667 lines
30 KiB
Groff
667 lines
30 KiB
Groff
.TH mspdebug 1 "14 Jun 2011" "Version 0.16"
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.SH NAME
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MSPDebug - debugging tool for MSP430 MCUs
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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\fBmspdebug\fR [options] \fIdriver\fR [\fIcommand\fR ...]
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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MSPDebug is a command-line tool designed for debugging and programming
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the MSP430 family of MCUs. It supports the eZ430-F2013, eZ430-RF2500,
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FET430UIF and Olimex MSP-JTAG-TINY programming tools, as well as a
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simulation mode.
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When started with appropriate options, MSPDebug will attempt to
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connect to the debugging tool specified and identify the device under
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test. Once connected, the user is presented with a command prompt
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which can be used to reflash the device memory, inspect memory and
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registers, set registers, and control the CPU (single step, run and
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run to breakpoint).
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It supports a variety of file formats, described in the section
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\fBBINARY FORMATS\fR below. It can also be used as a remote stub
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for \fBgdb\fR(1).
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On startup, MSPDebug will look for a file called .mspdebug in the user's
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home directory. If it exists, commands will be read and executed from this
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file before executing any other commands or starting the interactive
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reader.
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.SH COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
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Command-line options accepted by MSPDebug are described below. If
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commands are specified on the end of the command-line, then they are
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executed after connecting to the device, and the interactive prompt is
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not started. See the section labelled \fBCOMMANDS\fR for more
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information.
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.IP "\-q"
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Start in quiet mode. See the "quiet" option described below.
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.IP "\-v \fIvoltage\fR"
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Set the programming voltage. The voltage should be specified as an integer
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in millivolts. It defaults to 3000 (3.0 V).
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.IP "\-j"
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Use JTAG instead of Spy-Bi-Wire to communicate with the MSP430. This
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option doesn't work with eZ430 or eZ430-RF2500 devices, which support
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Spy-Bi-Wire only.
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.IP "\-d \fIdevice\fR"
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Specify that the driver should connect via a tty device rather than USB.
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The supported connection methods vary depending on the driver. See the
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section \fBDRIVERS\fR below for details.
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.IP "\-U \fIbus\fR:\fIdevice\fR"
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Specify a particular USB device to connect to. Without this option,
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the first device of the appropriate type is opened.
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.IP "\-s \fIserial\fR"
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Specify a particular USB device serial number to connect to. Use this
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option to distinguish between multiple devices of the same type.
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.IP "\-n"
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Do not process the startup file (~/.mspdebug).
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.IP "\--long-password"
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When using the flash-bsl driver, send a 32-byte BSL password instead
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of the standard 16-byte password.
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.IP "\-\-help"
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Display a brief help message and exit.
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.IP "\-\-fet\-list"
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Display a list of chips supported by the FET driver (the driver used
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for UIF, RF2500 and Olimex devices)>
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.IP "\-\-fet\-force\-id \fIstring\fR"
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When using a FET device, force the connected chip to be recognised by
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MSPDebug as one of the given type during initialization. This overrides
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the device ID returned by the FET. The given string should be a chip
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name in long form, for example "MSP430F2274".
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.IP "\-\-usb\-list"
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List available USB devices and exit.
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.IP "\-\-force-reset"
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When using a FET device, always send a reset during initialization. By
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default, an initialization without reset will be tried first.
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.IP "\-\-version"
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Show program version and copyright information.
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.SH DRIVERS
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A driver name must be specified on the command line for MSPDebug to
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connect to. Valid driver names are listed here.
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.IP "\fBrf2500\fR"
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Connect to an eZ430-RF2500 device. Only USB connection is supported.
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.IP "\fBolimex\fR"
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Connect to an Olimex MSP-JTAG-TINY device. Both USB and tty access are
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supported.
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.IP "\fBolimex-iso\fR"
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Connect to an Olimex MSP-JTAG-ISO device. Only tty access is supported.
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.IP "\fBsim\fR"
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Do not connect to any hardware device, but instead start in simulation
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mode. A 64k buffer is allocated to simulate the device memory.
