Give it a try,
and feel free to report any problems.
#!/usr/bin/tclsh8.5
# Simple tcl client to test OpenOCD tcl_server
#
# Original script idea by Charles Hardin
#
<http://lists.berlios.de/pipermail/openocd-development/2008-July/002368.html>
Le mercredi 06 juillet 2011 à 18:50 -0700, Rodrigo Rosa a écrit :
> On Mon, Jul 4, 2011 at 4:13 PM, Maxim Cournoyer
> wrote:
> > On Jul 2, 2011 6:15 PM +0200, Øyvind Harboe wrote:
> >
> > Use the Source Luke. The end of the command is not linefeed but 0x??. There
>
On Jul 2, 2011 6:15 PM +0200, Øyvind Harboe wrote:
> Use the Source Luke. The end of the command is not linefeed but 0x??.
> There ought to be updated docs. Patch?
>
Great tip! I found it inside the tcl_server.c file; the end of
character used by the openocd tcl server is 0x1a.
I managed to get
On Sat, Jul 2, 2011 at 09:31 +0200, Øyvind Harboe wrote:
>
> You need to use the "capture" command to capture progress output.
>
> Try something like:
>
> capture {reset halt}
>
Hello Øyvind!
Thank you for helping, but when using the port with the tcl script
posted before, I confirm tha
On Sat, Jul 2, 2011 at 05:36 -0700, Rodrigo Rosa wrote :
> your script worked with port (telnet port)
> (copy+paste and swap with )
I can confirm that this works (to my surprise! I don't know a lot about
telnet, but was thinking something more was required then a simple
"send" on a
> i used a made a nasty pgm that connect through tcp to the openocd tcl
> interface (port ), and to get openocd to do stuff i have send a \n
> for example, "reset" will not do anything, but "reset\n" does what
> it's supposed to do.
> haven't tried the gdb port.
>
> salú!
Hi there! Thank you
Hi all,
I would like to know the details about controlling openocd via TCP/IP
(port ). I have been experimenting with it, and I hope I'm doing
something wrong, because it does not seem to work.
I can connect to the openocd server, but any "command word" such as
"reset" or "halt", sent has n