5780 (e.g. 60MHz), make sure the PLL is enabled.
5781
5782 @item @b{Amontec Chameleon} When debugging using an Amontec Chameleon in its JTAG Accelerator configuration,
5783 I keep getting "Error: amt_jtagaccel.c:184 amt_wait_scan_busy(): amt_jtagaccel timed
5784 out while waiting for end of scan, rtck was disabled".
5785
5786 Make sure your PC's parallel port operates in EPP mode. You might have to try several
5787 settings in your PC BIOS (ECP, EPP, and different versions of those).
5788
5789 @item @b{Data Aborts} When debugging with OpenOCD and GDB (plain GDB, Insight, or Eclipse),
5790 I get lots of "Error: arm7_9_common.c:1771 arm7_9_read_memory():
5791 memory read caused data abort".
5792
5793 The errors are non-fatal, and are the result of GDB trying to trace stack frames
5794 beyond the last valid frame. It might be possible to prevent this by setting up
5795 a proper "initial" stack frame, if you happen to know what exactly has to
5796 be done, feel free to add this here.
5797
5798 @b{Simple:} In your startup code - push 8 registers of zeros onto the
5799 stack before calling main(). What GDB is doing is ``climbing'' the run
5800 time stack by reading various values on the stack using the standard
5801 call frame for the target. GDB keeps going - until one of 2 things
5802 happen @b{#1} an invalid frame is found, or @b{#2} some huge number of
5803 stackframes have been processed. By pushing zeros on the stack, GDB
5804 gracefully stops.
5805
5806 @b{Debugging Interrupt Service Routines} - In your ISR before you call
5807 your C code, do the same - artifically push some zeros onto the stack,
5808 remember to pop them off when the ISR is done.
5809
5810 @b{Also note:} If you have a multi-threaded operating system, they
5811 often do not @b{in the intrest of saving memory} waste these few
5812 bytes. Painful...
5813
5814
5815 @item @b{JTAG Reset Config} I get the following message in the OpenOCD console (or log file):
5816 "Warning: arm7_9_common.c:679 arm7_9_assert_reset(): srst resets test logic, too".
5817
5818 This warning doesn't indicate any serious problem, as long as you don't want to
5819 debug your core right out of reset. Your .cfg file specified @option{jtag_reset
5820 trst_and_srst srst_pulls_trst} to tell OpenOCD that either your board,
5821 your debugger or your target uC (e.g. LPC2000) can't assert the two reset signals
5822 independently. With this setup, it's not possible to halt the core right out of
5823 reset, everything else should work fine.
5824
5825 @item @b{USB Power} When using OpenOCD in conjunction with Amontec JTAGkey and the Yagarto
5826 toolchain (Eclipse, arm-elf-gcc, arm-elf-gdb), the debugging seems to be
5827 unstable. When single-stepping over large blocks of code, GDB and OpenOCD
5828 quit with an error message. Is there a stability issue with OpenOCD?
5829
5830 No, this is not a stability issue concerning OpenOCD. Most users have solved
5831 this issue by simply using a self-powered USB hub, which they connect their
5832 Amontec JTAGkey to. Apparently, some computers do not provide a USB power
5833 supply stable enough for the Amontec JTAGkey to be operated.
5834
5835 @b{Laptops running on battery have this problem too...}
5836
5837 @item @b{USB Power} When using the Amontec JTAGkey, sometimes OpenOCD crashes with the
5838 following error messages: "Error: ft2232.c:201 ft2232_read(): FT_Read returned:
5839 4" and "Error: ft2232.c:365 ft2232_send_and_recv(): couldn't read from FT2232".
5840 What does that mean and what might be the reason for this?
5841
5842 First of all, the reason might be the USB power supply. Try using a self-powered
5843 hub instead of a direct connection to your computer. Secondly, the error code 4
5844 corresponds to an FT_IO_ERROR, which means that the driver for the FTDI USB
5845 chip ran into some sort of error - this points us to a USB problem.
5846
5847 @item @b{GDB Disconnects} When using the Amontec JTAGkey, sometimes OpenOCD crashes with the following
5848 error message: "Error: gdb_server.c:101 gdb_get_char(): read: 10054".
