Add JTAG Primer to doxygen manual, contributed by Strontium.

git-svn-id: svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk@1776 b42882b7-edfa-0310-969c-e2dbd0fdcd60
This commit is contained in:
zwelch 2009-05-13 11:10:35 +00:00
parent 9c2468eee4
commit 7626139950
2 changed files with 121 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -7,6 +7,18 @@ of APIs and gives an overview of how they fit together.
*/
/** @page primer OpenOCD Techincal Primers
This pages lists Techincal Primers available for OpenOCD Developers.
They seek to provide information to pull novices up the learning curves
associated with the fundamental technologies used by OpenOCD.
- @subpage primerjtag
Contributions or suggestions for new Technical Primers are welcome.
*/
/** @page oocd OpenOCD Architecture
The OpenOCD library consists of several APIs that build together to

109
doc/manual/primer/jtag.txt Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,109 @@
/** @page primerjtag OpenOCD JTAG Primer
JTAG is unnecessarily confusing, because JTAG is often confused with
boundary scan, which is just one of its possible functions.
JTAG is simply a communication interface designed to allow communication
to functions contained on devices, for the designed purposes of
initialisation, programming, testing, debugging, and anything else you
want to use it for (as a chip designer).
Think of JTAG as I2C for testing. It doesn't define what it can do,
just a logical interface that allows a uniform channel for communication.
See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_Test_Action_Group
and
http://www.inaccessnetworks.com/projects/ianjtag/jtag-intro/jtag-state-machine-large.png
The first page (among other things) shows a logical representation
describing how multiple devices are wired up using JTAG. JTAG does not
specify, data rates or interface levels (3.3V/1.8V, etc) each device can
support different data rates/interface logic levels. How to wire them
in a compatible way is an exercise for an engineer.
Basically TMS controls which shift register is placed on the device,
between TDI and TDO. The second diagram shows the state transitions on
TMS which will select different shift registers.
The first thing you need to do is reset the state machine, because when
you connect to a chip you dont know what state the jtag is in,you need
to clock TMS as 1, at least 7 times. This will put you into "Test Logic
Reset" State. Knowing this, you can, once reset, then track what each
transition on TMS will do, and hence know what state the jtag state
machine is in.
There are 2 "types" of shift registers. The Instruction shift register
and the data shift register. The sizes of these are undefined, and can
change from chip to chip. The Instruction register is used to select
which Data register/data register function is used, and the data
register is used to read data from that function or write data to it.
Each of the states control what happens to either the data register or
instruction register.
For example, one of the data registers will be known as "bypass" this is
(usually) a single bit which has no function and is used to bypass the
chip. Eg, assume we have 3 identical chips, wired up like the picture
and each has a 3 bit instruction register, and there are 2 known
instructions (110 = bypass, 010 = some other function) if we want to use
"some other function", on the second chip in the line, and not change
the other chips we would do the following transitions.
From Test Logic Reset, TMS goes:
0 1 1 0 0
which puts every chip in the chain into the "Shift IR state"
Then (while holding TMS as 0) TDI goes:
0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1
which puts the following values in the instruction shift register for
each chip [110] [010] [110]
The order is reversed, because we shift out the least significant bit
first. Then we transition TMS:
1 1 1 1 0 0
which puts us in the "Shift DR state".
Now when we clock data onto TDI (again while holding TMS to 0) , the
data shifts through the data registers, and because of the instruction
registers we selected (some other function has 8 bits in its data
register), our total data register in the chain looks like this:
0 00000000 0
The first and last bit are in the "bypassed" chips, so values read from
them are irrelevant and data written to them is ignored. But we need to
write bits for those registers, because they are in the chain.
If we wanted to write 0xF5 to the data register we would clock out of
TDI (holding TMS to 0):
0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0
Again, we are clocking the lsbit first. Then we would clock TMS:
1 1 0
which updates the selected data register with the value 0xF5 and returns
us to run test idle.
If we needed to read the data register before over-writing it with F5,
no sweat, that's already done, because the TDI/TDO are set up as a
circular shift register, so if you write enough bits to fill the shift
register, you will receive the "captured" contents of the data registers
simultaneously on TDO.
That's JTAG in a nutshell. On top of this, you need to get specs for
target chips and work out what the various instruction registers/data
registers do, so you can actually do something useful. That's where it
gets interesting. But in and of itself, JTAG is actually very simple.
*/