On 08/09/2016 07:48 PM, Jaromir Sukuba wrote: > Few years ago I made this http://jaromir.xf.cz/pic89/pic89prog.html > programmer for Atmel 8051 SPI ISP programmable parts - at first it was > just a joke, but it proven quite useful later. Using ASCII serial > protocol it works under all OS-es by design, I'd say you ran run it > under Z80 CPM easily. The sources are for Microchip XC8 compiler, but > don't use any special features of the compiler, so porting to SDCC > should be piece of cake. The PIC89PROG comes from the days of XC8 only > - nowadays I make my public projects to be compilable with both XC8 > and SDCC. > I seriously thought for a few times of expanding it to support C2 > programming protocol (and porting to SDCC along the way) and > subsequently Silabs MCU. The protocol itself is pretty well described > in Silabs appnotes. On the other hand, I'm not exactly sure it the > Silabs 8-bitters are useful for anyone those days. Are those Silabs > parts really interesting or people tend to use older 8051 parts? What > about SDCC support of those little cheap chips? >
I have a few rfid devices that uses the C8051F chips. SDCC support for one of the chips works fine. The other chip does not for some reason. MvH Benjamin Larsson ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity planning reports. http://sdm.link/zohodev2dev _______________________________________________ Sdcc-user mailing list Sdcc-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/sdcc-user