5849 What does that mean and what might be the reason for this?
5850
5851 Error code 10054 corresponds to WSAECONNRESET, which means that the debugger (GDB)
5852 has closed the connection to OpenOCD. This might be a GDB issue.
5853
5854 @item @b{LPC2000 Flash} In the configuration file in the section where flash device configurations
5855 are described, there is a parameter for specifying the clock frequency
5856 for LPC2000 internal flash devices (e.g. @option{flash bank lpc2000
5857 0x0 0x40000 0 0 0 lpc2000_v1 14746 calc_checksum}), which must be
5858 specified in kilohertz. However, I do have a quartz crystal of a
5859 frequency that contains fractions of kilohertz (e.g. 14,745,600 Hz,
5860 i.e. 14,745.600 kHz). Is it possible to specify real numbers for the
5861 clock frequency?
5862
5863 No. The clock frequency specified here must be given as an integral number.
5864 However, this clock frequency is used by the In-Application-Programming (IAP)
5865 routines of the LPC2000 family only, which seems to be very tolerant concerning
5866 the given clock frequency, so a slight difference between the specified clock
5867 frequency and the actual clock frequency will not cause any trouble.
5868
5869 @item @b{Command Order} Do I have to keep a specific order for the commands in the configuration file?
5870
5871 Well, yes and no. Commands can be given in arbitrary order, yet the
5872 devices listed for the JTAG scan chain must be given in the right
5873 order (jtag newdevice), with the device closest to the TDO-Pin being
5874 listed first. In general, whenever objects of the same type exist
5875 which require an index number, then these objects must be given in the
5876 right order (jtag newtap, targets and flash banks - a target
5877 references a jtag newtap and a flash bank references a target).
5878
5879 You can use the ``scan_chain'' command to verify and display the tap order.
5880
5881 Also, some commands can't execute until after @command{init} has been
5882 processed. Such commands include @command{nand probe} and everything
5883 else that needs to write to controller registers, perhaps for setting
5884 up DRAM and loading it with code.
5885
5886 @anchor{FAQ TAP Order}
5887 @item @b{JTAG TAP Order} Do I have to declare the TAPS in some
5888 particular order?
5889
5890 Yes; whenever you have more than one, you must declare them in
5891 the same order used by the hardware.
5892
5893 Many newer devices have multiple JTAG TAPs. For example: ST
5894 Microsystems STM32 chips have two TAPs, a ``boundary scan TAP'' and
5895 ``Cortex-M3'' TAP. Example: The STM32 reference manual, Document ID:
5896 RM0008, Section 26.5, Figure 259, page 651/681, the ``TDI'' pin is
5897 connected to the boundary scan TAP, which then connects to the
5898 Cortex-M3 TAP, which then connects to the TDO pin.
5899
5900 Thus, the proper order for the STM32 chip is: (1) The Cortex-M3, then
5901 (2) The boundary scan TAP. If your board includes an additional JTAG
5902 chip in the scan chain (for example a Xilinx CPLD or FPGA) you could
5903 place it before or after the STM32 chip in the chain. For example:
5904
5905 @itemize @bullet
5906 @item OpenOCD_TDI(output) -> STM32 TDI Pin (BS Input)
5907 @item STM32 BS TDO (output) -> STM32 Cortex-M3 TDI (input)
5908 @item STM32 Cortex-M3 TDO (output) -> SM32 TDO Pin
5909 @item STM32 TDO Pin (output) -> Xilinx TDI Pin (input)
5910 @item Xilinx TDO Pin -> OpenOCD TDO (input)
5911 @end itemize
5912
5913 The ``jtag device'' commands would thus be in the order shown below. Note:
5914
5915 @itemize @bullet
5916 @item jtag newtap Xilinx tap -irlen ...
5917 @item jtag newtap stm32 cpu -irlen ...
5918 @item jtag newtap stm32 bs -irlen ...
5919 @item # Create the debug target and say where it is
5920 @item target create stm32.cpu -chain-position stm32.cpu ...
