wiki3081: Nto640AmccPpcEp_grTrunkReleasenotes (Version 2) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Release Notes of the QNX 6.4.0 BSP for AMCC PPC440 EP/GR Evaluation Kit (EVK) Trunk#System requirements#Target system
Host development system
System Layout#The tables below depict the memory layout for the image and for the flash.
Getting Started#Starting Neutrino#Step 1: Build the BSP You can build a BSP OS image from the source code. For instructions about building a BSP OS image, please refer to the chapter Working with a BSP in the Building Embedded Systems manual. Step 2: Connect your hardware 1. Connect one end of the null-modem serial cable to the RS-232 port labeled P2 "UART0" the AMCC Reference board. 2. Connect the other end of the serial cable to the first available serial port of your host machine (e.g. ser1 on a Neutrino host). Note: If you have a Neutrino host with a serial mouse, you may have to move the mouse to the second serial port on your host, because some terminal programs require the first serial port. On your host machine, start your favorite terminal program with these settings:
Then, apply power to the target. You should see output similar to the following: U-Boot 1.1.4-ga2c95a72 (Jul 28 2006 - 19:33:10) CPU: AMCC PowerPC 440GR Rev. B at 533.333 MHz (PLB=133, OPB=66, EBC=66 MHz) I2C boot EEPROM enabled Internal PCI arbiter disabled, PCI async ext clock used 32 kB I-Cache 32 kB D-Cache Board: Yellowstone - AMCC PPC440GR Evaluation Board I2C: ready DRAM: 256 MB FLASH: 64 MB PCI: Bus Dev VenId DevId Class Int In: serial Out: serial Err: serial Net: ppc_4xx_eth0, ppc_4xx_eth1 Type "run flash_nfs" to mount root filesystem over NFS Hit any key to stop autoboot: 0 => Note: The version number for U-Boot is displayed as 1.1.0, but it's really 1.1.2. Step 3: Setup the environment On your target, type the following, filling in the appropriate IP addresses and ifs file: => setenv ipaddr 192.168.200.2 => setenv serverip 192.168.200.1 => setenv bootfile root/ifs-ep440c.bin => setenv loadaddr 0x200000 => setenv bootcmd 'tftpboot $loadaddr $bootfile; go $loadaddr' => saveenv Saving Environment to Flash... Un-Protected 1 sectors Un-Protected 1 sectors Erasing Flash... . done Erased 1 sectors Writing to Flash... done Protected 1 sectors Protected 1 sectors Step 4: Boot the IFS image You can use TFTP download (the default) or serial download to transfer the image from your host to the target: This method requires a raw image, which the buildfile creates by default. Once the above setup is complete, you can run the load command at the => prompt to download the image: => boot or => tftpboot 0x200000; go 0x200000 At this point you should see the ROM monitor download the boot image, indicated by a series of number signs. You'll also see output similar to this when it completes downloading: => tftpboot 0x200000; go 0x200000 ENET Speed is 100 Mbps - FULL duplex connection Using ppc_4xx_eth0 device TFTP from server 10.42.97.136; our IP address is 10.42.104.42 Filename '/root/ifs-ep440c.bin'. Load address: 0x200000 Loading: ################################################################# ################################################################# ################################################################# ################################################################# ############################################################## done Bytes transferred = 1644888 (191958 hex) ## Starting application at 0x00200000 ... System page at phys:0000b000 user:0000b000 kern:0000b000 Starting next program at v0024615c Welcome to QNX Neutrino Trunk on the PPC 440 EP/GR Reference Board # You can test the OS simply by executing any shell builtin command or any command residing within the OS image (e.g. ls). Once the initial image is running, you can update the OS image using the network and flash drivers. For sample command lines, please see the "Summary of driver commands" section. Creating a flash partition#1. Enter the following command to start the flash filesystem driver:devf-generic -s0xFC000000,64M 2. To prepare the area for the partition,, enter the following command:
Caution:
Be aware of the ROM Monitor offset in flash. These commands will erase the ROM Monitor if not properly watched. The ROM Monitor / Linux image reside in the last 20MB of flash. flashctl -p/dev/fs0 -l8M -ve 3. Format the partition: flashctl -p/dev/fs0p0 -l8M -vf 4. Slay, then restart the driver: slay devf-generic & devf-generic -s0xFC000000,64M & You should now have a /fs0p0 directory which you can copy files to.
Driver Command Summary#The following table summarizes the commands to launch the various drivers.
Some of the drivers are commented out in the default buildfile. To use the drivers in the target hardware, you'll need to uncomment them in your buildfile, rebuild the image, and load the image into the board. FPU support#This BSP support AMCC PPC440 EP/GR 440 FPU. SPI#SPI support is included as a static library (libep440c-spi.a) which needs to be linked into the application which requires SPI functionality. The ep440-spi sample utility included in this BSP has already been linked with this library. The following is the expected output of the sample utility when run on the target: # ep440-spi Welcome to PPC440 SPI API testing program bit rate is set to 125000 but is read back as 125313 if the error is too big, please set another value Transmit successful Transmit successful Transmit successful ... This utility assumes the following:
Known Issues#
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