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During simulation, addresses below 0x0200 are assumed to be IO memory.
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Programmed IO writes to and from IO memory are handled by the IO
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simulator, which can be configured and controlled with the \fBsimio\fR
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command, described below.
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This mode is intended for testing of changes to MSPDebug, and for
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aiding the disassembly of MSP430 binaries (as all binary and symbol
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table formats are still usable in this mode).
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.IP "\fBuif\fR"
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Connect to an eZ430-F2013 or a FET430UIF device. The device argument
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should be the filename of the appropriate tty device. The TI serial
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converter chips on these devices are supported by newer versions of the
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Linux kernel, and should appear as /dev/tty\fIXX\fR when attached.
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USB connection is not supported for this driver.
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.IP "\fBuif-bsl\fR"
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Connect to the bootloader on a FET430UIF device. These devices contain
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MSP430F1612 chips. By sending a special command sequence, you can obtain
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access to the bootloader and inspect memory on the MSP430F1612 in the
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programming device itself.
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Currently, only memory read/write and erase are supported. CPU control
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via the bootloader is not possible.
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USB connection is not supported for this driver.
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.IP "\fBflash-bsl\fR"
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Connect to the built-in bootloader in MSP430 devices with flash bootloader
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memory. Devices with ROM bootloaders require another driver. Currently,
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this driver must mass-erase the device in order to gain access. Read,
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write, and erase operations are supported.
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USB connection is not supported for this driver. Connection is via serial
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port, and bootloader entry is accomplished via the RTS and DTR lines.
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Connect RTS to the device's TEST pin and DTR to the device's RST pin.
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Use an appropriate serial level-shifter to make the connection, if necessary.
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If connecting to a device with non-multiplexed JTAG pins, connect RTS to
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the device's TCK pin via an inverter.
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.IP "\fBgdbc\fR"
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GDB client mode. Connect to a server which implements the GDB remote
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protocol and provide an interface to it. To use this driver, specify
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the remote address in \fIhostname:port\fR format using the \fB-d\fR
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option.
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.SH COMMANDS
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MSPDebug can accept commands either through an interactive prompt, or
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non-interactively when specified on the command line. The supported
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commands are listed below.
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Commands take arguments separated by spaces. Any text string enclosed
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in double-quotation marks is considered to be a single argument, even
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if it contains space characters. Within a quoted string, the usual
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C-style backslash substitutions can be used.
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Commands can be specified by giving the first few characters of the
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command name, provided that the prefix is unambiguous. Some commands
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support automatic repeat. For these commands, pressing enter at the
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reader prompt without typing anything will cause repeat execution.
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.IP "\fB=\fR \fIexpression\fR"
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Evaluate an address expression and show both its value, and the result
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when the value is looked up in reverse in the current symbol
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table. This result is of the form \fIsymbol\fR+\fIoffset\fR, where
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\fIsymbol\fR is the name of the nearest symbol not past the address in
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question.
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See the section marked \fBADDRESS EXPRESSIONS\fR for more information on
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the syntax of expressions.
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.IP "\fBalias\fR"
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Show a list of defined command aliases.
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.IP "\fBalias\fR \fIname\fR"
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Remove a previously defined command alias.
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.IP "\fBalias\fR \fIname\fR \fIcommand\fR"
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Define a command alias. The text \fIcommand\fR will be substituted for
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\fIname\fR when looking up commands. The given command text may contain
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a command plus arguments, if the entire text is wrapped in quotes when
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defining the alias. To avoid alias substitution when interpreting
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commands, prefix the command with \\ (a backslash character).
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.IP "\fBbreak\fR"
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Show a list of active breakpoints. Breakpoints can be added and removed
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with the \fBsetbreak\fR and \fBdelbreak\fR commands. Each breakpoint is
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numbered with an integer index starting at 0.
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.IP "\fBcgraph\fR \fIaddress\fR \fIlength\fR [\fIaddress\fR]"
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Construct the call graph of all functions contained or referenced in
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the given range of memory. If a particular function is specified, then
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details for that node of the graph are displayed. Otherwise, a summary
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of all nodes is displayed.
