From 72687f227a5b2479685cf6940855adade1565aa8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: zwelch Date: Thu, 11 Jun 2009 21:48:36 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] David Brownell : Rework the "Simple Configuration Files" chapter so it's more of a quick-start "how to set up your project" tutorial: - Say how to hook up the JTAG adapter. This will help new users, and in any case is worth spelling out somewhere. - Streamline the previous rather haphazard presentation, filling in some missing holes along the way: * Suggest "project directory" structure * Introduce new term, "user config" file (openocd.cfg) * Talk about more options for openocd.cfg contents * ... and about creating new config files * Add new topic, project-specific utilities (+examples) - Remove too-short, yet duplicative, chapter 19 Nudge packagers a bit more strongly to send patches (including config files) upstream. git-svn-id: svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk@2204 b42882b7-edfa-0310-969c-e2dbd0fdcd60 --- doc/openocd.texi | 351 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------- 1 file changed, 256 insertions(+), 95 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/openocd.texi b/doc/openocd.texi index 5c3883f0..baabc3cc 100644 --- a/doc/openocd.texi +++ b/doc/openocd.texi @@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ Free Documentation License''. * Building OpenOCD:: Building OpenOCD From SVN * JTAG Hardware Dongles:: JTAG Hardware Dongles * Running:: Running OpenOCD -* Simple Configuration Files:: Simple Configuration Files +* OpenOCD Project Setup:: OpenOCD Project Setup * Config File Guidelines:: Config File Guidelines * About JIM-Tcl:: About JIM-Tcl * Daemon Configuration:: Daemon Configuration @@ -76,7 +76,6 @@ Free Documentation License''. * General Commands:: General Commands * Architecture and Core Commands:: Architecture and Core Commands * JTAG Commands:: JTAG Commands -* Sample Scripts:: Sample Target Scripts * TFTP:: TFTP * GDB and OpenOCD:: Using GDB and OpenOCD * Tcl Scripting API:: Tcl Scripting API @@ -239,6 +238,7 @@ That said, the OpenOCD developers would also like you to follow a few suggestions: @enumerate +@item @b{Send patches, including config files, upstream.} @item @b{Always build with printer ports enabled.} @item @b{Try to use LIBFTDI + LIBUSB where possible. You cover more bases.} @end enumerate @@ -718,28 +718,114 @@ establish a connection with the target. In general, it is possible for the JTAG controller to be unresponsive until the target is set up correctly via e.g. GDB monitor commands in a GDB init script. -@node Simple Configuration Files -@chapter Simple Configuration Files -@cindex configuration +@node OpenOCD Project Setup +@chapter OpenOCD Project Setup -@section Outline -There are 4 basic ways of ``configurating'' OpenOCD to run, they are: +To use OpenOCD with your development projects, you need to do more than +just connecting the JTAG adapter hardware (dongle) to your development board +and then starting the OpenOCD server. +You also need to configure that server so that it knows +about that adapter and board, and helps your work. + +@section Hooking up the JTAG Adapter + +Today's most common case is a dongle with a JTAG cable on one side +(such as a ribbon cable with a 10-pin or 20-pin IDC connector) +and a USB cable on the other. +Instead of USB, some cables use Ethernet; +older ones may use a PC parallel port, or even a serial port. @enumerate -@item A small openocd.cfg file which ``sources'' other configuration files -@item A monolithic openocd.cfg file -@item Many -f filename options on the command line -@item Your Mixed Solution +@item @emph{Start with power to your target board turned off}, +and nothing connected to your JTAG adapter. +If you're particularly paranoid, unplug power to the board. +It's important to have the ground signal properly set up, +unless you are using a JTAG adapter which provides +galvanic isolation between the target board and the +debugging host. + +@item @emph{Be sure it's the right kind of JTAG connector.