flash without proprietary IDE?

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Patrick-11 Patrick-11
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flash without proprietary IDE?

Hi Everyone

I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to fabriacte PCBs
but I was think the other day how nice it would be to be totally free of
the proprietary IDE that shipped with my development board(and Windows),
I can't flash my board without it.

There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between a USB
device and it's device driver:
http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en

If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the
development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is there
anything obvious that would stand in my way?

Thanks for reading-Patrick
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BogdanM BogdanM
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

Hi Patrick,

What board are you using again? The EK-LM3S8962 by any chance?
Using usbsnoop to reverse engineer the protocol is a way to go, but probably the most masochistic one :) There's probably a better way to do it.

Best,
Bogdan

On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 4:55 PM, Patrick <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hi Everyone

I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.

There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between a USB device and it's device driver:
http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en

If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is there anything obvious that would stand in my way?

Thanks for reading-Patrick
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Patrick-11 Patrick-11
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

Hey Bogdan

Yep it's the EK-LM3S8962.

Would it be better to try to disassemble the windows driver? I have
never done this. Would this sort of thing help eLua? If not, it might
not be worth the trouble.

Thanks-Patrick

Bogdan Marinescu wrote:

> Hi Patrick,
>
> What board are you using again? The EK-LM3S8962 by any chance?
> Using usbsnoop to reverse engineer the protocol is a way to go, but
> probably the most masochistic one :) There's probably a better way to
> do it.
>
> Best,
> Bogdan
>
> On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 4:55 PM, Patrick
> <[hidden email]
> <mailto:[hidden email]>> wrote:
>
>     Hi Everyone
>
>     I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to
>     fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be
>     to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my
>     development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.
>
>     There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between
>     a USB device and it's device driver:
>     http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en
>
>     If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the
>     development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is
>     there anything obvious that would stand in my way?
>
>     Thanks for reading-Patrick
>     _______________________________________________
>     eLua-dev mailing list
>     [hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]>
>     https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/elua-dev
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> _______________________________________________
> eLua-dev mailing list
> [hidden email]
> https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/elua-dev
>  

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BogdanM BogdanM
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?



On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 5:07 PM, Patrick <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hey Bogdan

Yep it's the EK-LM3S8962.

Would it be better to try to disassemble the windows driver? I have never done this. Would this sort of thing help eLua? If not, it might not be worth the trouble.

Disassembling a Windows driver is not a job for a mere mortal :), and it wouldn't help much  anyway, you need to know more about the protocol itself. As for helping eLua" it would probably help, but not much; our job is to make eLua itself very good, not to improve tool support from chip manufacturers (although I don't have a problem with doing this).
I vaguely remember a thread on the Luminary Micro forums with some information about how to program your board from Linux, using OpenOCD. It's worth checking out.

Best,
Bogdan
 

Bogdan Marinescu wrote:
Hi Patrick,

What board are you using again? The EK-LM3S8962 by any chance?
Using usbsnoop to reverse engineer the protocol is a way to go, but probably the most masochistic one :) There's probably a better way to do it.

Best,
Bogdan

On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 4:55 PM, Patrick <[hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]>> wrote:

   Hi Everyone

   I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to
   fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be
   to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my
   development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.

   There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between
   a USB device and it's device driver:
   http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en

   If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the
   development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is
   there anything obvious that would stand in my way?

   Thanks for reading-Patrick
   _______________________________________________
   eLua-dev mailing list
   [hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]> ------------------------------------------------------------------------


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Dado Sutter Dado Sutter
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

James was able to flash his EK-LM3S6965 from Linux using OpenOCD.
I hope we can publish a small tutorial or at least some hints on the wiki one of these days.

Best
Dado


On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 11:14, Bogdan Marinescu <[hidden email]> wrote:


On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 5:07 PM, Patrick <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hey Bogdan

Yep it's the EK-LM3S8962.

Would it be better to try to disassemble the windows driver? I have never done this. Would this sort of thing help eLua? If not, it might not be worth the trouble.

Disassembling a Windows driver is not a job for a mere mortal :), and it wouldn't help much  anyway, you need to know more about the protocol itself. As for helping eLua" it would probably help, but not much; our job is to make eLua itself very good, not to improve tool support from chip manufacturers (although I don't have a problem with doing this).
I vaguely remember a thread on the Luminary Micro forums with some information about how to program your board from Linux, using OpenOCD. It's worth checking out.

