> This test was caused by curiosity which started after reading one > forum post in which someone describes that in CrossWorks when using > the same JTAG he achieved almost 150kB/s, over 14x faster than OpenOCD.
Well, that's BS. The STM32 flash has a nominal programming time of 52.5µs per 16 bits. So the theoretical max speed anyone can achieve is roughly 37.2 KiBytes/s. If you see claims of speeds way above that they're either lies, load-to-ram figures or a mixup in units. That said, I think it should be possible to crank up the STM32 flash programming speed in OpenOCD by at least a factor of two. I don't know what the bottleneck is, but like you I have concluded that JTAG frequency is not the major issue here. My guess is that the programming algorithm we use might be quite inefficient. USB latency might play a role but with double buffering and other tricks in the algorithm the latency shouldn't be a limiting factor. /Andreas Hi Andreas, On the LPC17xx range of micros, flash programming is 256 bytes in 1ms (this assumes those 256 bytes are sitting in RAM ready to flash), that gives a theoretical flash speed of 256k/bytes per second .... I am only getting 10kb/sec. So my question is, for the LPC micro, is flash programming done like this? IE load 256 bytes to flash then flash that block of data? Cheers, Bernie _______________________________________________ Openocd-development mailing list Openocd-development@lists.berlios.de https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/openocd-development