} +If your dongle has a 20-pin ARM connector, you need some kind +of adapter (or octopus, see below) to hook it up to +boards using 14-pin or 10-pin connectors ... or to 20-pin +connectors which don't use ARM's pinout. + +In the same vein, make sure the voltage levels are compatible. +Not all JTAG adapters have the level shifters needed to work +with 1.2 Volt boards. + +@item @emph{Be certain the cable is properly oriented} or you might +damage your board. In most cases there are only two possible +ways to connect the cable. +Connect the JTAG cable from your adapter to the board. +Be sure it's firmly connected. + +In the best case, the connector is keyed to physically +prevent you from inserting it wrong. +This is most often done using a slot on the board's male connector +housing, which must match a key on the JTAG cable's female connector. +If there's no housing, then you must look carefully and +make sure pin 1 on the cable hooks up to pin 1 on the board. +Ribbon cables are frequently all grey except for a wire on one +edge, which is red. The red wire is pin 1. + +Sometimes dongles provide cables where one end is an ``octopus'' of +color coded single-wire connectors, instead of a connector block. +These are great when converting from one JTAG pinout to another, +but are tedious to set up. +Use these with connector pinout diagrams to help you match up the +adapter signals to the right board pins. + +@item @emph{Connect the adapter's other end} once the JTAG cable is connected. +A USB, parallel, or serial port connector will go to the host which +you are using to run OpenOCD. +For Ethernet, consult the documentation and your network administrator. + +For USB based JTAG adapters you have an easy sanity check at this point: +does the host operating system see the JTAG adapter? + +@item @emph{Connect the adapter's power supply, if needed.} +This step is primarily for non-USB adapters, +but sometimes USB adapters need extra power. + +@item @emph{Power up the target board.} +Unless you just let the magic smoke escape, +you're now ready to set up the OpenOCD server +so you can use JTAG to work with that board. + @end enumerate -@section Small configuration file method +Talk with the OpenOCD server using +telnet (@code{telnet localhost 4444} on many systems) or GDB. +@xref{GDB and OpenOCD}. + +@section Project Directory -This is the preferred method. It is simple and works well for many -people. The developers of OpenOCD would encourage you to use this -method. If you create a new configuration please email new -configurations to the development list. +There are many ways you can configure OpenOCD and start it up. -Here is an example of an openocd.cfg file for an ATMEL at91sam7x256 +A simple way to organize them all involves keeping a +single directory for your work with a given board. +When you start OpenOCD from that directory, +it searches there first for configuration files +and for code you upload to the target board. +It is also be the natural place to write files, +such as log files and data you download from the board. + +@section Configuration Basics + +There are two basic ways of configuring OpenOCD, and +a variety of ways you can mix them. +Think of the difference as just being how you start the server: + +@itemize +@item Many @option{-f file} or @option{-c command} options on the command line +@item No options, but a @dfn{user config file} +in the current directory named @file{openocd.cfg} +@end itemize + +Here is an example @file{openocd.cfg} file for a setup +using a Signalyzer FT2232-based JTAG adapter to talk to +a board with an Atmel AT91SAM7X256 microcontroller: @example source [find interface/signalyzer.cfg] @@ -751,66 +837,172 @@ gdb_flash_program enable source [find target/sam7x256.cfg] @end example -There are many example configuration scripts you can work with. You -should look in the directory: @t{$(INSTALLDIR)/lib/openocd}. You -should find: +Here is the command line equivalent of that configuration: -@enumerate -@item @b{board} - eval board level configurations -@item @b{interface} - specific dongle configurations -@item @b{target} - the target chips -@item @b{tcl} - helper scripts -@item @b{xscale} - things specific to the xscale. -@end enumerate +@example +openocd -f interface/signalyzer.cfg \ + -c "gdb_memory_map enable" \ + -c "gdb_flash_program enable" \ + -f target/sam7x256.cfg +@end example + +You could wrap such long command lines in shell scripts, +each supporting a different development task. +One might re-flash the board with specific firmware version. +Another might set up a particular debugging or run-time environment. -Look first in the ``boards'' area, then the ``targets'' area. Often a board -configuration is a good example to work from. +Here we will focus on the simpler solution: one user config +file, including basic configuration plus any TCL procedures +to simplify your work. -@section Many -f filename options -Some believe this is a wonderful solution, others find it painful. +@section User Config Files +@cindex config file +@cindex user config file -You can use a series of ``-f filename'' options on the command line, -OpenOCD