Best,
Bogdan
 

Bogdan Marinescu wrote:
Hi Patrick,

What board are you using again? The EK-LM3S8962 by any chance?
Using usbsnoop to reverse engineer the protocol is a way to go, but probably the most masochistic one :) There's probably a better way to do it.

Best,
Bogdan

On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 4:55 PM, Patrick <[hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]>> wrote:

   Hi Everyone

   I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to
   fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be
   to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my
   development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.

   There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between
   a USB device and it's device driver:
   http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en

   If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the
   development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is
   there anything obvious that would stand in my way?

   Thanks for reading-Patrick
   _______________________________________________
   eLua-dev mailing list
   [hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]> ------------------------------------------------------------------------


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BogdanM BogdanM
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

I'd be interested in that too, actually.

Best,
Bogdan

On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 5:50 PM, Dado Sutter <[hidden email]> wrote:
James was able to flash his EK-LM3S6965 from Linux using OpenOCD.
I hope we can publish a small tutorial or at least some hints on the wiki one of these days.

Best
Dado



On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 11:14, Bogdan Marinescu <[hidden email]> wrote:


On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 5:07 PM, Patrick <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hey Bogdan

Yep it's the EK-LM3S8962.

Would it be better to try to disassemble the windows driver? I have never done this. Would this sort of thing help eLua? If not, it might not be worth the trouble.

Disassembling a Windows driver is not a job for a mere mortal :), and it wouldn't help much  anyway, you need to know more about the protocol itself. As for helping eLua" it would probably help, but not much; our job is to make eLua itself very good, not to improve tool support from chip manufacturers (although I don't have a problem with doing this).
I vaguely remember a thread on the Luminary Micro forums with some information about how to program your board from Linux, using OpenOCD. It's worth checking out.

Best,
Bogdan
 

Bogdan Marinescu wrote:
Hi Patrick,

What board are you using again? The EK-LM3S8962 by any chance?
Using usbsnoop to reverse engineer the protocol is a way to go, but probably the most masochistic one :) There's probably a better way to do it.

Best,
Bogdan

On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 4:55 PM, Patrick <[hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]>> wrote:

   Hi Everyone

   I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to
   fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be
   to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my
   development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.

   There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between
   a USB device and it's device driver:
   http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en

   If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the
   development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is
   there anything obvious that would stand in my way?

   Thanks for reading-Patrick
   _______________________________________________
   eLua-dev mailing list
   [hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]> ------------------------------------------------------------------------


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Ronan Paixão Ronan Paixão
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

That remembers me when a friend and I reverse-engineered Digilent's USB protocol for the Nexys2 FPGA board. That would only allow bitfile updates from Windows, but I ran Linux at the time. Quite tricky, and probably wouldn't work if we didn't have a good starting point (xilprg), but eventually it did work. Note: FPGAs are also programmed via JTAG.

Ronan

2010/4/19 Bogdan Marinescu <[hidden email]>
I'd be interested in that too, actually.

Best,
Bogdan


On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 5:50 PM, Dado Sutter <[hidden email]> wrote:
James was able to flash his EK-LM3S6965 from Linux using OpenOCD.
I hope we can publish a small tutorial or at least some hints on the wiki one of these days.

Best
Dado



On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 11:14, Bogdan Marinescu <[hidden email]> wrote:


On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 5:07 PM, Patrick <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hey Bogdan

Yep it's the EK-LM3S8962.

Would it be better to try to disassemble the windows driver? I have never done this. Would this sort of thing help eLua? If not, it might not be worth the trouble.

Disassembling a Windows driver is not a job for a mere mortal :), and it wouldn't help much  anyway, you need to know more about the protocol itself. As for helping eLua" it would probably help, but not much; our job is to make eLua itself very good, not to improve tool support from chip manufacturers (although I don't have a problem with doing this).
I vaguely remember a thread on the Luminary Micro forums with some information about how to program your board from Linux, using OpenOCD. It's worth checking out.

Best,
Bogdan
 

Bogdan Marinescu wrote:
Hi Patrick,

What board are you using again? The EK-LM3S8962 by any chance?
Using usbsnoop to reverse engineer the protocol is a way to go, but probably the most masochistic one :) There's probably a better way to do it.

