are many types of debug adapter, and little uniformity in what
they are called. (There are also product naming differences.)
-These adapters are sometimes packaged as discrete dongles. which
+These adapters are sometimes packaged as discrete dongles, which
may generically be called @dfn{hardware interface dongles}.
Some development boards also integrate them directly, which may
let the development board can be directly connected to the debug
@c "cfi part_id" disabled
@end deffn
+@deffn {Flash Driver} stmsmi
+@cindex STMicroelectronics Serial Memory Interface
+@cindex SMI
+@cindex stmsmi
+Some devices form STMicroelectronics (e.g. STR75x MCU family,
+SPEAr MPU family) include a proprietary
+``Serial Memory Interface'' (SMI) controller able to drive external
+SPI flash devices.
+Depending on specific device and board configuration, up to 4 external
+flash devices can be connected.
+
+SMI makes the flash content directly accessible in the CPU address
+space; each external device is mapped in a memory bank.
+CPU can directly read data, execute code and boot from SMI banks.
+Normal OpenOCD commands like @command{mdw} can be used to display
+the flash content.
+
+The setup command only requires the @var{base} parameter in order
+to identify the memory bank.
+All other parameters are ignored. Additional information, like
+flash size, are detected automatically.
+
+@example
+flash bank $_FLASHNAME stmsmi 0xf8000000 0 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
+@end example
+
+@end deffn
+
@subsection Internal Flash (Microcontrollers)
@deffn {Flash Driver} aduc702x
@xref{Running}.
@end deffn
-@deffn Command echo message
+@deffn Command echo [-n] message
Logs a message at "user" priority.
Output @var{message} to stdout.
+Option "-n" suppresses trailing newline.
@example
echo "Downloading kernel -- please wait"
@end example