"classic" AVRs (AT90, ATtiny, ATmega) in both,
ISP and high-voltage programming modes.
* Makefile.am: Add -lm.
* avrdude.conf.in: Add stk600, stk600pp, and stk600hvsp.
* config_gram.y: Add support for the stk600* keywords.
* lexer.l: (Ditto.)
* pgm.h: Add the "chan" parameter to set_varef().
* stk500.c: (Ditto.)
* serial.h: Add USB endpoint support to struct filedescriptor.
* stk500v2.c: Implement the meat of the STK600 support.
* stk500v2.h: Add new prototypes for stk600*() programmers.
* stk500v2_private.h: Add new constants used in the STK600.
* term.c: Add AREF channel support.
* usb_libusb.c: Automatically determine the correct write
endpoint ID, the STK600 uses 0x83 while all other tools use
0x82. Propagate the EP to use through struct filedescriptor.
* usbdevs.h: Add the STK600 USB product ID.
* tools/get-stk600-cards.xsl: XSL transformation for
targetboards.xml to obtain the list of socket and routing
card IDs, to be used in stk500v2.c (for displaying the
names).
* tools/get-stk600-devices.xsl: XSL transformation for
targetboards.xml to obtain the table of socket/routing cards
and their respective AVR device support for doc/avrdude.texi.
* avrdude.1: Document all the STK600 stuff.
* doc/avrdude.texi: Ditto. Added a new chapter for
Programmer Specific Information.
Thanks to Eirik Rasmussen from Atmel Norway for his support in
getting this code running within that short amount of time!
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declarations in each file by a central header file "avrdude.h".
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- declare a dummy "struct timezone" for some Win32 systems (MinGW)
- fix a few printf() argument types
- get rid off the prevailing "all filedescriptors are of type int"
attitude
The last item required a large sweep across the code, in order to
replace all "int fd"s by "struct filedescriptor *fd"s, and pass
pointers (as we cannot pass a union directly). In return, the
code is now supposed to be fully 64-bit safe, rather than relying
on a 64-bit pointer being converted to a (32-bit) int and back
to a pointer as we did previously.
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that indicates whether the underlying communication can dynamically
change its speed or not. This flag is set for true serial
communication but clear for USB communication. Don't try to adjust
the speed when talking over a communication channel that doesn't
support it. (The Dragon does not even support the respective
parameter.)
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AVRISP mkII device. (Savannah patch #4789.)
* serial.h: Declare usb_serdev_frame device descriptor.
* stk500v2.c: Implementation of the AVRISP mkII handling.
* usb_libusb.c: Add USB handling for short-frame delimited
AVRISP mkII USB protocol; add distinction of different
devices in usbdev_open().
* jtagmkII.c: Tell usbdev_open() to search for the JTAG ICE mkII.
* usbdevs.h: (New file.)
* Makefile.am: Add usbdevs.h, as well as some other forgotten
files "make distcheck" complained about.
* avrdude.conf.in: Add more aliases for the AVRISP mkII.
* avrdude.1: Document how to use the AVRISP mkII.
* doc/avrdude.texi: (Ditto.)
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. use the correct endpoint, depending on whether we are going to read
or write
. when opening the USB device, set the configuration according to the
config entry, and properly claim the interface
. when closing, release the interface again
With these changes, it works now with libusb-win32 as well.
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synchronizing against a JTAG ICE in weird state.
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to have problems sending a control message (returns an "I/O error").
At least try to recover gracefully in the bening case where the user
did not request a particular serial number, so we could continue
anyway without knowing it.
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available in recent versions of libusb, and the check isn't really
needed anyway (as the check for vendor and product ID will cover that
as well).
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mkII.
The serial transport methods have been moved out into a record of
function pointers for that purpose, defaulting to the actual serial
connection that natively applies to the hosting system. Iff inside
the JTAG ICE mkII handler a port name starting with "usb" has been
detected, the record of function pointers is switched to USB.
Optionally, a serial number might be specified, so only the JTAG ICE
mkII matching the given serial number will be opened. The match is
done right-to-left, so only the least significant bytes of the serial
number need to be given.
In order to make the change as least intrusive to existing drivers as
possible, the entire naming scheme of the serial_foo() function entry
points has been maintained as access macros that encapsulate these
into the respective indirect function calls via serdev->foo().
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