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Information from the symbol table is used for hinting at the possible
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locations of function starts. Any symbol which does not contain a "."
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is considered a possible function start.
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Callers and callee names are shown prefixed by a "*" where the
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transition is a tail-call type transition.
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.IP "\fBdelbreak\fR [\fIindex\fR]"
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Delete one or all breakpoints. If an index is given, the selected breakpoint
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is deleted. Otherwise, all breakpoints are cleared.
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.IP "\fBdis\fR \fIaddress\fR [\fIlength\fR]"
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Dissassemble a section of memory. Both arguments may be address
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expressions. If no length is specified, a section of the default
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length (64 bytes) is disassembled and shown.
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If symbols are available, then all addresses used as operands are
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translated into \fIsymbol\fR+\fIoffset\fR form.
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This command supports repeat execution. If repeated, it continues to
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disassemble another block of memory following that last printed.
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.IP "\fBerase\fR [\fBall\fR|\fBsegment\fR] [\fIaddress\fR]"
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Erase the device under test. With no arguments, all code memory is erased
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(but not information or boot memory). With the argument "all", a mass
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erase is performed (the results may depend on the state of the LOCKA
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bit in the flash memory controller).
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Specify "segment" and a memory address to erase an individual flash
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segment.
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.IP "\fBexit\fR"
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Exit from MSPDebug.
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.IP "\fBgdb\fR [\fIport\fR]"
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Start a GDB remote stub, optionally specifying a TCP port to listen on.
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If no port is given, the default port is 2000.
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MSPDebug will wait for a connection on this port, and then act as a
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GDB remote stub until GDB disconnects.
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GDB's "monitor" command can be used to issue MSPDebug commands via the
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GDB interface. Supplied commands are executed non-interactively, and
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the output is sent back to be displayed in GDB.
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.IP "\fBhelp\fR [\fIcommand\fR]"
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Show a brief listing of available commands. If an argument is
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specified, show the syntax for the given command. The help text shown
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when no argument is given is also shown when MSPDebug starts up.
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.IP "\fBhexout\fR \fIaddress\fR \fIlength\fR \fIfilename\fR"
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Read the specified section of the device memory and save it to an
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Intel HEX file. The address and length arguments may both be address
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expressions.
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If the specified file already exists, then it will be overwritten. If
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you need to dump memory from several disjoint memory regions, you can
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do this by saving each section to a separate file. The resulting files
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can then be concatenated together to form a single valid HEX file.
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.IP "\fBisearch\fR \fIaddress\fR \fIlength\fR [\fIoptions\fR ...]"
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Search over the given range for an instruction which matches the specified
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search criteria. The search may be narrowed by specifying one or more of
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the following terms:
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.RS
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.IP "\fBopcode\fR \fIopcode\fR"
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Match the specified opcode. Byte/word specifiers are not recognised, as
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they are specified with other options.
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.IP "\fBbyte\fR"
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Match only byte operations.
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.IP "\fBword\fR"
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Match only word operations.
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.IP "\fBaword\fR"
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Match only address-word (20-bit) operations.
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.IP "\fBjump\fR"
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Match only jump instructions (conditional and unconditional jumps, but
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not instructions such as BR which load the program counter explicitly).
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.IP "\fBsingle\fR"
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Match only single-operand instructions.
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.IP "\fBdouble\fR"
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Match only double-operand instructions.
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.IP "\fBnoarg\fR"
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Match only instructions with no arguments.
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.IP "\fBsrc\fR \fIaddress\fR"
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Match instructions with the specified value in the source operand. The value
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may be given as an address expression. Specifying this option implies matching
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of only double-operand instructions.
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.IP "\fBdst\fR \fIaddress\fR"
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Match instructions with the specified value in the destination
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operand. This option implies that no-argument instructions are not
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matched.
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.IP "\fBsrcreg\fR \fIregister\fR"
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Match instructions using the specified register in the source operand. This
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option implies matching of only double-operand instructions.