5921 @end itemize
5922
5923
5924 @item @b{SYSCOMP} Sometimes my debugging session terminates with an error. When I look into the
5925 log file, I can see these error messages: Error: arm7_9_common.c:561
5926 arm7_9_execute_sys_speed(): timeout waiting for SYSCOMP
5927
5928 TODO.
5929
5930 @end enumerate
5931
5932 @node Tcl Crash Course
5933 @chapter Tcl Crash Course
5934 @cindex Tcl
5935
5936 Not everyone knows Tcl - this is not intended to be a replacement for
5937 learning Tcl, the intent of this chapter is to give you some idea of
5938 how the Tcl scripts work.
5939
5940 This chapter is written with two audiences in mind. (1) OpenOCD users
5941 who need to understand a bit more of how JIM-Tcl works so they can do
5942 something useful, and (2) those that want to add a new command to
5943 OpenOCD.
5944
5945 @section Tcl Rule #1
5946 There is a famous joke, it goes like this:
5947 @enumerate
5948 @item Rule #1: The wife is always correct
5949 @item Rule #2: If you think otherwise, See Rule #1
5950 @end enumerate
5951
5952 The Tcl equal is this:
5953
5954 @enumerate
5955 @item Rule #1: Everything is a string
5956 @item Rule #2: If you think otherwise, See Rule #1
5957 @end enumerate
5958
5959 As in the famous joke, the consequences of Rule #1 are profound. Once
5960 you understand Rule #1, you will understand Tcl.
5961
5962 @section Tcl Rule #1b
5963 There is a second pair of rules.
5964 @enumerate
5965 @item Rule #1: Control flow does not exist. Only commands
5966 @* For example: the classic FOR loop or IF statement is not a control
5967 flow item, they are commands, there is no such thing as control flow
5968 in Tcl.
5969 @item Rule #2: If you think otherwise, See Rule #1
5970 @* Actually what happens is this: There are commands that by
5971 convention, act like control flow key words in other languages. One of
5972 those commands is the word ``for'', another command is ``if''.
5973 @end enumerate
5974
5975 @section Per Rule #1 - All Results are strings
5976 Every Tcl command results in a string. The word ``result'' is used
5977 deliberatly. No result is just an empty string. Remember: @i{Rule #1 -
5978 Everything is a string}
5979
5980 @section Tcl Quoting Operators
5981 In life of a Tcl script, there are two important periods of time, the
5982 difference is subtle.
5983 @enumerate
5984 @item Parse Time
5985 @item Evaluation Time
5986 @end enumerate
5987
5988 The two key items here are how ``quoted things'' work in Tcl. Tcl has
5989 three primary quoting constructs, the [square-brackets] the
5990 @{curly-braces@} and ``double-quotes''
5991
5992 By now you should know $VARIABLES always start with a $DOLLAR
5993 sign. BTW: To set a variable, you actually use the command ``set'', as
5994 in ``set VARNAME VALUE'' much like the ancient BASIC langauge ``let x
5995 = 1'' statement, but without the equal sign.
5996
5997 @itemize @bullet
5998 @item @b{[square-brackets]}
5999 @* @b{[square-brackets]} are command substitutions. It operates much
6000 like Unix Shell `back-ticks`. The result of a [square-bracket]
6001 operation is exactly 1 string. @i{Remember Rule #1 - Everything is a
6002 string}. These two statements are roughly identical:
6003 @example
6004 # bash example
6005 X=`date`
6006 echo "The Date is: $X"
6007 # Tcl example
6008 set X [date]
6009 puts "The Date is: $X"
6010 @end example
6011 @item @b{``double-quoted-things''}
6012 @* @b{``double-quoted-things''} are just simply quoted
6013 text. $VARIABLES and [square-brackets] are expanded in place - the
6014 result however is exactly 1 string. @i{Remember Rule #1 - Everything
6015 is a string}
6016 @example
6017 set x "Dinner"
6018 puts "It is now \"[date]\", $x is in 1 hour"
6019 @end example
6020 @item @b{@{Curly-Braces@}}
6021 @*@b{@{Curly-Braces@}} are magic: $VARIABLES and [square-brackets] are
6022 parsed, but are NOT expanded or executed. @{Curly-Braces@} are like
6023 'single-quote' operators in BASH shell scripts, with the added
6024 feature: @{curly-braces@} can be nested, single quotes can not. @{@{@{this is
6025 nested 3 times@}@}@} NOTE: [date] is a bad example;
6026 at this writing, Jim/OpenOCD does not have a date command.
