FreeCalypso > hg > freecalypso-tools
view doc/Pirelli-loadtools-entry @ 992:c4c400c1b10c
fc-loadtool flash: no flash2 ppb-erase-all
All PPBs from across the entire flash chip can only be erased together
as a unit, spanning across both banks on 16 MiB chips - therefore,
we shall disallow 'flash2 ppb-erase-all', and accept 'flash ppb-erase-all'
only.
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 03 Dec 2023 04:47:31 +0000 |
parents | 803e926e0699 |
children |
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Pirelli DP-L10 phone is a quirky Calypso target in that the same hardware interface (USB) that provides access to the one easily accessible Calypso UART also feeds charging power to the phone. The result of this arrangement is that whenever you connect your phone to your computer for communication, programming or tinkering, the charging voltage is always present and the Calypso+Iota chipset never enters switched-off state: every "soft poweroff" operation is converted by the hardware into a deep reboot. You can force a "cold programming boot" cycle on your Pirelli phone by removing the battery, connecting USB to the "debattered" phone, running fc-loadtool on the ttyUSB device that appears, and then inserting the battery in one swift motion - this sequence will be necessary if you brick your flash and need to unbrick it - but of course it is hugely inconvenient for ordinary FreeCalypso tinkering (such as running FreeCalypso VPM firmware builds via fc-xram), and doing it too often will ruin battery spring contacts. The other alternative is to let Pirelli's official fw boot fully (including GSM network registration) in between cycles of fc-loadtool or fc-xram, and then do the switch-off operation from the UI (press and hold red button on unlocked home screen) with fc-loadtool or fc-xram running. But this option is also unattractive, as it involves unwanted SIM bring-up and GSM network registration from Pirelli's fw. As of fc-host-tools-r19 we have an improved solution in the form of -Petmoff option to fc-loadtool, fc-xram, fc-simint etc. The usage scenario is as follows: * The phone needs to be in its "booted for charging only" state. With Pirelli's official fw, this state is entered when you connect USB to a switched-off phone, or when you execute the switch-off sequence from the UI with USB connected. * In this state, you issue a command like the following: fc-loadtool -h pirelli -Petmoff /dev/ttyUSB0 or fc-simint -h pirelli -Petmoff /dev/ttyUSB0 or fc-xram -h pirelli -Petmoff /dev/ttyUSB0 ramimage.srec rvinterf etc This -Petmoff option (implemented as part of our generic boot control framework, see Target-boot-control article) tells loadtools programs to send an ETM ABB write (abbw) command to the target serial port, issuing a DEVOFF write to the VRPCDEV register, just before going into the loop that sends beacons aiming to interrupt the boot process at the Calypso boot ROM. This trick works because Pirelli's official fw implements a TI-standard RVTMUX interface on the Calypso IrDA UART behind USB, complete with ETM, and with USB applying VCHG to Iota VRPC, the DEVOFF operation (soft poweroff) turns into a deep reboot. Running loadtools programs with -Petmoff against a Pirelli phone that is fully booted, as opposed to "booted for charging only" state, is possible but not recommended: it will forcibly kill the running firmware without any kind of clean shutdown. Strictly speaking, this option always effects the just- described forced firmware kill, no matter which state the official fw happens to be in, but if the fw is in its "booted for charging only" state, then there are no ill effects to be concerned with. When fc-loadtool or fc-simint/fc-simtool finishes with a clean exit, or when a RAM-based firmware session started with fc-xram is cleanly finished with fc-shell poweroff, the phone returns to the same "booted for charging only" state. Therefore, multiple operations of fc-loadtool, fc-simtool or fc-xram, each with -Petmoff option, may be performed back to back, just like how a FreeCalypso developer using a proper FC dev board would run back-to-back sessions starting with -Pdtr or -Prts and ending with Iota poweroff.