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Re: Eclipse / CDT without Makefile Project
Ilija,
What I am doing with MQX is debugging from Flash. If I use a PEMicro JTAG debugger, it is pretty fast to load 128K. My app does not use a lot of memory, so I have not run out of RAM.
If I finally get a JTAG debugger, can I do the same with eCos? That is, debug from Flash?
Mike
On Dec 22, 2012, at 5:09 PM, Ilija Kocho <ilijak@siva.com.mk> wrote:
> Hi Mike
>
> My insight in Eclipse is limited so I hope somebody else will hint us
> how to get the console I/O.
>
> Regarding the target issues, see my comment below. Here I will only say
> that for with respect to Redboot this is a small memory system and the
> application size is limited. That is the reason why I didn't provide RAM
> startup for systems without external memory.
>
> Ilija
>
> On 23.12.2012 00:08, Michael Jones wrote:
>> I noticed a few things, and did not copy the list because it might be Kinetis specific. See compilation problems towards the end.
>>
>> I setup a program like this:
>>
>> int integer1, integer2, sum;
>>
>> printf("Hello Mike.\n");
>>
>> printf("Enter first integer:\n");
>> scanf("%d", &integer1);
>> return 0;
>>
>> And when run, in the Eclipse gdb console (I finally realized there is more than one console):
>>
>> 947,145 (gdb)
>> 947,415 *running,thread-id="all"
>> 947,457 @"Hello Mike.\n"
>> 947,460 @"Enter first integer:\n"
>>
>> Suggests it got some printf data, but it did not appear on the app console.
>>
>> Then on the app console, I type 45 and on the gdb console get:
>>
>> 192,289 27-interpreter-exec console 45
>>
>> I don't know if this means gdb sent 45 to RedBoot or not. I assume so. But the application did not respond. So tty problems are in both directions. I can't tell what is gdb and what is RedBoot.
>>
>> I extend the program like this:
>>
>> int integer1, integer2, sum;
>>
>> printf("Hello Mike.\n");
>>
>> printf("Enter first integer:\n");
>> scanf("%d", &integer1);
>> printf("Enter second integer:\n");
>> scanf("%d", &integer2);
>> sum = integer1 + integer2;
>>
>> And I run from command line gdb (not Eclipse) which does print the one line Hello Mike app. I get:
>>
>> (gdb) cont
>> Continuing.
>> FLASH configuration checksum error or invalid key
>> ASSERT FAIL: <2>stream.cxx[603]virtual Cyg_ErrNo Cyg_StdioStream::write() Stream object is not a valid stream!
>> ASSERT FAIL: <2>stream.cxx [ 603] virtual Cyg_ErrNo Cyg_StdioStream::write() Stream object is not a valid stream!
>>
>> So things are not so well with the command line gdb either.
>>
>> I then tried another experiment with a program like this:
>>
>> int integer1, integer2, sum;
>>
>> printf("Hello Mike.\n");
>>
>> printf("Enter first integer:\n");
>> scanf("%d", &integer1);
>> printf("Enter second integer:\n");
>> scanf("%d", &integer2);
>> sum = integer1 + integer2;
>> printf("Sum is %d\n", sum);
>> return 0;
>>
>> And I get a compile error:
>>
>> Description Resource Path Location Type
>> address 0x200106fc of hello_world section `.bss' is not within region `ram' hello_world C/C++ Problem
>> address 0x20010704 of hello_world section `.bss' is not within region `ram' hello_world C/C++ Problem
>>
>> So something is also not right with the compilation either.
>
> Compilation is probably OK, but linker complains because there is not
> enough memory.
> This makes me to suspect that previous errors are due to low memory,
> probably some stack overflow.
>
> The linker will include only used functions so if you scanf() it will
> add couple of tens KB to the image. You can save some memory if you
> configure printf()/scanf() without floating point support
>
>>
>> Now, I backed off to just printf programs with multiple lines to see what can be done.
>>
>> A 10 line printf compiles and runs.
>> A 10 count for loop with printf works.
>>
>> So it does not appear that the number of lines in the program matters.
>>
>> I change the sum program to only printf and it can add numbers and print (gdb command line, not Eclipse)
>>
>> With some playing around, the scanf seems to cause the compiler error about regions.
>>
>> So I think try:
>>
>> c = getchar();
>>
>> And with the command line gdb it prints, then hangs, and typing a character does not let the program proceed. So this seems like even with the command line arm-eabi-gdb, console input may not be routed back through RedBoot to the application.
>>
>> With the example redboot and application projects you sent, are you able to read from stdin?
>>
>> Do you know how to get Eclipse to handle IO for gdb?
>
> I have the same problem with Eclipse.
> But I usually activate the (real) serial device driver and I get I/O on
> serial port.
>
>
> --
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> and search the list archive: http://ecos.sourceware.org/ml/ecos-discuss
>
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