6027 @end itemize
6028
6029 @section Consequences of Rule 1/2/3/4
6030
6031 The consequences of Rule 1 are profound.
6032
6033 @subsection Tokenisation & Execution.
6034
6035 Of course, whitespace, blank lines and #comment lines are handled in
6036 the normal way.
6037
6038 As a script is parsed, each (multi) line in the script file is
6039 tokenised and according to the quoting rules. After tokenisation, that
6040 line is immedatly executed.
6041
6042 Multi line statements end with one or more ``still-open''
6043 @{curly-braces@} which - eventually - closes a few lines later.
6044
6045 @subsection Command Execution
6046
6047 Remember earlier: There are no ``control flow''
6048 statements in Tcl. Instead there are COMMANDS that simply act like
6049 control flow operators.
6050
6051 Commands are executed like this:
6052
6053 @enumerate
6054 @item Parse the next line into (argc) and (argv[]).
6055 @item Look up (argv[0]) in a table and call its function.
6056 @item Repeat until End Of File.
6057 @end enumerate
6058
6059 It sort of works like this:
6060 @example
6061 for(;;)@{
6062 ReadAndParse( &argc, &argv );
6063
6064 cmdPtr = LookupCommand( argv[0] );
6065
6066 (*cmdPtr->Execute)( argc, argv );
6067 @}
6068 @end example
6069
6070 When the command ``proc'' is parsed (which creates a procedure
6071 function) it gets 3 parameters on the command line. @b{1} the name of
6072 the proc (function), @b{2} the list of parameters, and @b{3} the body
6073 of the function. Not the choice of words: LIST and BODY. The PROC
6074 command stores these items in a table somewhere so it can be found by
6075 ``LookupCommand()''
6076
6077 @subsection The FOR command
6078
6079 The most interesting command to look at is the FOR command. In Tcl,
6080 the FOR command is normally implemented in C. Remember, FOR is a
6081 command just like any other command.
6082
6083 When the ascii text containing the FOR command is parsed, the parser
6084 produces 5 parameter strings, @i{(If in doubt: Refer to Rule #1)} they
6085 are:
6086
6087 @enumerate 0
6088 @item The ascii text 'for'
6089 @item The start text
6090 @item The test expression
6091 @item The next text
6092 @item The body text
6093 @end enumerate
6094
6095 Sort of reminds you of ``main( int argc, char **argv )'' does it not?
6096 Remember @i{Rule #1 - Everything is a string.} The key point is this:
6097 Often many of those parameters are in @{curly-braces@} - thus the
6098 variables inside are not expanded or replaced until later.
6099
6100 Remember that every Tcl command looks like the classic ``main( argc,
6101 argv )'' function in C. In JimTCL - they actually look like this:
6102
6103 @example
6104 int
6105 MyCommand( Jim_Interp *interp,
6106 int *argc,
6107 Jim_Obj * const *argvs );
6108 @end example
6109
6110 Real Tcl is nearly identical. Although the newer versions have
6111 introduced a byte-code parser and intepreter, but at the core, it
6112 still operates in the same basic way.
6113
6114 @subsection FOR command implementation
6115
6116 To understand Tcl it is perhaps most helpful to see the FOR
6117 command. Remember, it is a COMMAND not a control flow structure.
6118
6119 In Tcl there are two underlying C helper functions.
6120
6121 Remember Rule #1 - You are a string.
6122
6123 The @b{first} helper parses and executes commands found in an ascii
6124 string. Commands can be seperated by semicolons, or newlines. While
6125 parsing, variables are expanded via the quoting rules.
