This is the firmware for the microcontroller on the M1K.
Unless you are an advanced user, you should probably start at the Table of Contents.
With arm-none-eabi-gcc
version 4.7 or later installed, run the following
commands:
git clone https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/m1k-fw.git
sudo make flash
- this command will build the firmware image and attempt to load it onto any attached SAM3U devices with either SAMBA or M1K vendor IDs.
make flash
also requires Python 2.7 or later and PyUSB for the script to load
the firmware on the target device.
Unplug and replug the attached device to try out the new firmware.
All SAM parts have a slightly broken boot ROM which presents a serial interface that is capable of flashing a firmware image to the device in its raw state.
Due to the brokenness inherent in the bootloader, the recommended tool for updating the firmware is the Python script in this repository which treats the USB device implementing the CDC-ACM USB device class as a raw vendor device and directly interacts without using the serial interface and triggering bugs. This is advantageous due to finer grained control over packet boundaries - if SAM-BA receives commands split across subsequent USB packets, an error condition will arise. Unfortunately, Windows does not offer the ability for userspace programs to detatch kernel drivers, so the device must be interacted with as a serial device.
BOSSA is a third-party open-source cross-platform tool which implements the required serial protocol and works around the afforementioned bugs. Install the latest version from SourceForge and follow the instructions in the documentation to flash the m1000.bin file included in this repository.
Before you use BOSSA, you must first manually trigger the bootloader on the ADALM1000. This can be done by shorting out the small jumper on the "top" of the board, by the labels for the PIO connector. The device should disconnect from USB and re-enumerate as a SAMBA bootloader device / USB modem. For more information, see this detailed image calling out the bootloader jumper.
There are two options for flashing from the command line. The first is to use the previously mentioned sam-ba.py script in this repository or use the bossac application.
Both require the device to be in programming mode in which the LED should be off. To forcibly enable the mode, short the pads on top of the board as seen in this image.
The script's dependencies are pyusb and bitstring. Either python-2.7 or python-3.3 and up should work.
From the root directory of the repository run the script using the following:
python scripts/sam-ba.py /path/to/firmware/file
If no firmware file path is specified the script currently tries to use the m1000.bin file in the root directory of the repository.
First the bossac application must be built or downloaded. For Windows and OS X the following binaries are available.
For Linux, it's easy to build your own via:
git clone https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/BOSSA.git
cd BOSSA
make bin/bossac
cd bin
Then using the bossac application, run something similar to following command (altering where necessary for OS differences):
./bossac -e -w -v -b /path/to/firmware/file