will read each filename in sequence, for example: +A user configuration file ties together all the parts of a project +in one place. +One of the following will match your situation best: + +@itemize +@item Ideally almost everything comes from configuration files +provided by someone else. +For example, OpenOCD distributes a @file{scripts} directory +(probably in @file{/usr/share/openocd/scripts} on Linux); +board and tool vendors can provide these too. +The AT91SAM7X256 example above works this way. + +Three main types of non-user configuration file each have their +own subdirectory in the @file{scripts} directory: + +@enumerate +@item @b{interface} -- one for each kind of JTAG adapter/dongle +@item @b{board} -- one for each different board +@item @b{target} -- the chips which integrate CPUs and other JTAG TAPs +@end enumerate + +Best case: include just two files, and they handle everything else. +The first is an interface config file. +The second is board-specific, and it sets up the JTAG TAPs and +their GDB targets (by deferring to some @file{target.cfg} file), +declares all flash memory, and leaves you nothing to do except +meet your deadline: @example -openocd -f file1.cfg -f file2.cfg -f file2.cfg +source [find interface/olimex-jtag-tiny.cfg] +source [find board/csb337.cfg] @end example -You can also intermix various commands with the ``-c'' command line -option. +Boards with a single microcontroller often won't need more +than the target config file, as in the AT91SAM7X256 example. +That's because there is no external memory (flash, DDR RAM), and +the board differences are encapsulated by application code. -@section Monolithic file -The ``Monolithic File'' dispenses with all ``source'' statements and -puts everything in one self contained (monolithic) file. This is not -encouraged. +@item You can often reuse some standard config files but +need to write a few new ones, probably a @file{board.cfg} file. +You will be using commands described later in this User's Guide, +and working with the guidelines in the next chapter. -Please try to ``source'' various files or use the multiple -f -technique. +For example, there may be configuration files for your JTAG adapter +and target chip, but you need a new board-specific config file +giving access to your particular flash chips. +Or you might need to write another target chip configuration file +for a new chip built around the Cortex M3 core. -@section Advice for you -Often, one uses a ``mixed approach''. Where possible, please try to -``source'' common things, and if needed cut/paste parts of the -standard distribution configuration files as needed. +@quotation Note +When you write new configuration files, please submit +them for inclusion in the next OpenOCD release. +For example, a @file{board/newboard.cfg} file will help the +next users of that board, and a @file{target/newcpu.cfg} +will help support users of any board using that chip. +@end quotation -@b{REMEMBER:} The ``important parts'' of your configuration file are: +@item +You may may need to write some C code. +It may be as simple as a supporting a new new ft2232 or parport +based dongle; a bit more involved, like a NAND or NOR flash +controller driver; or a big piece of work like supporting +a new chip architecture. +@end itemize -@enumerate -@item @b{Interface} - Defines the dongle -@item @b{Taps} - Defines the JTAG Taps -@item @b{GDB Targets} - What GDB talks to -@item @b{Flash Programing} - Very Helpful -@end enumerate +Reuse the existing config files when you can. +Look first in the @file{scripts/boards} area, then @file{scripts/targets}. +You may find a board configuration that's a good example to follow. -Some key things you should look at and understand are: +When you write config files, separate the reusable parts +(things every user of that interface, chip, or board needs) +from ones specific to your environment and debugging approach. -@enumerate -@item The reset configuration of your debug environment as a whole -@item Is there a ``work area'' that OpenOCD can use? -@* For ARM - work areas mean up to 10x faster downloads. -@item For MMU/MPU based ARM chips (i.e.: ARM9 and later) will that work area still be available? -@item For complex targets (multiple chips) the JTAG SPEED becomes an issue. -@end enumerate +For example, a @code{gdb-attach} event handler that invokes +the @command{reset init} command will interfere with debugging +early boot code, which performs some of the same actions +that the @code{reset-init} event handler does. +Likewise, the @command{arm9tdmi vector_catch} command (or +its @command{xscale