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.IP "\fBdstreg\fR \fIregister\fR"
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Match instructions using the specified register in the destination operand.
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This option implies that no-argument instructions are not matched.
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.IP "\fBsrcmode\fR \fImode\fR"
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Match instructions using the specified mode in the source operand. See
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below for a list of modes recognised. This option implies matching of
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only double-operand instructions.
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.IP "\fBdstmode\fR \fImode\fR"
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Match instructions using the specified mode in the destination operand. See
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below for a list of modes. This option implies that no-argument instructions
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are not matched.
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.RE
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.IP
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For single-operand instructions, the operand is considered to be the
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destination operand.
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The seven addressing modes used by the MSP430 are represented by single
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characters, and are listed here:
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.RS
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.IP "\fBR\fR"
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Register mode.
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.IP "\fBI\fR"
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Indexed mode.
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.IP "\fBS\fR"
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Symbolic mode.
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.IP "\fB&\fR"
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Absolute mode.
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.IP "\fB@\fR"
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Register-indirect mode.
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.IP "\fB+\fR"
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Register-indirect mode with auto-increment.
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.IP "\fB#\fR"
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Immediate mode.
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.RE
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.IP "\fBload\fR \fIfilename\fR"
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Program the device under test using the binary file supplied. This
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command is like \fBprog\fR, but it does not load symbols or erase
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the device before programming.
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The CPU is reset and halted before and after programming.
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.IP "\fBlocka\fR [\fBset\fR|\fBclear\fR]"
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Show or change the status of the LOCKA bit in the chip's memory
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controller. The LOCKA bit is set on POR and acts as a write-protect bit
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for info segment A. This segment contains factory-configured calibration
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data, and under normal circumstances, should not be changed.
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If the LOCKA bit is cleared, erasing the info A segment is possible.
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The LOCKA bit also affects the behaviour of the "erase all" command. If
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LOCKA is set (the default), only main memory is erased. If LOCKA is
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cleared, main and information memory are both erased.
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.IP "\fBmd\fR \fIaddress\fR [\fIlength\fR]"
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Read the specified section of device memory and display it as a
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canonical\-style hexdump. Both arguments may be address expressions. If
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no length is specified, a section of the default length (64 bytes) is
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shown.
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The output is split into three columns. The first column shows the
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starting address for the line. The second column lists the hexadecimal
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values of the bytes. The final column shows the ASCII characters
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corresponding to printable bytes, and . for non-printing characters.
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This command supports repeat execution. If repeated, it continues to
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print another block of memory following that last printed.
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.IP "\fBmw\fR \fIaddress\fR \fIbytes\fR ..."
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Write a sequence of bytes at the given memory address. The address given
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may be an address expression. Bytes values are two-digit hexadecimal
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numbers separated by spaces.
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Unless used in the simulation mode, this command can only be used for
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programming flash memory.
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.IP "\fBopt\fR [\fIname\fR] [\fIvalue\fR]"
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Query, set or list option variables. MSPDebug's behaviour can be configured
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using option variables, described below in the section \fBOPTIONS\fR.
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Option variables may be of three types: boolean, numeric or text. Numeric
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values may be specified as address expressions.
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With no arguments, this command displays all available option variables.
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With just an option name as its argument, it displays the current value
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of that option.
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.IP "\fBprog\fR \fIfilename\fR"
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Erase and reprogram the device under test using the binary file
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supplied. The file format will be auto-detected and may be any of
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the supported file formats.
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In the case of a file containing symbols, symbols will be automatically
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loaded from the file into the symbol table (discarding any existing
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symbols), if they are present.
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The CPU is reset and halted before and after programming.
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.IP "\fBread\fR \fIfilename\fR"
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Read commands from the given file, line by line and process each one.
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Any lines whose first non-space character is \fB#\fR are ignored. If
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an error occurs while processing a command, the rest of the file is not
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processed.
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.IP "\fBregs\fR"
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Show the current value of all CPU registers in the device under test.
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.IP "\fBreset\fR"
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Reset (and halt) the CPU of the device under test.
