Difference between revisions of "Linuxstamp mx27"
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== Main == | == Main == | ||
This is a place holder for the Linuxstamp mx27 board. Details will be posted as they are available. | This is a place holder for the Linuxstamp mx27 board. Details will be posted as they are available. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == OpenOCD == | ||
+ | Initialize openocd: | ||
+ | # openocd -f interface/signalyzer.cfg -f board/imx27som.cfg | ||
+ | Open connection to OpenOCD | ||
+ | $ telnet localhost 4444 | ||
== Redboot == | == Redboot == |
Revision as of 17:16, 11 May 2009
Main
This is a place holder for the Linuxstamp mx27 board. Details will be posted as they are available.
OpenOCD
Initialize openocd:
# openocd -f interface/signalyzer.cfg -f board/imx27som.cfg
Open connection to OpenOCD
$ telnet localhost 4444
Redboot
Redboot is based on ecos. A good starting point is here First pull the installer
$ wget --passive-ftp ftp://ecos.sourceware.org/pub/ecos/ecos-install.tcl
Then run it, be sure to include the arm-elf tools as that's what the freescale version wants.
$ ./ecos-install.tcl
It wants to run ecosenv.sh so set up the environment correctly. It says to stick it in .profile or .login. I think .bashrc will also work. Install old compat-libstdc
# yum install compat-libstdc++-3
Freescale has a version of ecos that they have patched to work with the imx27. First you need to download redboot_200719.tar.gz, that has both the base as well as the patches. to convert all the dos files to unix files use:
$ find . -type f -exec dos2unix {} \;
Then you can patch the tree:
$ bunzip2 -c ../patch-redboot-200719-base.bz2 | patch -p1 $ bunzip2 -c ../patch-redboot-200719-mx27.bz2 | patch -p1
Next set the ECOS_REPOSITORY environment variable:
$ export ECOS_REPOSITORY=/path_to_redboot/redboot_200719/src/ecos_20050912/packages/
Configure for imx27
$ ecosconfig new mx27ads redboot $ ecosconfig import $ECOS_REPOSITORY/hal/arm/mx27/ads/current/misc/redboot_ROMRAM.ecm $ ecosconfig tree
And finally make:
$ make
Now you should have redboot.bin under install/bin