Communicate

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Revision as of 16:18, 27 June 2011 by JulienB (Talk | contribs) (Server configuration)

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How-To connect your Armadeus board to your development Host.

Forewords

The default connection uses a simple Serial Link either with a RS232 Null-Modem cable (with or without USB<->serial adapter) or with a miniUSB cable (APF51) As you will have to transfer some mega bytes of data, the Ethernet link is nice to have if not mandatory.
In order to use these two way of transfer with the APF target, a terminal emulator (for Serial link) and a TFTP server (for Ethernet link) have to be configured.

At this stage, you should have something looking like that (IP addresses may change):

BoardConnection.png

Serial Terminal configuration

You will need a Serial terminal emulator to communicate with U-Boot/Linux console. You can choose between:

We suggest you to use Kermit as Terminal emulator. Minicom was sadly reported to have problems when communicating with U-Boot (ZModem data transfer). If you just need a simple serial console and not to transfer data through the serial link, then GTKTerm is the perfect choice ! (gtkterm package in Ubuntu)

Note Note: Your terminal should now be configured with: 115200 bauds 8N1 parameters


TFTP server

In order to send your image files (U-Boot, Linux, rootfs or FPGA's firmware) at higher speed (than serial port) to your Armadeus board, you can use the Ethernet link and a TFTP server. Once the server configured, the files located in the server shared directory (/tftpboot by default) will be accessible from the U-Boot/Linux TFTP clients.

TFTP server installation

Install packages

  • On *Ubuntu / Debian:
$ sudo apt-get install tftpd xinetd

or use your preferred graphical package manager

  • On Fedora:
$ rpm -q tftpd xinetd
  • On OpenSUSE 11.3:
sudo zypper install tftp yast2-tftp-server
sudo yast2 tftp-server

Choose Enable to start the TFTP server. It might be required to open the TFTP port in your firewall. For more details see: YaST TFTP Server on OpenSUSE site

Create server's directory

  • Then create the directory (/tftpboot/) that will contain all the files that the server will export:
$ sudo mkdir /tftpboot
$ sudo chmod 777 /tftpboot

Server configuration

  • As root user edit or create the /etc/xinetd.d/tftp configuration file and modify/add it the following lines:
# default: off
# description: The tftp server serves files using the trivial file transfer
#       protocol.  The tftp protocol is often used to boot diskless
#       workstations, download configuration files to network-aware printers,
#       and to start the installation process for some operating systems.
service tftp
{
       socket_type             = dgram
       protocol                = udp
       wait                    = yes
       user                    = root
       server                  = /usr/sbin/in.tftpd
       server_args             = -s /tftpboot
#       disable                 = yes
}
  • Restart xinetd service:
$ sudo killall -HUP xinetd

For more information regarding how-to setup a TFTP server please check one of many Web How-to:

Errata (if you have troubles)

It looks like xinetd configuration is not sufficient in some recent versions of this tool. IPv6 is enabled by default and seems to be not compatible with the TFTP protocol. A simple inetd configuration should work for people who have this problem (connection refused in system logs with addresses like ::ffff:192.168.0.100).

  • Edit (as root user) - if necessary - the /etc/inetd.conf file and add this line:
tftp		dgram	udp	wait	nobody	/usr/sbin/tcpd	/usr/sbin/in.tftpd -s /tftpboot
  • Install inetd tools

On Ubuntu/Debian

$ sudo apt-get install inetutils-tools
  • Setup the hosts rules: edit (as root user) /etc/hosts.allow and add the following lines:
in.tftpd: ALL
tftpd: ALL
  • Restart inetd
$ sudo /etc/init.d/xinetd restart

It's done... and should work for most people.

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