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.IP "\fBrun\fR"
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Start running the CPU. The interactive command prompt is blocked when
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the CPU is started and the prompt will not appear again until the CPU
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halts. The CPU will halt if it encounters a breakpoint, or if Ctrl\-C
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is pressed by the user.
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After the CPU halts, the current register values are shown as well as
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a disassembly of the first few instructions at the address selected
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by the program counter.
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.IP "\fBset\fR \fIregister\fR \fIvalue\fR"
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Alter the value of a register. Registers are specified as numbers from
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0 through 15. Any leading non-numeric characters are ignored (so a
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register may be specified as, for example, "R12"). The value argument
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is an address expression.
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.IP "\fBsetbreak\fR \fIaddress\fR [\fIindex\fR]"
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Add a new breakpoint. The breakpoint location is an address expression. An
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optional index may be specified, indicating that this new breakpoint should
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overwrite an existing slot. If no index is specified, then the breakpoint
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will be stored in the next unused slot.
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.IP "\fBsimio add\fR \fIclass\fR \fIname\fR [\fIargs ...\fR]"
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Add a new peripheral to the IO simulator. The \fIclass\fR parameter may be
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any of the peripheral types named in the output of the \fBsimio classes\fR
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command. The \fIname\fR parameter is a unique name assigned by the user to
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this peripheral instance, and is used with other commands to refer to this
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instance of the peripheral.
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Some peripheral classes take arguments upon creation. These are documented
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in the output to the \fBsimio help\fR command.
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.IP "\fBsimio classes\fR"
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List the names of the different types of peripherals which may be added to
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the simulator. You can use the \fBsimio help\fR command to obtain more
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information about each peripheral type.
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.IP "\fBsimio config\fR \fIname\fR \fIparam\fR [\fIargs ...\fR]"
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Configure or perform some action on a peripheral instance. The \fIparam\fR
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argument is specific to the peripheral type. A list of valid configuration
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commands can be obtained by using the \fBsimio help\fR command.
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.IP "\fBsimio del\fR \fIname\fR"
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Remove a previously added peripheral instance. The \fIname\fR argument
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should be the name of the peripheral that was assigned with the
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\fBsimio add\fR command.
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.IP "\fBsimio devices\fR"
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List all peripheral instances currently attached to the simulator, along
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with their types and interrupt status. You can obtain more detailed
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information for each instance with the \fBsimio info\fR command.
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.IP "\fBsimio help\fR \fIclass\fR"
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Obtain more information about a peripheral class. The documentation
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given will list constructor arguments and configuration parameters for
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the device type.
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.IP "\fBsimio info\fR \fIname\fR"
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Display detailed status information for a particular peripheral. The type
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of information displayed is specific to each type of peripheral.
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.IP "\fBstep\fR [\fIcount\fR]"
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Step the CPU through one or more instructions. After stepping, the new
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register values are displayed, as well as a disassembly of the
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instructions at the address selected by the program counter.
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An optional count can be specified to step multiple times. If no
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argument is given, the CPU steps once. This command supports repeat
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execution.
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.IP "\fBsym clear\fR"
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Clear the symbol table, deleting all symbols.
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.IP "\fBsym set\fR \fIname\fR \fIvalue\fR"
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Set or alter the value of a symbol. The value given may be an address
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expression.
|
|
.IP "\fBsym del\fR \fIname\fR"
|
|
Delete the given symbol from the symbol table.
|
|
.IP "\fBsym import\fR \fIfilename\fR"
|
|
Load symbols from the specified file and add them to the symbol table.
|
|
The file format will be auto-detected and may be either ELF32 or a
|
|
BSD-style symbol listing (like the output from \fBnm\fR(1)).
|
|
|
|
Symbols can be combined from many sources, as the syms command adds
|
|
to the existing symbol table without discarding existing symbols.
|
|
.IP "\fBsym import+\fR \fIfilename\fR"
|
|
This command is similar to \fBsym import\fR, except that the symbol table
|
|
is not cleared first. By using this command, symbols from multiple
|
|
sources can be combined.