Best,
Bogdan

On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 4:55 PM, Patrick <[hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]>> wrote:

   Hi Everyone

   I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to
   fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be
   to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my
   development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.

   There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between
   a USB device and it's device driver:
   http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en

   If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the
   development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is
   there anything obvious that would stand in my way?

   Thanks for reading-Patrick
   _______________________________________________
   eLua-dev mailing list
   [hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]> ------------------------------------------------------------------------


_______________________________________________
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Tony-12 Tony-12
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

In reply to this post by Patrick-11
Has anyone considered contacting TI?  They are at least somewhat open to open source and Linux (e.g. BeagleBoard, HawkBoard, free for non-commercial use Linux command line compilers for the C6000 DSPs, etc).  If they would provide details, it would be much, much easier to create a Linux flash down loader.

BTW, Patrick, are you trying to fabricate your own PCBs or learn how to design them so someone else can make them?

--Tony

On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 6:55 AM, Patrick <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hi Everyone

I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.

There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between a USB device and it's device driver:
http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en

If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is there anything obvious that would stand in my way?

Thanks for reading-Patrick

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BogdanM BogdanM
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 9:28 AM, Tony <[hidden email]> wrote:
Has anyone considered contacting TI? 

No, because I have a strong feeling that people already managed to do this, and I don't feel like being greated with a polite versoin of JFGI :) I never contact the manufacturer until I run out of options (unless of course I am in a big hurry). I'd search for the solution if I had some time, but I don't right now, unfortunately.
 
They are at least somewhat open to open source and Linux (e.g. BeagleBoard, HawkBoard, free for non-commercial use Linux command line compilers for the C6000 DSPs, etc).  If they would provide details, it would be much, much easier to create a Linux flash down loader.

I'm quite sure it already exists in the combination of OpenOCD + some JTAG dongle (maybe even the USB to JTAG adapter present on Luminary's boards). The solution just doesn't seem to be that popular (yet).


Best,
Bogdan


On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 6:55 AM, Patrick <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hi Everyone

I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.

There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between a USB device and it's device driver:
http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en

If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is there anything obvious that would stand in my way?

Thanks for reading-Patrick

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Patrick-11 Patrick-11
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

In reply to this post by Tony-12
Hi Tony

Your post is a good reminder. I work with scientific instruments and all
the manufacturers are hard to deal with. It never even crossed my mind
that a manufacturer might help.

I am trying to learn how to design boards for fabrication houses to
build. I am actually giving gEDA a try. It has a steep learning curve
and I am making slow progress. I settled on gEDA because I really want
to produce production grade boards and it appears that people need to
make their own footprints much of the time to do this anyhow, so it
lowered the value of Eagle which sounds like it has a great set of
libraries but which may or may not be suitable for drop in use on a
commercial board.

-Patrick

Tony wrote:

> Has anyone considered contacting TI?  They are at least somewhat open
> to open source and Linux (e.g. BeagleBoard, HawkBoard, free for
> non-commercial use Linux command line compilers for the C6000 DSPs,
> etc).  If they would provide details, it would be much, much easier to
> create a Linux flash down loader.
>
> BTW, Patrick, are you trying to fabricate your own PCBs or learn how
> to design them so someone else can make them?
>
> --Tony
>
> On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 6:55 AM, Patrick
> <[hidden email]
> <mailto:[hidden email]>> wrote:
>
>     Hi Everyone
>
>     I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to
>     fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be
>     to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my
>     development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.
>
>     There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between
>     a USB device and it's device driver:
>     http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en
>
>     If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the
>     development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is
>     there anything obvious that would stand in my way?
>
>     Thanks for reading-Patrick
>
>     _______________________________________________
>     eLua-dev mailing list
>     [hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]>
>     https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/elua-dev
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> _______________________________________________
> eLua-dev mailing list
> [hidden email]
> https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/elua-dev
>  

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Tony-12 Tony-12
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

Patrick,

In my job (automation), I expect crappy to OK manuals and good tech support.  If I have a choice, I'll dump a vendor that charges typical prices and has lousy tech support.  Maybe the fact that my typical vendor is small to mid-size helps.

Most semiconductor companies have pretty good support; to give one example, TI has an ultra low cost JTAG adapter you can build yourself, the XDS-100 ( http://processors.wiki.ti.com/wiki/index.php?title=XDS100 ).  Unfortunately, it doesn't support Cortex-M3.

