view doc/Pirelli-Howto @ 954:d25d73815817

c139explore: jump command added
author Mychaela Falconia <falcon@ivan.Harhan.ORG>
date Wed, 04 Nov 2015 19:57:45 +0000
parents 7c5b129573f6
children 7d3f0910aeb2
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How to play with FreeCalypso GSM firmware on a Pirelli DP-L10
=============================================================

Our experimental FC GSM fw can now run on the Pirelli DP-L10 target.  Our fw
cannot yet operate this phone in a useful manner, i.e., it is not currently
possible to replace Pirelli's proprietary fw with ours and use the phone as an
end user.  Our gsm-fw is close to having working voice call functionality when
controlled by an external host via AT commands, but we haven't even started
working on the on-board user interface part yet.

One very useful special feature of the Pirelli DP-L10 is its very large RAM:
8 MiB.  Having such large RAM allows us to run our experimental fw on this
target entirely from RAM, without touching the flash.  When you compile a
FreeCalypso gsm-fw image for the Pirelli target, by default a ramImage will be
built instead of a flashImage.  It is possible to build a flashable image of
the fw in the same configuration and program it into flash with fc-loadtool,
but doing so is not recommended: our current fw has no battery management code,
so the charging hardware circuit will never be enabled and the battery will
discharge even with a USB power source connected; keeping Pirelli's original
fw in flash will allow the phone to charge its battery and otherwise function
normally when you are not in the middle of a FreeCalypso firmware experiment.

If you are ready to play with our experimental GSM pseudo-modem fw on your
Pirelli, the steps are as follows:

1. Build the firmware in the pirelli-gsm configuration - see the Compiling
   document for more details.

2. Connect a USB cable from your GNU/Linux PC/laptop to the phone.  If the
   phone was off but the battery is present, it will go through a charger-plug
   power-on event; if the flash contains Pirelli's original fw, it will boot in
   the charging mode.  If the battery is not present, the Calypso won't power
   on (it needs VBAT and can't run on VCHG power instead), but the /dev/ttyUSBx
   device will still show up, as the CP2102 USB-serial chip inside the phone is
   powered strictly from the USB side.

3. Run a command like the following:

   fc-xram -h pirelli /dev/ttyUSB0 finlink/ramImage.srec rvinterf

   Adjust the paths to your /dev/ttyUSBx device and your ramImage.srec as
   appropriate, and add rvinterf logging or other options as desired.
   Specifying rvinterf on the fc-xram command line directs fc-xram to exec
   rvinterf and pass the serial channel to it immediately as soon as the code
   image has been loaded into target RAM and jumped to; this direct passing of
   the serial channel from fc-xram to rvinterf is appropriate because the
   loaded fw will immediately start emitting binary trace packets in TI's RVTMUX
   format.

4. Induce the phone to execute its Calypso boot path: if the battery was
   removed, insert it now; if Pirelli's regular fw is running, execute its
   power-off sequence.

Once the Calypso chip in the Pirelli phone executes its boot path with fc-xram
running, the boot path will be diverted and our experimental firmware will be
loaded into target device RAM and jumped to.  Our fw will now run, and the
rvinterf process on the host will maintain communication with it.

To exercise our firmware further, you will need to open another terminal window
on your driving PC/laptop and run fc-shell.  This program will connect to the
already running rvinterf process via a local socket, and it will enable you to
send various commands to the running fw on the target, the most important ones
being standard AT commands.  Send the following sequence of AT commands to
bring up GSM functionality:

AT%SLEEP=2	-- disable deep sleep (doesn't work yet)
AT+CMEE=2	-- enable verbose error responses
AT+CFUN=1	-- enable radio and SIM interfaces
AT+COPS=0	-- register to the default GSM network

Our fw is currently able to exercise all SIM interface functions (at least the
obvious ones which I've tested), register with a live commercial GSM network
using a legitimate SIM, and send and receive SMS using standard GSM 07.05 AT
commands.  Voice calls don't work yet; dialing a MO call with the ATD command
or placing a MT call to the device under test from the network side results in
the firmware going haywire.  The latter misbehaviour is next to be investigated
and (hopefully) fixed.

When you are done playing with our experimental fw, you can either yank the
battery and kill the host side rvinterf and fc-shell processes, or you can
issue a 'tgtreset' command at the fc-shell prompt.  The latter will cause the
target to reset and boot back into its regular firmware.