Difference between revisions of "JTAG"

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== Building a JTAG connector for apf27Dev board ==
 
== Building a JTAG connector for apf27Dev board ==
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First you need a decent JTAG connector. The description below produces a 20-pin male JTAG connectior with standard ARM pinout.
  
 
List of material and part numbers at [http://www.conrad.ch Conrad]:
 
List of material and part numbers at [http://www.conrad.ch Conrad]:
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== JTAG Adapter ==
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I'm using the [http://www.amontec.com/jtagkey.shtml Amontec JTAGkey] adapter. It has a male 20-pin plug and a 20-way female-to-female cable which fits directly into the cable as described above. A cheaper solution would be to use the Amontec JTAGkey-Tiny and install a 20-pin female plug on on the connector cable for apf27dev.
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== Configuring OpenOCD ==
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yet to be done. Basic tests show that cable works as expected, but board-specific settings need some more time to figure out.

Revision as of 00:11, 28 March 2009

[SSinyagin] I'm trying to get use of JTAG for U-Boot debugging and probably FPGA debugging in the future. This page is not yet finished, and the work is in progress.

Building a JTAG connector for apf27Dev board

First you need a decent JTAG connector. The description below produces a 20-pin male JTAG connectior with standard ARM pinout.

List of material and part numbers at Conrad:

  • 2x20-pin header, 2.54mm pitch (Conrad: 741973)
  • ATA/IDE cable (Conrad: 971742)
  • 2x10-pin IDC low profile header, 2.54mm pitch (Conrad: 743534)
  • 20-way flat cable, 1.27mm pitch (Conrad: 609463)

Assembling it all together:

  1. Solder the 40-in header onto the J19 connector on the apf27dev board
  2. Cut off a ~10cm piece from the ATA cable with the 40pin plug at the end.
  3. Cut off ~10cm from 20-way flat cable
  4. Carefully attach the 20-pin header to the flat cable. The thing is easy to break and it requires some forcing. Better buy a spare piece in advance.
  5. Use a knife and a cutting pad and dissect the cable endings, ~3cm long. Dissect the whole width of the 20-way cable and only pins 40 to 31 on the 40-way ATA cable.
  6. Strip the cable endings
  7. Solder the two cables together, as specified below:
ARM JTAG 20-pin cable apf27 J19 40-pin cable
1 - Vddh (+3.3v) 39
2 - Vddh (+3.3v) 39
3 - nTRST 33
4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 - Vss (ground) 31, 34, 40
5 - TDI 35
7 - TMS 36
9  - TCK 37
13 –TDO 38
15 – nRST ---

JTAG Adapter

I'm using the Amontec JTAGkey adapter. It has a male 20-pin plug and a 20-way female-to-female cable which fits directly into the cable as described above. A cheaper solution would be to use the Amontec JTAGkey-Tiny and install a 20-pin female plug on on the connector cable for apf27dev.

Configuring OpenOCD

yet to be done. Basic tests show that cable works as expected, but board-specific settings need some more time to figure out.