Figuring out how to get boards designed and manufactured is a big learning curve; fortunately, I had help.  It's good to look at the fab houses you're considering before laying out your PCB, because they can have quirky rules (e.g. fixed drill sizes, only plated holes) that you may need to consider in your layout.

--Tony


On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 5:47 AM, Patrick <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hi Tony

Your post is a good reminder. I work with scientific instruments and all the manufacturers are hard to deal with. It never even crossed my mind that a manufacturer might help.

I am trying to learn how to design boards for fabrication houses to build. I am actually giving gEDA a try. It has a steep learning curve and I am making slow progress. I settled on gEDA because I really want to produce production grade boards and it appears that people need to make their own footprints much of the time to do this anyhow, so it lowered the value of Eagle which sounds like it has a great set of libraries but which may or may not be suitable for drop in use on a commercial board.

-Patrick

Tony wrote:
Has anyone considered contacting TI?  They are at least somewhat open to open source and Linux (e.g. BeagleBoard, HawkBoard, free for non-commercial use Linux command line compilers for the C6000 DSPs, etc).  If they would provide details, it would be much, much easier to create a Linux flash down loader.

BTW, Patrick, are you trying to fabricate your own PCBs or learn how to design them so someone else can make them?

--Tony

On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 6:55 AM, Patrick <[hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]>> wrote:

   Hi Everyone

   I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to
   fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be
   to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my
   development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.

   There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between
   a USB device and it's device driver:
   http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en

   If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the
   development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is
   there anything obvious that would stand in my way?

   Thanks for reading-Patrick

   _______________________________________________
   eLua-dev mailing list
   [hidden email] <mailto:[hidden email]> ------------------------------------------------------------------------


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jbsnyder jbsnyder
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Re: flash without proprietary IDE?

In reply to this post by BogdanM
OpenOCD works to flash luminary boards using the on-board JTAG many of
them come with. Someone else also wrote some Tcl/Tk tool for flashing
luminary boards which you can find on their message boards.

Unfortunately I don't know too many details of how JTAG works for
flashing with these platforms but I get the sense that OpenOCD is just
using some standard ARM JTAG interfacing with knowledge of the memory
offsets to start writing at and some details about supported commands
(types of resets, etc) so it might not be terribly painful to write
some simple flashing tool. That said I'm not sure where to look for
implementation details aside from ARM's docs and OpenOCD's source.

As for just using OpenOCD I think I posted the flashing config file
and script a little while ago. They should work with a few path tweaks
and compiling OpenOCD from source with libftdi support. I've had it on
my todo list to make some kind of tutorial but haven't gotten to it
yet :)

On Wednesday, April 21, 2010, Bogdan Marinescu
<[hidden email]> wrote:

> On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 9:28 AM, Tony <[hidden email]> wrote:
>
>
> Has anyone considered contacting TI?
> No, because I have a strong feeling that people already managed to do this, and I don't feel like being greated with a polite versoin of JFGI :) I never contact the manufacturer until I run out of options (unless of course I am in a big hurry). I'd search for the solution if I had some time, but I don't right now, unfortunately.
>  They are at least somewhat open to open source and Linux (e.g. BeagleBoard, HawkBoard, free for non-commercial use Linux command line compilers for the C6000 DSPs, etc).  If they would provide details, it would be much, much easier to create a Linux flash down loader.
>
> I'm quite sure it already exists in the combination of OpenOCD + some JTAG dongle (maybe even the USB to JTAG adapter present on Luminary's boards). The solution just doesn't seem to be that popular (yet).
>
>
> Best,
> Bogdan
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 6:55 AM, Patrick <[hidden email]> wrote:
> Hi Everyone
>
> I am just taking a little break from eLua to learn how to fabriacte PCBs but I was think the other day how nice it would be to be totally free of the proprietary IDE that shipped with my development board(and Windows), I can't flash my board without it.
>
> There is a program I have used once to monitor the traffic between a USB device and it's device driver:
> http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/index.php.en
>
> If I was able to recreate the "command sets" understood by the development board do you think I could do away with the IDE? Is there anything obvious that would stand in my way?
>
> Thanks for reading-Patrick
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--
James Snyder
Biomedical Engineering
Northwestern University
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