openocd/src/jtag/interface.h

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/***************************************************************************
* Copyright (C) 2005 by Dominic Rath *
* Dominic.Rath@gmx.de *
* *
* Copyright (C) 2007,2008 Øyvind Harboe *
* oyvind.harboe@zylin.com *
* *
* Copyright (C) 2009 Zachary T Welch *
* zw@superlucidity.net *
* *
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify *
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by *
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or *
* (at your option) any later version. *
* *
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, *
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of *
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the *
* GNU General Public License for more details. *
* *
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License *
* along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. *
***************************************************************************/
#ifndef OPENOCD_JTAG_INTERFACE_H
#define OPENOCD_JTAG_INTERFACE_H
#include <jtag/jtag.h>
#include <jtag/swim.h>
#include <target/armv7m_trace.h>
/* @file
* The "Cable Helper API" is what the cable drivers can use to help
* implement their "Cable API". So a Cable Helper API is a set of
* helper functions used by cable drivers, and this is different from a
* Cable API. A "Cable API" is what higher level code used to talk to a
* cable.
*/
/* FIXME: prototype to simplify transition of HLA drivers. To be removed */
struct hl_interface_s;
/** implementation of wrapper function tap_set_state() */
void tap_set_state_impl(tap_state_t new_state);
/**
* This function sets the state of a "state follower" which tracks the
* state of the TAPs connected to the cable. The state follower is
* hopefully always in the same state as the actual TAPs in the jtag
* chain, and will be so if there are no bugs in the tracking logic
* within that cable driver.
*
* All the cable drivers call this function to indicate the state they
* think the TAPs attached to their cables are in. Because this
* function can also log transitions, it will be helpful to call this
* function with every transition that the TAPs being manipulated are
* expected to traverse, not just end points of a multi-step state path.
*
* @param new_state The state we think the TAPs are currently in (or
* are about to enter).
*/
#define tap_set_state(new_state) \
do { \
LOG_DEBUG_IO("tap_set_state(%s)", tap_state_name(new_state)); \
tap_set_state_impl(new_state); \
} while (0)
/**
* This function gets the state of the "state follower" which tracks the
* state of the TAPs connected to the cable. @see tap_set_state @return
* tap_state_t The state the TAPs are in now.
*/
tap_state_t tap_get_state(void);
/**
* This function sets the state of an "end state follower" which tracks
* the state that any cable driver thinks will be the end (resultant)
* state of the current TAP SIR or SDR operation.
*
* At completion of that TAP operation this value is copied into the
* state follower via tap_set_state().
*
* @param new_end_state The state the TAPs should enter at completion of
* a pending TAP operation.
*/
void tap_set_end_state(tap_state_t new_end_state);
/**
* For more information, @see tap_set_end_state
* @return tap_state_t - The state the TAPs should be in at completion of the current TAP operation.
*/
tap_state_t tap_get_end_state(void);
/**
* This function provides a "bit sequence" indicating what has to be
* done with TMS during a sequence of seven TAP clock cycles in order to
* get from state \a "from" to state \a "to".
*
* The length of the sequence must be determined with a parallel call to
* tap_get_tms_path_len().
*
* @param from The starting state.
* @param to The desired final state.
* @return int The required TMS bit sequence, with the first bit in the
* sequence at bit 0.
*/
int tap_get_tms_path(tap_state_t from, tap_state_t to);
/**
* Function int tap_get_tms_path_len
* returns the total number of bits that represents a TMS path
* transition as given by the function tap_get_tms_path().
*
* For at least one interface (JLink) it's not OK to simply "pad" TMS
* sequences to fit a whole byte. (I suspect this is a general TAP
* problem within OOCD.) Padding TMS causes all manner of instability
* that's not easily discovered. Using this routine we can apply
* EXACTLY the state transitions required to make something work - no
* more - no less.
*
* @param from is the starting state
* @param to is the resultant or final state
* @return int - the total number of bits in a transition.
*/
int tap_get_tms_path_len(tap_state_t from, tap_state_t to);
/**
* Function tap_move_ndx
* when given a stable state, returns an index from 0-5. The index corresponds to a
* sequence of stable states which are given in this order: <p>
* { TAP_RESET, TAP_IDLE, TAP_DRSHIFT, TAP_DRPAUSE, TAP_IRSHIFT, TAP_IRPAUSE }
* <p>
* This sequence corresponds to look up tables which are used in some of the
* cable drivers.
* @param astate is the stable state to find in the sequence. If a non stable
* state is passed, this may cause the program to output an error message
* and terminate.
* @return int - the array (or sequence) index as described above
*/
int tap_move_ndx(tap_state_t astate);
/**
* Function tap_is_state_stable
* returns true if the \a astate is stable.
*/
bool tap_is_state_stable(tap_state_t astate);
/**
* Function tap_state_transition
* takes a current TAP state and returns the next state according to the tms value.
* @param current_state is the state of a TAP currently.
* @param tms is either zero or non-zero, just like a real TMS line in a jtag interface.
* @return tap_state_t - the next state a TAP would enter.