6126
6127 The @b{second} helper evaluates an ascii string as a numerical
6128 expression and returns a value.
6129
6130 Here is an example of how the @b{FOR} command could be
6131 implemented. The pseudo code below does not show error handling.
6132 @example
6133 void Execute_AsciiString( void *interp, const char *string );
6134
6135 int Evaluate_AsciiExpression( void *interp, const char *string );
6136
6137 int
6138 MyForCommand( void *interp,
6139 int argc,
6140 char **argv )
6141 @{
6142 if( argc != 5 )@{
6143 SetResult( interp, "WRONG number of parameters");
6144 return ERROR;
6145 @}
6146
6147 // argv[0] = the ascii string just like C
6148
6149 // Execute the start statement.
6150 Execute_AsciiString( interp, argv[1] );
6151
6152 // Top of loop test
6153 for(;;)@{
6154 i = Evaluate_AsciiExpression(interp, argv[2]);
6155 if( i == 0 )
6156 break;
6157
6158 // Execute the body
6159 Execute_AsciiString( interp, argv[3] );
6160
6161 // Execute the LOOP part
6162 Execute_AsciiString( interp, argv[4] );
6163 @}
6164
6165 // Return no error
6166 SetResult( interp, "" );
6167 return SUCCESS;
6168 @}
6169 @end example
6170
6171 Every other command IF, WHILE, FORMAT, PUTS, EXPR, everything works
6172 in the same basic way.
6173
6174 @section OpenOCD Tcl Usage
6175
6176 @subsection source and find commands
6177 @b{Where:} In many configuration files
6178 @* Example: @b{ source [find FILENAME] }
6179 @*Remember the parsing rules
6180 @enumerate
6181 @item The FIND command is in square brackets.
6182 @* The FIND command is executed with the parameter FILENAME. It should
6183 find the full path to the named file. The RESULT is a string, which is
6184 substituted on the orginal command line.
6185 @item The command source is executed with the resulting filename.
6186 @* SOURCE reads a file and executes as a script.
6187 @end enumerate
6188 @subsection format command
6189 @b{Where:} Generally occurs in numerous places.
6190 @* Tcl has no command like @b{printf()}, instead it has @b{format}, which is really more like
6191 @b{sprintf()}.
6192 @b{Example}
6193 @example
6194 set x 6
6195 set y 7
6196 puts [format "The answer: %d" [expr $x * $y]]
6197 @end example
6198 @enumerate
6199 @item The SET command creates 2 variables, X and Y.
6200 @item The double [nested] EXPR command performs math
6201 @* The EXPR command produces numerical result as a string.
6202 @* Refer to Rule #1
6203 @item The format command is executed, producing a single string
6204 @* Refer to Rule #1.
6205 @item The PUTS command outputs the text.
6206 @end enumerate
6207 @subsection Body or Inlined Text
6208 @b{Where:} Various TARGET scripts.
6209 @example
6210 #1 Good
6211 proc someproc @{@} @{
6212 ... multiple lines of stuff ...
6213 @}
6214 $_TARGETNAME configure -event FOO someproc
6215 #2 Good - no variables
6216 $_TARGETNAME confgure -event foo "this ; that;"
6217 #3 Good Curly Braces
6218 $_TARGETNAME configure -event FOO @{
6219 puts "Time: [date]"
6220 @}
6221 #4 DANGER DANGER DANGER
6222 $_TARGETNAME configure -event foo "puts \"Time: [date]\""
6223 @end example
6224 @enumerate
6225 @item The $_TARGETNAME is an OpenOCD variable convention.
6226 @*@b{$_TARGETNAME} represents the last target created, the value changes
6227 each time a new target is created. Remember the parsing rules. When
6228 the ascii text is parsed, the @b{$_TARGETNAME} becomes a simple string,
6229 the name of the target which happens to be a TARGET (object)
6230 command.
6231 @item The 2nd parameter to the @option{-event} parameter is a TCBODY
6232 @*There are 4 examples:
6233 @enumerate
6234 @item The TCLBODY is a simple string that happens to be a proc name
6235 @item The TCLBODY is several simple commands seperated by semicolons
6236 @item The TCLBODY is a multi-line @{curly-brace@} quoted string
6237 @item The TCLBODY is a string with variables that get expanded.
