Hello, I've been able to get our board to boot with the help of this video on the NuttX channel. At least, we can see LEDs. However I only get noise on the USART console right now, so I am going to try running off of the HSI instead of the HSE and see if anything changes. I think the shell is there, just at the wrong speed. The boot time is quite slow so I think something may be wrong with our HSE.
I have one question, which is that I'm noticing that the autoleds does not seem to be working properly. I found that the `board_autoled_on` function never seems to be called with LED_STARTED. I can turn on the LEDs if I set them high in the `board_autoled_initialize` function though. In the menuconfig options I saw that I can also enable `CONFIG_ARCH_LEDS_CPU_ACTIVITY`. Is this needed to have `board_autoled_on(LED_STARTED)` to occur? Thanks again for all your help! Matteo On Thu, Jan 23, 2025 at 11:31 AM Alan C. Assis <acas...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Matesz, > > Yes, LWL is slow because it is working using a polling approach (AFAIK ARM > DAP has support for interruption, but it is not implemented yet). > The main purpose of the LWL is to be the initial console before the real > serial driver is not implemented yet. > > I think J-Link is a nice tool and I have it too. But it is always better to > use an open source solution when possible :-) > > BR, > > Alan > > On Thu, Jan 23, 2025 at 5:46 AM raiden00pl <raiden0...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > To be honest I didn't hear about this LWL (Lightweight Link) before, > > what a great discovery, nsh directly over JTAG/SWD with no UART!! > > Thank you Alan!! :-) > > > > There is also RTT console support in NuttX, so you can use JLink > debuggers > > without any UART. > > Also there are more powerful tools for Segger debuggers in NuttX, like > > SystemView. > > > > Last time I tested LWL it was terribly slow and heavily loaded the CPU - > > incomparably worse than RTT. > > > > Personally I recommend converting STLINK to JLINK if possible with > > > > > https://www.segger.com/products/debug-probes/j-link/models/other-j-links/st-link-on-board/ > > or even investing in a dedicated tool from Segger. It's really money > worth > > investment. > > > > śr., 22 sty 2025 o 22:45 Tomek CEDRO <to...@cedro.info> napisał(a): > > > > > On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 3:26 PM Matteo Golin <matteo.go...@gmail.com> > > > wrote: > > > > I did not even realize it would be possible to get a shell over the > > debug > > > > probe; that would be quite a useful feature for bringing up new > > boards! I > > > > might read into that if I have success with the UART later. > > > > > > Modern debug probes usually provide JTAG/SWD interface for debug (USB > > > HID), UART console (USB CDC), and filesystem storage for drag-and-drop > > > firmware flashing (USB MSC) over single USB connection. Even "dumb" > > > FT2232 like probes have two channels one for JTAG/SWD and another for > > > UART console :-) > > > > > > Most STLinks provide all 3 functionalities, except the old ones with > > > small MCU that provides onboard debug only. You can even use most > > > STM32 devkits as the debug probe (jumpers configurable). Latest > > > devkits use more powerful MCU for the onboard debug probe than the > > > target MCU few years back. There is a windoze based utility from STM > > > that allows you to upgrade firmware and view / configure feature of > > > various STLink debug probes including those installed on devkits.. it > > > sometimes solves strange problems too :-) > > > > > > To be honest I didn't hear about this LWL (Lightweight Link) before, > > > what a great discovery, nsh directly over JTAG/SWD with no UART!! > > > Thank you Alan!! :-) > > > > > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4aCwoABGB8 > > > > > > -- > > > CeDeROM, SQ7MHZ, http://www.tomek.cedro.info > > > > > >