|
|
.IP "\fBsym export\fR \fIfilename\fR"
|
|
Save all symbols currently defined to the given file. The symbols are
|
|
saved as a BSD-style symbol table. Note that symbol types are not stored
|
|
by MSPDebug, and all symbols are saved as type \fBt\fR.
|
|
.IP "\fBsym find\fR [\fIregex\fR]"
|
|
Search for symbols. If a regular expression is given, then all symbols
|
|
matching the expression are printed. If no expression is specified, then
|
|
the entire symbol table is listed.
|
|
.IP "\fBsym rename\fR \fIregex\fR \fIstring\fR"
|
|
Rename symbols by searching for those matching the given regular
|
|
expression and substituting the given string for the matched portion. The
|
|
symbols renamed are displayed, as well as a total count of all symbols
|
|
renamed.
|
|
.SH SUPPORTED CHIPS
|
|
The following chips are supported when using FET-compatible drivers:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.RS 0
|
|
CC430F5133 MSP430F1612 MSP430F235 MSP430F4270 MSP430F5526
|
|
.RS 0
|
|
CC430F5137 MSP430F169 MSP430F2370 MSP430F47173 MSP430F5529
|
|
.RS 0
|
|
CC430F6137 MSP430F2013 MSP430F247 MSP430F47197 MSP430FG4618
|
|
.RS 0
|
|
MSP430F1121 MSP430F2122 MSP430F249 MSP430F4784 MSP430G2231
|
|
.RS 0
|
|
MSP430F1232 MSP430F2131 MSP430F2616 MSP430F5437 MSP430G2252
|
|
.RS 0
|
|
MSP430F147 MSP430F2132 MSP430F2617 MSP430F5437A MSP430G2452
|
|
.RS 0
|
|
MSP430F148 MSP430F2234 MSP430F2618 MSP430F5438 MSP430G2553
|
|
.RS 0
|
|
MSP430F149 MSP430F2272 MSP430F413 MSP430F5438A
|
|
.RS 0
|
|
MSP430F1611 MSP430F2274 MSP430F427 MSP430F5525
|
|
.SH BINARY FORMATS
|
|
The following binary/symbol formats are supported by MSPDebug:
|
|
|
|
.RS
|
|
ELF32
|
|
.br
|
|
COFF
|
|
.br
|
|
Intel HEX (program only)
|
|
.br
|
|
BSD symbol table (symbols only)
|
|
.br
|
|
TI Text (program only)
|
|
.br
|
|
SREC (program only)
|
|
.RE
|
|
.SH IO SIMULATOR
|
|
The IO simulator subsystem consists of a database of device classes, and a
|
|
list of instances of those classes. Each device class has a different
|
|
set of constructor arguments, configuration parameters and information which
|
|
may be displayed. This section describes the operation of the available
|
|
device classes in detail.
|
|
|
|
In the list below, each device class is listed, followed by its constructor
|
|
arguments.
|
|
.IP "\fBgpio\fR"
|
|
Digital IO port simulator. This device simulates any of the digital ports
|
|
with or without interrupt capability. It has the following configuration
|
|
parameters:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP "\fBbase\fR \fIaddress\fR"
|
|
Set the base address for this port. Note that for ports without interrupt
|
|
capability, the resistor enable port has a special address which is
|
|
computable from the base address.
|
|
.IP "\fBirq\fR \fIvector\fR"
|
|
Enable interrupt functionality for this port by specifying an interrupt
|
|
vector number.
|
|
.IP "\fBnoirq\fR"
|
|
Disable interrupt functionality for this port.
|
|
.IP "\fBverbose\fR"
|
|
Print a state change message every time the port output changes.
|
|
.IP "\fBquiet\fR"
|
|
Don't print anything when the port state changes (the default).
|
|
.IP "\fBset\fR \fIpin\fR \fIvalue\fR"
|
|
Set the input pin state for the given pin on this port. The \fIpin\fR
|
|
parameter should be an index between 0 and 7. The \fIvalue\fR should be
|
|
either zero (for a low state) or non-zero (for a high state).