*/
tap_state_t tap_state_transition(tap_state_t current_state, bool tms);
/** Allow switching between old and new TMS tables. @see tap_get_tms_path */
void tap_use_new_tms_table(bool use_new);
/** @returns True if new TMS table is active; false otherwise. */
bool tap_uses_new_tms_table(void);
/**
* @brief Prints verbose TAP state transitions for the given TMS/TDI buffers.
* @param tms_buf must points to a buffer containing the TMS bitstream.
* @param tdi_buf must points to a buffer containing the TDI bitstream.
* @param tap_len must specify the length of the TMS/TDI bitstreams.
* @param start_tap_state must specify the current TAP state.
* @returns the final TAP state; pass as @a start_tap_state in following call.
*/
static inline tap_state_t jtag_debug_state_machine(const void *tms_buf,
const void *tdi_buf, unsigned tap_len, tap_state_t start_tap_state)
{
/* Private declaration */
tap_state_t jtag_debug_state_machine_(const void *tms_buf, const void *tdi_buf,
unsigned tap_len, tap_state_t start_tap_state);
if (LOG_LEVEL_IS(LOG_LVL_DEBUG_IO))
return jtag_debug_state_machine_(tms_buf, tdi_buf, tap_len, start_tap_state);
else
return start_tap_state;
}
/**
* Represents a driver for a debugging interface.
*
* @todo Rename; perhaps "debug_driver". This isn't an interface,
* it's a driver! Also, not all drivers support JTAG.
*
* @todo We need a per-instance structure too, and changes to pass
* that structure to the driver. Instances can for example be in
* either SWD or JTAG modes. This will help remove globals, and
* eventually to cope with systems which have more than one such
* debugging interface.
*/
struct jtag_interface {
/**
* Bit vector listing capabilities exposed by this driver.
*/
unsigned supported;
#define DEBUG_CAP_TMS_SEQ (1 << 0)
/**
* Execute queued commands.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code on failure.
*/
int (*execute_queue)(void);
};
/**
* Represents a driver for a debugging interface
*
* @todo We need a per-instance structure too, and changes to pass
* that structure to the driver. Instances can for example be in
* either SWD or JTAG modes. This will help remove globals, and
* eventually to cope with systems which have more than one such
* debugging interface.
*/
struct adapter_driver {
/** The name of the interface driver. */
const char * const name;
/** transports supported in C code (NULL terminated vector) */
const char * const *transports;
/**
* The interface driver may register additional commands to expose
* additional features not covered by the standard command set.
*/
const struct command_registration *commands;
/**
* Interface driver must initialize any resources and connect to a
* JTAG device.
*
* quit() is invoked if and only if init() succeeds. quit() is always
* invoked if init() succeeds. Same as malloc() + free(). Always
* invoke free() if malloc() succeeds and do not invoke free()
* otherwise.
*
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code on failure.
*/
int (*init)(void);
/**
* Interface driver must tear down all resources and disconnect from
* the JTAG device.
*
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code on failure.
*/
int (*quit)(void);
swd: get rid of jtag queue to assert/deassert srst The transport SWD uses the JTAG queue to assert/deassert the system reset srst. This is the major inconsistency that has to be removed to properly split JTAG and SWD. Introduce a new driver API, reset(), to controls both the signals trst and srst in the driver, skipping the JTAG queue. Put the new API in struct jtag_interface, even if in this patch it's used for SWD only; the goal is to get it reused by the other transports. Add the implementation of the API in all the drivers that implement SWD. Such implementation is almost the same of the old code in JTAG queue. Create a wrapper adapter_system_reset() to use the new API and remove the SWD specific swd_add_reset(). In the wrapper replace jtag_add_sleep() with jtag_sleep(), because the former uses the JTAG queue too. Rename the old jtag_add_reset() as legacy_jtag_add_reset() with the target to remove it when all drivers would be ported to the new reset API. Create a new jtag_add_reset() that calls the legacy function for drivers still on the old reset API. Use the new API also on JTAG transport for the drivers that can support both SWD and JTAG. For the moment, do not modify the implementation of JTAG-only drivers, which will continue using the usual method. This should be cleaned-up in future commits. Change-Id: I32331c88313f6059b25e12c6bb0156aebc1c074f Signed-off-by: Antonio Borneo <borneo.antonio@gmail.com> Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/4895 Tested-by: jenkins Reviewed-by: Tomas Vanek <vanekt@fbl.cz>
2019-08-31 09:08:16 +00:00
/**
* Control (assert/deassert) the signals SRST and TRST on the interface.
