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
--debug | -d set debug level <0-3>
--log_output | -l redirect log output to file <name>
--command | -c run <command>
---pipe | -p use pipes when talking to gdb
@end verbatim
If you don't give any @option{-f} or @option{-c} options,
@deffn {Command} gdb_port [number]
@cindex GDB server
-Specify or query the first port used for incoming GDB connections.
-The GDB port for the
-first target will be gdb_port, the second target will listen on gdb_port + 1, and so on.
+Normally gdb listens to a TCP/IP port, but GDB can also
+communicate via pipes(stdin/out or named pipes). The name
+"gdb_port" stuck because it covers probably more than 90% of
+the normal use cases.
+
+No arguments reports GDB port. "pipe" means listen to stdin
+output to stdout, an integer is base port number, "disable"
+disables the gdb server.
+
+When using "pipe", also use log_output to redirect the log
+output to a file so as not to flood the stdin/out pipes.
+
+The -p/--pipe option is deprecated and a warning is printed
+as it is equivalent to passing in -c "gdb_port pipe; log_output openocd.log".
+
+Any other string is interpreted as named pipe to listen to.
+Output pipe is the same name as input pipe, but with 'o' appended,
+e.g. /var/gdb, /var/gdbo.
+
+The GDB port for the first target will be the base port, the
+second target will listen on gdb_port + 1, and so on.
When not specified during the configuration stage,
the port @var{number} defaults to 3333.
-When specified as zero, GDB remote access ports are not activated.
@end deffn
@deffn {Command} tcl_port [number]
Intended as a machine interface.
When not specified during the configuration stage,
the port @var{number} defaults to 6666.
-When specified as zero, this port is not activated.
+
@end deffn
@deffn {Command} telnet_port [number]
@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
debug handler are either (0x800 - 0x1fef800) or (0xfe000800 -
0xfffff800). The default value is 0xfe000800.
+XScale has resources to support two hardware breakpoints and two
+watchpoints. However, the following restrictions on watchpoint
+functionality apply: (1) the value and mask arguments to the @code{wp}
+command are not supported, (2) the watchpoint length must be a
+power of two and not less than four, and can not be greater than the
+watchpoint address, and (3) a watchpoint with a length greater than
+four consumes all the watchpoint hardware resources. This means that
+at any one time, you can have enabled either two watchpoints with a
+length of four, or one watchpoint with a length greater than four.
These commands are available to XScale based CPUs,
which are implementations of the ARMv5TE architecture.
This finishes by listing the current vector catch configuration.
@end deffn
+@deffn Command {cortex_m3 reset_config} (@option{srst}|@option{sysresetreq}|@option{vectreset})
+Control reset handling. The default @option{srst} is to use srst if fitted,
+otherwise fallback to @option{vectreset}.
+@itemize @minus
+@item @option{srst} use hardware srst if fitted otherwise fallback to @option{vectreset}.
+@item @option{sysresetreq} use NVIC SYSRESETREQ to reset system.
+@item @option{vectreset} use NVIC VECTRESET to reset system.
+@end itemize
+Using @option{vectreset} is a safe option for all current Cortex-M3 cores.
+This however has the disadvantage of only resetting the core, all peripherals
+are uneffected. A solution would be to use a @code{reset-init} event handler to manually reset
+the peripherals.
+@xref{Target Events}.
+@end deffn
+
@anchor{Software Debug Messages and Tracing}
@section Software Debug Messages and Tracing
@cindex Linux-ARM DCC support
@item
A pipe connection is typically started as follows:
@example
-target remote | openocd --pipe
+target remote | openocd -c "gdb_port pipe; log_output openocd.log"
@end example
This would cause GDB to run OpenOCD and communicate using pipes (stdin/stdout).
Using this method has the advantage of GDB starting/stopping OpenOCD for the debug
-session.
+session. log_output sends the log output to a file to ensure that the pipe is
+not saturated when using higher debug level outputs.
@end enumerate
To list the available OpenOCD commands type @command{monitor help} on the