|
|
.RE
|
|
.IP "\fBhwmult\fR"
|
|
This peripheral simulates the hardware multiplier. It has no constructor or
|
|
configuration parameters, and does not provide any extended information.
|
|
.IP "\fBtimer\fR [\fIsize\fR]"
|
|
This peripheral simulators Timer_A modules, and can be used to simulate
|
|
Timer_B modules, provided that the extended features aren't required.
|
|
|
|
The constructor takes a size argument specifying the number of capture/compare
|
|
registers in this peripheral instance. The number of such registers may not
|
|
be less than 2, or greater than 7.
|
|
|
|
The IO addresses and IRQs used are configurable. The default IO addresses used
|
|
are those specified for Timer_A in the MSP430 hardware documentation.
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP "\fBbase\fR \fIaddress\fR"
|
|
Alter the base IO address. By default, this is 0x0160. By setting this to 0x0180,
|
|
a Timer_B module may be simulated.
|
|
.IP "\fBirq0\fR \fInumber\fR"
|
|
Set the TACCR0 interrupt vector number. By default, this is interrupt vector 9.
|
|
This interrupt is self-clearing, and higher priority than the TACCR1/TAIFG
|
|
vector.
|
|
.IP "\fBirq1\fR \fInumber\fR"
|
|
Set the TACCR1/TAIFG interrupt vector. By default, this is interrupt vector 8.
|
|
.IP "\fBiv\fR \fIaddress\fR"
|
|
Alter the address of the interrupt vector register. By default, this is 0x012E.
|
|
By setting this to 0x011E, a Timer_B module may be simulated.
|
|
.IP "\fBset\fR \fIchannel\fR \fIvalue\fR"
|
|
When Timer_A is used in capture mode, the CCI bit in each capture register reflects
|
|
the state of the corresponding input pin, and can't be altered in software. This
|
|
configuration command can be used to simulate changes in input pin state, and will
|
|
trigger the corresponding interrupts if the peripheral is so configured.
|
|
.RE
|
|
.IP "\fBtracer\fR [\fIhistory-size\fR]"
|
|
The tracer peripheral is a debugging device. It can be used to investigate
|
|
and record the IO activity of a running program, to benchmark execution time,
|
|
and to simulate interrupts.
|
|
|
|
The information displayed by the tracer gives a running count of clock cycles
|
|
from each of the system clocks, and an instruction count. A list of the \fIN\fR
|
|
most recent IO events is also displayed (this is configurable via the \fIhistory-size\fR
|
|
argument of the constructor). Each IO event is timestamped by the number of
|
|
MCLK cycles that have elapsed since the last reset of the device's counter.
|
|
|
|
The IO events that it records consist of programmed IO reads and writes,
|
|
interrupt acceptance, and system resets. As well as keeping the IO events in a
|
|
rotating buffer, the tracer can be configured to display the events as they
|
|
occur.
|
|
|
|
Note that since clock cycles don't advance while the CPU isn't running, this
|
|
peripheral can be used to calculate execution times for blocks of code. This
|
|
can be achieved by setting a breakpoint at the end of the code block, setting the
|
|
program counter to the start of the code block, clearing the tracer and running
|
|
the code. After the breakpoint is reached, the information displayed by the
|
|
tracer will contain a count of MCLK cycles elapsed during the last run.
|
|
|
|
The configuration parameters for this device class are:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP "\fBverbose\fR"
|
|
Start displaying IO events as they occur, as well as recording them in the
|
|
rotating buffer.
|
|
.IP "\fBquiet\fR"
|
|
Stop displaying IO events as they occur, and just record them in the buffer.
|
|
.IP "\fBtrigger\fR \fIirq\fR"
|
|
Signal an interrupt request to the CPU. This request will remain raised until
|
|
accepted by the CPU or cleared by the user.
|
|
.IP "\fBuntrigger\fR"
|
|
Clear a signalled interrupt request.
|
|
.IP "\fBclear\fR"
|
|
Reset the clock cycle and instruction counts to 0, and clear the IO event
|
|
history.
