clash with the Win32 API names for baud rates.
Reported by: Eric
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@462 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
. Implement the new EECRAddress field in the device descriptor that is
required by the 4.x firmware; make an uneducated guess about what
firmware requires what length of device descriptor -- perhaps Atmel
can be convinced to publish an official matrix for that.
. Specify EECR in the config file where required. Obviously, only
locations that differ from the 0x3c default are mentioned in the
XML files, so by now, this only affects the AT90CAN128 for us.
. After clarification with Atmel, EnablePageProgramming should really
default to 1, and only cleared if specified by an XML parameter. So
far, only the XML files for the ATmega256x and ATmega406 do specify
it at all, and they specify a 1, too.
. Drop the entire OCDEN fuse heuristic. If OCDEN is unprogrammed at
startup, issue a warning that single-byte EEPROM updates won't be
possible. Leave it to the user to program the fuse if desired.
That way, we won't run into any issue of prematurely wearing out the
hfuse EEPROM cell. Interestingly enough, this also solved the
problem of the target not restarting from scratch upon sign-off.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@461 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
yesterday's changes (i.e. before rev. 1.10 of ser_posix.c), that is,
exit(1) in case of a timeout. Previously, the upper layers didn't see
the timeout at all.
Quite possible that some of these drivers could handle a timeout more
intelligently though. At least for the rather sophisticated STK500v2
protocol, I think it should be possible to retry the request.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@460 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
performance.
Note that many consumers still read one byte at a time though.
This patch has once been submitted to me by Bernd Walter
<ticso@cicely.de>, minor tweak by me (mainly to get it running under
Linux, too).
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@459 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
Walthinsen, as well as JTAG ICE mkII support (by me).
Erik's submission has been cleaned up a little bit, mostly to add his
name and the current year to the copyright of the new file, remove
trailing white space before importing the files, and fix the minor
syntax errors in his avrdude.conf.in additions (missing semicolons).
The JTAG ICE mkII support should be considered alpha to beta quality
at this point. Few things are still to be done, like defering the
hfuse (OCDEN) tweaks until they are really required. Also, for
reasons not yet known, the target MCU doesn't start to run after
signing off from the ICE, it needs a power-cycle first (at least on my
STK500).
Note that for the JTAG ICE, I did change a few things in the internal
API. Notably I made the serial receive timeout configurable by the
backends via an exported variable (done in both the Posix and the
Win32 implementation), and I made the serial_recv() function return a
-1 instead of bailing out with exit(1) upon encountering a receive
timeout (currently only done in the Posix implementation). Both
measures together allow me to receive a datastreem from the ICE at 115
kbps on a somewhat lossy PCI multi-UART card that occasionally drops a
character. The JTAG ICE mkII protocol has enough of safety layers to
allow recovering from these events, but the previous code wasn't
prepared for any kind of recovery. The Win32 change for this still
has to be done, and the traditional drivers need to be converted to
exit(1) upon encountering a timeout (as they're now getting a -1
returned they didn't see before in that case).
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@451 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
doc are either not available on all systems or are at best
inconvenient to build and install. The doc can still be built, one
just needs to specify --enable-doc at configure time.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@445 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
encoding is correct, specifically the address bits don't exactly match
those of the preliminary datasheet that I have, but I don't see how
they could be right. Tested with STK500 and it works there.
Instruction encodings have not been tested due to lack of a parallel
port on my Mac.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@436 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
* configure.ac (AC_INIT): Set version to "4.4.0cvs".
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@435 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
* NEWS: Fix typo.
* bootstrap: Delete the autom4te.cache dir before running the autotools.
* configure.ac (AC_INIT): Set version to 4.4.0.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@433 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
When showing update progress in a no tty situation, use unbuffered IO
for all systems, not just win32 native.
Update copyright year when printing version.
Remove warning about native win32 being experimental.
Split a line string.
* ppiwin.c: Update copyright year.
Add cvs Id keyword.
(usleep): Cleanup debug CPP directives to improve readability.
* ser_win32.c: Include <stdio.h> to fix failing build.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@430 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
* ser_win32.c: Assign copyright to Martin J. Thomas since he did all
real work on this file.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@429 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
was based on a typo in the datasheet which Atmel agreed is going to be
fixed.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@420 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
switch. The specified baud rate will override the default serial port
baud rate for a particular programmer.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@416 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2
return an error code when building on MacOS X. This commit makes
AVRDUDE compile and run fine on my PowerMac G5 running MacOS X. In
theory it would be possible to support parallel ports on the Mac using
a PCI multi-port card and/or USB<->Parallel converters. If/when such
support is added we can flesh out these functions as needed, but for
now, only serial port programmers are currently supported.
Note that I tested avrdude on the G5/MacOS X with an STK500 programmer
and used a Keyspan model USA-19HS USB<->RS232 adapter device which
simply shows up in /dev as a POSIX serial port. None of the serial
port handling needed any changes.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/avrdude/trunk/avrdude@415 81a1dc3b-b13d-400b-aceb-764788c761c2