will be available in the upcoming avrdude release.
His addition has been implemented by means of a generalized bit-bang
interface that contains the common part between serial and paralle
bit-bang devices, and specialed backends for the serial and parallel
port connections.
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. 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.
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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).
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available.
* avr910.c (avr910_vfy_cmd_sent): New function.
(avr910_chip_erase): Add support for chip erase.
(avr910_enter_prog_mode): New function.
(avr910_leave_prog_mode): New function.
(avr910_initialize): Add code to select device type and enter prog mode.
(avr910_close): Leave programming mode before closing serial port.
(avr910_read_sig_bytes): New function.
(avr910_initpgm): Add avr910_read_sig_bytes method to pgm initializer.
* avrdude.conf.in: Add note about deprecating devicecode.
Change all occurences of devicecode to stk500_devcode.
Add avr910_devcode to a few parts for testing.
* avrpart.h (struct avrpart): Change devicecode field to stk500_devcode.
(struct avrpart): Add avr910_devcode field.
* config_gram.y: Add K_STK500_DEVCODE and K_AVR910_DEVCODE tokens.
Generate an error if devicecode is found in the config file.
Handle parsing of avr910_devcode and stk500_devcode.
* lexer.l: Handle parsing of avr910_devcode and stk500_devcode.
* pgm.c: Initialize pgm->read_sig_bytes field.
* pgm.h: Add pgm->read_sig_bytes field.
* stk500.c: Use stk500_devcode instead of devicecode.
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* config_gram.y: Add parsing of avr910 programmer.
* lexer.l: Add avr910 token.
* avr910.c: [this is still work in progress]
Add some debug output.
Add probe for programmer presense.
* main.c: Set port to default_serial if programmer type is avr910.
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causes some shift-reduce conflicts, but I think they are OK.
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$HOME/.avrduderc. Entries from .avrduderc take precedence over those
from the system wide config file in ${PREFIX}/etc/avrdude.conf.
Track and display the config file name and line number when we print
out the available parts and programmers. This is useful in case
someone has overridden a definition in their .avrduderc file and is
wondering why the definition in the system wide config file is not
being used.
Remove the default programmer 'stk500' from the distributed config
file.
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one of the programmers to be tagged "default" within its definition.
Also, axe the notion of a compiled-in default programmer. It is
kind've pointless now that nearly all configuration comes from the
config file, thus, avrdude is not very useful without the config file,
and thus, having a programmer compiled-in offers little or no benefit.
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This adds 'default_parallel' and 'default_serial' keywords to the
grammar, which take quoted string arguments.
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programming mode. Use 'retry_pulse' in the per-part specification
that can currently take values of 'reset' or 'sck', the default being
'sck' which preserves the previous behaviour. Some newer parts
indicate that /RESET should be pulsed, while older parts say to pulse
SCK.
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say whether parts support these programming modes or not. Possible
values for 'serial' are 'yes' or 'no'. Possible values for 'parallel'
are 'yes', 'no', or 'pseudo'. Add a bit mask of flags to the AVRPART
structure to capture these settings. Use these within
stk500_initialize() to set the device parameters correctly.
Defaults for 'serial' and 'parallel' are 'yes' unless specified
otherwise.
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PAGEL and BS2 signals and the disposition of the reset pin
('dedicated' or 'io').
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* .cvsignore: Ignore autoconf files.
* AUTHORS: New file.
* ChangeLog: New file.
* Makefile: Removed file.
* Makefile.am: New file.
* NEWS: New file.
* README: New file.
* bootstrap: New file.
* configure.ac: New file.
* avr.c: Include ac_cfg.h (generated by autoconf).
* config.c: Include ac_cfg.h.
Include config_gram.h instead of y.tab.h.
* config.h: If HAS_YYSTYPE is not defined, define YYSTYPE.
* config_gram.y: Include ac_cfg.h.
* fileio.c: Include ac_cfg.h.
* lexer.l: Include config_gram.h instead of y.tab.h.