|
|
.RE
|
|
.IP "\fBwdt\fR"
|
|
This peripheral simulates the Watchdog Timer+, which can be used in software
|
|
either as a watchdog or as an interval timer. It has no constructor arguments.
|
|
|
|
The simulated state of the NMI/RST# pin can be controlled through a configuration
|
|
parameter. Note that if this pin state is held low with the pin mode selected
|
|
as a reset (the default), the CPU will not run.
|
|
|
|
The extended information for this peripheral shows all register states, including
|
|
the hidden counter register. Configuration parameters are:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP "\fBnmi\fR \fIstate\fR"
|
|
Set the NMI/RST# pin state. The argument should be zero to indicate a low state
|
|
or non-zero for a high state.
|
|
.IP "\fBirq\fR \fIirq\fR"
|
|
Select the interrupt vector for interval timer mode. The default is to use
|
|
interrupt vector 10.
|
|
.SH ADDRESS EXPRESSIONS
|
|
Any command which accepts a memory address, length or register value
|
|
as an argument may be given an address expression. An address
|
|
expression consists of an algebraic combination of values.
|
|
|
|
An address value may be either a symbol name, a hex value preceeded
|
|
with the specifier "0x", a decimal value preceeded with the specifier
|
|
"0d", or a number in the default input radix (without a specifier). See
|
|
the option \fBiradix\fR for more information.
|
|
|
|
The operators recognised are the usual algebraic operators: \fB+\fR, \fB-\fR,
|
|
\fB*\fR, \fB/\fR, \fB%\fR, \fB(\fR and \fB)\fR. Operator precedence is the
|
|
same as in C-like languages, and the \fB-\fR operator may be used as a
|
|
unary negation operator.
|
|
|
|
The following are all valid examples of address expressions:
|
|
|
|
.B 2+2
|
|
.br
|
|
.B table_start + (elem_size + elem_pad)*4
|
|
.br
|
|
.B main+0x3f
|
|
.br
|
|
.B __bss_end-__bss_start
|
|
.SH OPTIONS
|
|
MSPDebug's behaviour can be configured via the following variables:
|
|
.IP "\fBcolor\fR (boolean)"
|
|
If true, MSPDebug will colorize debugging output.
|
|
.IP "\fBfet_block_size\fR (numeric)"
|
|
Change the size of the buffer used to transfer memory to and from the
|
|
FET. Increasing the value from the default of 64 will improve transfer
|
|
speed, but may cause problems with some chips.
|
|
.IP "\fBgdb_loop\fR (boolean)"
|
|
Automatically restart the GDB server after disconnection. If this
|
|
option is set, then the GDB server keeps running until an error occurs,
|
|
or the user interrupts with Ctrl+C.
|
|
.IP "\fBgdbc_xfer_size\fR (numeric)"
|
|
Maximum size of memory transfers for the GDB client. Increasing this
|
|
value will result in faster transfers, but may cause problems with some
|
|
servers.
|
|
.IP "\fBiradix\fR (numeric)"
|
|
Default input radix for address expressions. For address values with
|
|
no radix specifier, this value gives the input radix, which is
|
|
10 (decimal) by default.
|
|
.IP "\fBquiet\fR (boolean)"
|
|
If set, MSPDebug will supress most of its debug-related output. This option
|
|
defaults to false, but can be set true on start-up using the \fB-q\fR
|
|
command-line option.
|
|
.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
\fBnm\fR(1), \fBgdb\fR(1), \fBobjcopy\fR(1)
|
|
.SH BUGS
|
|
If you find any bugs, you should report them to the author at
|
|
dlbeer@gmail.com. It would help if you could include a transcript
|
|
of an MSPDebug session illustrating the program, as well as any
|
|
relevant binaries or other files.
|
|
.SH COPYRIGHT
|
|
Copyright (C) 2009-2011 Daniel Beer <dlbeer@gmail.com>
|
|
|
|
MSPDebug is free software, distributed under the terms of the GNU
|
|
General Public license (version 2 or later). See the file COPYING
|
|
included with the source code for more details.
|