* This function is synchronous and should be called after the adapter
* queue has been properly flushed.
swd: get rid of jtag queue to assert/deassert srst The transport SWD uses the JTAG queue to assert/deassert the system reset srst. This is the major inconsistency that has to be removed to properly split JTAG and SWD. Introduce a new driver API, reset(), to controls both the signals trst and srst in the driver, skipping the JTAG queue. Put the new API in struct jtag_interface, even if in this patch it's used for SWD only; the goal is to get it reused by the other transports. Add the implementation of the API in all the drivers that implement SWD. Such implementation is almost the same of the old code in JTAG queue. Create a wrapper adapter_system_reset() to use the new API and remove the SWD specific swd_add_reset(). In the wrapper replace jtag_add_sleep() with jtag_sleep(), because the former uses the JTAG queue too. Rename the old jtag_add_reset() as legacy_jtag_add_reset() with the target to remove it when all drivers would be ported to the new reset API. Create a new jtag_add_reset() that calls the legacy function for drivers still on the old reset API. Use the new API also on JTAG transport for the drivers that can support both SWD and JTAG. For the moment, do not modify the implementation of JTAG-only drivers, which will continue using the usual method. This should be cleaned-up in future commits. Change-Id: I32331c88313f6059b25e12c6bb0156aebc1c074f Signed-off-by: Antonio Borneo <borneo.antonio@gmail.com> Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/4895 Tested-by: jenkins Reviewed-by: Tomas Vanek <vanekt@fbl.cz>
2019-08-31 09:08:16 +00:00
* This function is optional.
* Adapters that don't support resets can either not define this function
* or return an error code.
* Adapters that don't support one of the two reset should ignore the
* request to assert the missing signal and eventually log an error.
*
* @param srst 1 to assert SRST, 0 to deassert SRST.
* @param trst 1 to assert TRST, 0 to deassert TRST.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code on failure.
*/
int (*reset)(int srst, int trst);
/**
* Set the interface speed.
* @param speed The new interface speed setting.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code on failure.
*/
int (*speed)(int speed);
/**
* Returns JTAG maxium speed for KHz. 0 = RTCK. The function returns
* a failure if it can't support the KHz/RTCK.
*
* WARNING!!!! if RTCK is *slow* then think carefully about
* whether you actually want to support this in the driver.
* Many target scripts are written to handle the absence of RTCK
* and use a fallback kHz TCK.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code on failure.
*/
int (*khz)(int khz, int *jtag_speed);
/**
* Calculate the clock frequency (in KHz) for the given @a speed.
* @param speed The desired interface speed setting.
* @param khz On return, contains the speed in KHz (0 for RTCK).
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code if the
* interface cannot support the specified speed (KHz or RTCK).
*/
int (*speed_div)(int speed, int *khz);
/**
* Read and clear the power dropout flag. Note that a power dropout
* can be transitionary, easily much less than a ms.
*
* To find out if the power is *currently* on, one must invoke this
* method twice. Once to clear the power dropout flag and a second
* time to read the current state. The default implementation
* never reports power dropouts.
*
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code on failure.
*/
int (*power_dropout)(int *power_dropout);
/**
* Read and clear the srst asserted detection flag.
*
* Like power_dropout this does *not* read the current
* state. SRST assertion is transitionary and may be much
* less than 1ms, so the interface driver must watch for these
* events until this routine is called.
*
* @param srst_asserted On return, indicates whether SRST has
* been asserted.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code on failure.
*/
int (*srst_asserted)(int *srst_asserted);
/**
* Configure trace parameters for the adapter
*
* @param enabled Whether to enable trace
* @param pin_protocol Configured pin protocol
* @param port_size Trace port width for sync mode
* @param trace_freq A pointer to the configured trace
* frequency; if it points to 0, the adapter driver must write
* its maximum supported rate there
* @param traceclkin_freq TRACECLKIN frequency provided to the TPIU in Hz
* @param prescaler Pointer to the SWO prescaler calculated by the
* adapter
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, an error code on failure.
*/
int (*config_trace)(bool enabled, enum tpiu_pin_protocol pin_protocol,
uint32_t port_size, unsigned int *trace_freq,
unsigned int traceclkin_freq, uint16_t *prescaler);
/**
* Poll for new trace data
*
* @param buf A pointer to buffer to store received data
* @param size A pointer to buffer size; must be filled with
* the actual amount of bytes written
*
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, an error code on failure.
*/
int (*poll_trace)(uint8_t *buf, size_t *size);
/** Low-level JTAG APIs */
struct jtag_interface *jtag_ops;
/** Low-level SWD APIs */
const struct swd_driver *swd_ops;
/* DAP APIs over JTAG transport */
const struct dap_ops *dap_jtag_ops;
/* DAP APIs over SWD transport */
const struct dap_ops *dap_swd_ops;
/* SWIM APIs */
const struct swim_driver *swim_ops;
/* FIXME: helper to simplify transition of HLA drivers. To be removed */
struct hl_interface_s *hla_if;
};
extern const char * const jtag_only[];
int adapter_resets(int assert_trst, int assert_srst);
int adapter_assert_reset(void);
int adapter_deassert_reset(void);
int adapter_config_trace(bool enabled, enum tpiu_pin_protocol pin_protocol,
uint32_t port_size, unsigned int *trace_freq,
unsigned int traceclkin_freq, uint16_t *prescaler);
int adapter_poll_trace(uint8_t *buf, size_t *size);
#endif /* OPENOCD_JTAG_INTERFACE_H */