vector_catch} sibling) can be a timesaver +during some debug sessions, but don't make everyone use that either. +Keep those kinds of debugging aids in your user config file. + +@section Project-Specific Utilities + +A few project-specific utility +routines may well speed up your work. +Write them, and keep them in your project's user config file. + +For example, if you are making a boot loader work on a +board, it's nice to be able to debug the ``after it's +loaded to RAM'' parts separately from the finicky early +code which sets up the DDR RAM controller and clocks. +A script like this one, or a more GDB-aware sibling, +may help: + +@example +proc ramboot @{ @} @{ + # Reset, running the target's "reset-init" scripts + # to initialize clocks and the DDR RAM controller. + # Leave the CPU halted. + reset init + + # Load CONFIG_SKIP_LOWLEVEL_INIT version into DDR RAM. + load_image u-boot.bin 0x20000000 + # Start running. + resume 0x20000000 +@} +@end example + +Then once that code is working you will need to make it +boot from NOR flash; a different utility would help. +Alternatively, some developers write to flash using GDB. +(You might use a similar script if you're working with a flash +based microcontroller application instead of a boot loader.) + +@example +proc newboot @{ @} @{ + # Reset, leaving the CPU halted. The "reset-init" event + # proc gives faster access to the CPU and to NOR flash; + # "reset halt" would be slower. + reset init + + # Write standard version of U-Boot into the first two + # sectors of NOR flash ... the standard version should + # do the same lowlevel init as "reset-init". + flash protect 0 0 1 off + flash erase_sector 0 0 1 + flash write_bank 0 u-boot.bin 0x0 + flash protect 0 0 1 on + + # Reboot from scratch using that new boot loader. + reset run +@} +@end example + +You may need more complicated utility procedures when booting +from NAND. +That often involves an extra bootloader stage, +running from on-chip SRAM to perform DDR RAM setup so it can load +the main bootloader code (which won't fit into that SRAM). + +Other helper scripts might be used to write production system images, +involving considerably more than just a three stage bootloader. @node Config File Guidelines @@ -852,6 +1044,7 @@ setting a variable or two before sourcing the target file. Or adding various commands specific to their situation. @section Interface Config Files +@cindex config file The user should be able to source one of these files via a command like this: @@ -868,6 +1061,7 @@ sole developer who created it. Interface files should be found in @t{$(INSTALLDIR)/lib/openocd/interface} @section Board Config Files +@cindex config file @b{Note: BOARD directory NEW as of 28/nov/2008} @@ -896,6 +1090,7 @@ In summary the board files should contain (if present) @end enumerate @section Target Config Files +@cindex config file The user should be able to source one of these files via a command like this: @@ -1113,13 +1308,6 @@ register to report that JTAG debugging is being done. If the chip has a DCC, enable it. If the chip is an ARM9 with some special high speed download features - enable it. -If the chip supports the @command{arm9tdmi vector_catch}, -@command{xscale vector_catch}, or similar features, -consider enabling it in your user-specific configuration file. -Experience has shown the ``vector_catch'' can be -helpful for catching programming errors -like Undefined Instructions, Data Abort, and Prefetch Abort. - If present, the MMU, the MPU and the CACHE should be disabled. Some ARM cores are equipped with trace support, which permits @@ -4885,33 +5073,6 @@ that supports a packet size bigger than the default packet size (512 bytes). The are numerous TFTP servers out there (free and commercial) and you will have to do a bit of googling to find something that fits your requirements. -@node Sample Scripts -@chapter Sample Scripts -@cindex scripts - -This page shows how to use the Target Library. - -The configuration script can be divided into the following sections: -@itemize @bullet -@item Daemon configuration -@item Interface -@item JTAG scan chain -@item Target configuration -@item Flash configuration -@end itemize - -Detailed information about each section can be found at OpenOCD configuration. - -@section AT91R40008 example -@cindex AT91R40008 example -To start OpenOCD with a target script for the AT91R40008 CPU and reset -the CPU upon startup of the OpenOCD daemon. -@example -openocd -f interface/parport.cfg -f target/at91r40008.cfg \ - -c "init" -c "reset" -@end example - - @node GDB and OpenOCD @chapter GDB and OpenOCD @cindex GDB -- 2.39.5