* lists.c: Include ac_cfg.h.
* main.c: Include ac_cfg.h.
* par.c: Include ac_cfg.h.
* pgm.c: Include ac_cfg.h.
* ppi.c: Include ac_cfg.h.
* stk500.c: Include ac_cfg.h.
* term.c: Include ac_cfg.h.
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its own file par.c, leaving low level parallel port accessor routines
in ppi.c to help with portability. Change the programmer type to
'PAR' now instead of 'PPI' - 'PAR' represents the parallel port
programmer type.
Be more liberal with 'static' function declarations within the
programmer implimentation files - these functions should never be
called directly - always use the programmer function references.
There are still a few places in 'main.c' that directly reference the
parallel programmer explicitly (par_getpinmask). These should be
fixed somehow.
Axe a few unused functions.
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care, bison does, and this is normally the way it's meant to be
anyway.
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This was intended to be used for identifying code in the field for
incoming bug reports, but I've never really found it all that useful.
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This change represents a name change only. There is currently an
effort to port AVRPROG to other platforms including Linux and Windows.
Since Atmel's programmer binary that's included within their AVR
Studio software is named AVRPROG.EXE on the Windows OS, there is the
chance for confusion if we keep calling this program AVRPROG as well.
Up until now the name hasn't really been a problem since there was no
chance to confuse 'avrprog' on Unix with Atmel's AVRPROG because
Atmel's tools only run on Windows. But with the Unix 'avrprog'
possibly being ported to Windows, I felt a name change was the best
way to avoid problems.
So - from this point forward, my FreeBSD Unix program formerly known
as AVRPROG will subsequently be known as AVRDUDE (AVR Downloader/UploaDEr).
This change also represents a time when the AVRDUDE sources move from
my own private repository to a public repository. This will give
other developers a chance to port AVRDUDE to other platforms and
extend its functionality to support additional programming hardware,
etc.
So goodbye AVRPROG, welcome AVRDUDE!
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that programmers other than the direct parallel port connection can be
supported.
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Fix setting of status LEDs under various write-fail conditions.
Add a flag to indicate that a memory type requires the device to
possibly be powered off and back on after a write to it. This is due
to a hardware problem on some Atmel devices, see:
http://www.atmel.com/atmel/acrobat/doc1280.pdf
Add greater verbosity to the part-display code when verbose>1 to
display avrprog's encoding of the defined programming instructions.
This is primarily for debugging purposes.
Part updates:
* add the AT90S4414 part
* add fuse and lock bit access instructions for the AT90S1200,
AT90S4434, and AT90S8515.
* add the pwroff_after_write flag to the fuse bits for the AT90S2333
and AT90S4433 parts
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Make the BUFF pin a mask like VCC to allow multiple pins to be
asserted at the same time (STK200 has two buffer enable lines).
Add the STK200 programmer.
Fix EEPROM address line selection for several parts.
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a memory type different than the previous one.
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used to make the instruction input more readable in the config file.
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serial programming instructions are not very orthoganal, i.e., the
"read fuse bits" instruction on an ATMega103 is an entirely different
opcode and data format from the _same_ instruction for an ATMega163!
Thus, it becomes impossible to have a single instruction encoding
(varying the data) across the chip lines.
This set of changes allows and requires instruction encodings to be
defined on a per-part basis within the configuration file. Hopefully
I've defined the encoding scheme in a general enough way so it is
useful in describing the instruction formats for yet-to-be invented
Atmel chips. I've tried hard to make it match very closely with the
specification in Atmel's data sheets for their parts. It's a little
more verbose than what I initially hoped for, but I've tried to keep
it as concise as I could, while still remaining reasonably flexible.
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Rename the poorly chosen name "bank" to "page" for page addressing.
Atmel calls it "page" in their documentation.
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checking on the memory parameters for parts that do bank addressing.
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format using a more human-readable format.
Read part descriptions from the config file now instead of hard-coding
them.
Update usage().
Cleanup unused code.
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