6238 @end enumerate
6239
6240 In the end, when the target event FOO occurs the TCLBODY is
6241 evaluated. Method @b{#1} and @b{#2} are functionally identical. For
6242 Method @b{#3} and @b{#4} it is more interesting. What is the TCLBODY?
6243
6244 Remember the parsing rules. In case #3, @{curly-braces@} mean the
6245 $VARS and [square-brackets] are expanded later, when the EVENT occurs,
6246 and the text is evaluated. In case #4, they are replaced before the
6247 ``Target Object Command'' is executed. This occurs at the same time
6248 $_TARGETNAME is replaced. In case #4 the date will never
6249 change. @{BTW: [date] is a bad example; at this writing,
6250 Jim/OpenOCD does not have a date command@}
6251 @end enumerate
6252 @subsection Global Variables
6253 @b{Where:} You might discover this when writing your own procs @* In
6254 simple terms: Inside a PROC, if you need to access a global variable
6255 you must say so. See also ``upvar''. Example:
6256 @example
6257 proc myproc @{ @} @{
6258 set y 0 #Local variable Y
6259 global x #Global variable X
6260 puts [format "X=%d, Y=%d" $x $y]
6261 @}
6262 @end example
6263 @section Other Tcl Hacks
6264 @b{Dynamic variable creation}
6265 @example
6266 # Dynamically create a bunch of variables.
6267 for @{ set x 0 @} @{ $x < 32 @} @{ set x [expr $x + 1]@} @{
6268 # Create var name
6269 set vn [format "BIT%d" $x]
6270 # Make it a global
6271 global $vn
6272 # Set it.
6273 set $vn [expr (1 << $x)]
6274 @}
6275 @end example
6276 @b{Dynamic proc/command creation}
6277 @example
6278 # One "X" function - 5 uart functions.
6279 foreach who @{A B C D E@}
6280 proc [format "show_uart%c" $who] @{ @} "show_UARTx $who"
6281 @}
6282 @end example
6283
6284 @node Target Library
6285 @chapter Target Library
6286 @cindex Target Library
6287
6288 OpenOCD comes with a target configuration script library. These scripts can be
6289 used as-is or serve as a starting point.
6290
6291 The target library is published together with the OpenOCD executable and
6292 the path to the target library is in the OpenOCD script search path.
6293 Similarly there are example scripts for configuring the JTAG interface.
6294
6295 The command line below uses the example parport configuration script
6296 that ship with OpenOCD, then configures the str710.cfg target and
6297 finally issues the init and reset commands. The communication speed
6298 is set to 10kHz for reset and 8MHz for post reset.
6299
6300 @example
6301 openocd -f interface/parport.cfg -f target/str710.cfg \
6302 -c "init" -c "reset"
6303 @end example
6304
6305 To list the target scripts available:
6306
6307 @example
6308 $ ls /usr/local/lib/openocd/target
6309
6310 arm7_fast.cfg lm3s6965.cfg pxa255.cfg stm32.cfg xba_revA3.cfg
6311 at91eb40a.cfg lpc2148.cfg pxa255_sst.cfg str710.cfg zy1000.cfg
6312 at91r40008.cfg lpc2294.cfg sam7s256.cfg str912.cfg
6313 at91sam9260.cfg nslu2.cfg sam7x256.cfg wi-9c.cfg
6314 @end example
6315
6316 @include fdl.texi
6317
6318 @node OpenOCD Concept Index
6319 @comment DO NOT use the plain word ``Index'', reason: CYGWIN filename
6320 @comment case issue with ``Index.html'' and ``index.html''
6321 @comment Occurs when creating ``--html --no-split'' output
6322 @comment This fix is based on: http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2006-05/msg00215.html
6323 @unnumbered OpenOCD Concept Index
6324
6325 @printindex cp
6326
6327 @node Command and Driver Index
6328 @unnumbered Command and Driver Index
6329 @printindex fn
6330
6331 @bye

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