e7e1396578
Currently itmdump is not a production-quality code hence this hack seems to be appropriate. More robust handling is possible with libswo-based swodec tool that's available from http://git.zapb.de/ . This adds a new command line option -d N where N is a stimulus number you want to dump (counting from 1). The idea here is that if you're interested to live-monitor just a single stimulus port, you can use this utility directly. If one wants to demultiplex the TPIU stream, the following is proposed: 1. Use https://gitorious.org/multiplex/multiplex utility that can accept binary data from a file/pipe/stdin and arbitrary number of TCP connections. It simply mirrors all the incoming data to all the accepted connections; 2. Use socat to connect itmdump to the proxy mentioned in 1. and then either dump the results to separate files or share via their dedicated TCP ports. Example script (inspired by http://openocd.zylin.com/#/c/1662/ , enables and disables specific itm ports on demand): for i in `seq 0 31`; do while true; do socat -U TCP-LISTEN:$((8000+$i)),reuseaddr \ SYSTEM:"echo itm port $i on | nc -q0 localhost 4444 > /dev/null; nc localhost 7777 | stdbuf -oL itmdump -d$((i+1))" echo itm port $i off | nc -q0 localhost 4444 > /dev/null done < /dev/null >&0 2>&0 & done Change-Id: Iaeb102436eaa5b106002083f2ffe758fb7bd83e5 Signed-off-by: Paul Fertser <fercerpav@gmail.com> Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/2537 Tested-by: jenkins |
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.. | ||
libdcc | ||
loaders | ||
remote_bitbang | ||
rpc_examples | ||
rtos-helpers | ||
xsvf_tools | ||
99-openocd.rules | ||
coresight-trace.txt | ||
cross-build.sh | ||
gen-stellaris-part-header.pl | ||
itmdump.c |