- remove endianness options; these chips hard-wire "little"
- $_TARGETNAME updates:
* don't pass $_TARGETNAME where a TAP label is required
* flash config uses $_TARGETNAME (it might not be target #0)
* simplify one $_TARGETNAME construction
- update work area setup:
* remove VM spec; these chips have no VM!
* fix some wrong sizes (0x4000 == 16K, not 4K)
* simplify: take defaults
- comment fixups
git-svn-id: svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk@2589 b42882b7-edfa-0310-969c-e2dbd0fdcd60
Prerequisites:
The users of OpenOCD as well as computer programs interacting with OpenOCD are expecting that certain commands
do the same thing across all the targets.
Rules to follow when writing scripts:
1. The configuration script should be defined such as , for example, the following sequences are working:
reset
flash info <bank>
and
reset
flash erase_address <start> <len>
and
reset init
load
In most cases this can be accomplished by specifying the default startup mode as reset_init (target command
in the configuration file).
2. If the target is correctly configured, flash must be writable without any other helper commands. It is
assumed that all write-protect mechanisms should be disabled.
3. The configuration scripts should be defined such as the binary that was written to flash verifies
(turn off remapping, checksums, etc...)
flash write_image [file] <parameters>
verify_image [file] <parameters>
4. jtag_khz sets the maximum speed (or alternatively RCLK). If invoked
multiple times only the last setting is used.
interface/xxx.cfg files are always executed *before* target/xxx.cfg
files, so any jtag_khz in interface/xxx.cfg will be overridden by
target/xxx.cfg. jtag_khz in interface/xxx.cfg would then, effectively,
set the default JTAG speed.
Note that a target/xxx.cfg file can invoke another target/yyy.cfg file,
so one can create target subtype configurations where e.g. only
amount of DRAM, oscillator speeds differ and having a single
config file for the default/common settings.