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AVRDUDE(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
AVRDUDE(1) |
avrdude —
driver program for ``simple'' Atmel AVR MCU programmer
avrdude |
-p partno
[-b baudrate]
[-B bitclock]
[-c programmer-id]
[-C config-file]
[-D ] [-e ]
[-E
exitspec[,exitspec]]
[-F ] [-i
delay] [-n
-logfile ] [-n ]
[-O ] [-P
port] [-q ]
[-s ] [-t ]
[-u ] [-U
memtype:op:filename:filefmt]
[-v ] [-x
extended_param] [-V ] |
Avrdude is a program for downloading code and data to
Atmel AVR microcontrollers. Avrdude supports Atmel's
STK500 programmer, Atmel's AVRISP and AVRISP mkII devices, Atmel's STK600,
Atmel's JTAG ICE (mkI, mkII and 3, the latter two also in ISP mode),
programmers complying to AppNote AVR910 and AVR109 (including the Butterfly),
as well as a simple hard-wired programmer connected directly to a
ppi(4) or
parport(4)
parallel port, or to a standard serial port. In the simplest case, the
hardware consists just of a cable connecting the respective AVR signal lines
to the parallel port.
The MCU is programmed in serial programming
mode, so, for the
ppi(4)
based programmer, the MCU signals
‘/RESET ’,
‘SCK ’,
‘MISO ’ and
‘MOSI ’ need to be connected to the
parallel port. Optionally, some otherwise unused output pins of the parallel
port can be used to supply power for the MCU part, so it is also possible to
construct a passive stand-alone programming device. Some status LEDs
indicating the current operating state of the programmer can be connected,
and a signal is available to control a buffer/driver IC 74LS367 (or
74HCT367). The latter can be useful to decouple the parallel port from the
MCU when in-system programming is used.
A number of equally simple bit-bang programming adapters that
connect to a serial port are supported as well, among them the popular
Ponyprog serial adapter, and the DASA and DASA3 adapters that used to be
supported by uisp(1). Note that these adapters are meant to be attached to a
physical serial port. Connecting to a serial port emulated on top of USB is
likely to not work at all, or to work abysmally slow.
If you happen to have a Linux system with at least 4 hardware
GPIOs available (like almost all embedded Linux boards) you can do without
any additional hardware - just connect them to the MOSI, MISO, RESET and SCK
pins on the AVR and use the linuxgpio programmer type. It bitbangs the lines
using the Linux sysfs GPIO interface. Of course, care should be taken about
voltage level compatibility. Also, although not strictrly required, it is
strongly advisable to protect the GPIO pins from overcurrent situations in
some way. The simplest would be to just put some resistors in series or
better yet use a 3-state buffer driver like the 74HC244. Have a look at
http://kolev.info/avrdude-linuxgpio for a more detailed tutorial about using
this programmer type.
Atmel's STK500 programmer is also supported and connects to a
serial port. Both, firmware versions 1.x and 2.x can be handled, but require
a different programmer type specification (by now). Using firmware version
2, high-voltage programming is also supported, both parallel and serial
(programmer types stk500pp and stk500hvsp).
Wiring boards are supported, utilizing STK500 V2.x protocol, but a
simple DTR/RTS toggle is used to set the boards into programming mode. The
programmer type is ``wiring''.
The Arduino (which is very similar to the STK500 1.x) is supported
via its own programmer type specification ``arduino''.
The BusPirate is a versatile tool that can also be used as an AVR
programmer. A single BusPirate can be connected to up to 3 independent AVRs.
See the section on extended parameters below for
details.
Atmel's STK600 programmer is supported in ISP and high-voltage
programming modes, and connects through the USB. For ATxmega devices, the
STK600 is supported in PDI mode. For ATtiny4/5/9/10 devices, the STK600 and
AVRISP mkII are supported in TPI mode.
The simple serial programmer described in Atmel's application note
AVR910, and the bootloader described in Atmel's application note AVR109
(which is also used by the AVR Butterfly evaluation board), are supported on
a serial port.
Atmel's JTAG ICE (mkI, mkII, and 3) is supported as well to up- or
download memory areas from/to an AVR target (no support for on-chip
debugging). For the JTAG ICE mkII, JTAG, debugWire and ISP mode are
supported, provided it has a firmware revision of at least 4.14 (decimal).
JTAGICE3 also supports all of JTAG, debugWIRE, and ISP mode. See below for
the limitations of debugWire. For ATxmega devices, the JTAG ICE mkII is
supported in PDI mode, provided it has a revision 1 hardware and firmware
version of at least 5.37 (decimal). For ATxmega devices, the JTAGICE3 is
supported in PDI mode.
Atmel-ICE (ARM/AVR) is supported in all modes (JTAG, PDI for
Xmega, debugWIRE, ISP).
Atmel's XplainedPro boards, using the EDBG protocol (CMSIS-DAP
compatible), are supported using the "jtag3" programmer type.
Atmel's XplainedMini boards, using the mEDBG protocol, are also
supported using the "jtag3" programmer type.
The AVR Dragon is supported in all modes (ISP, JTAG, HVSP, PP,
debugWire). When used in JTAG and debugWire mode, the AVR Dragon behaves
similar to a JTAG ICE mkII, so all device-specific comments for that device
will apply as well. When used in ISP mode, the AVR Dragon behaves similar to
an AVRISP mkII (or JTAG ICE mkII in ISP mode), so all device-specific
comments will apply there. In particular, the Dragon starts out with a
rather fast ISP clock frequency, so the -B
bitclock option might be required to achieve a stable
ISP communication. For ATxmega devices, the AVR Dragon is supported in PDI
mode, provided it has a firmware version of at least 6.11 (decimal).
The avrftdi, USBasp ISP and USBtinyISP adapters are also
supported, provided avrdude has been compiled with
libusb support. USBasp ISP and USBtinyISP both feature simple firmware-only
USB implementations, running on an ATmega8 (or ATmega88), or ATtiny2313,
respectively. If libftdi has has been compiled in
avrdude , the avrftdi device adds support for many
programmers using FTDI's 2232C/D/H and 4232H parts running in MPSSE mode,
which hard-codes (in the chip) SCK to bit 1, MOSI to bit 2, and MISO to bit
3. Reset is usually bit 4.
The Atmel DFU bootloader is supported in both, FLIP protocol
version 1 (AT90USB* and ATmega*U* devices), as well as version 2 (Xmega
devices). See below for some hints about FLIP version 1 protocol
behaviour.
Input files can be provided, and output files can be written in
different file formats, such as raw binary files containing the data to
download to the chip, Intel hex format, or Motorola S-record format. There
are a number of tools available to produce those files, like
asl(1) as
a standalone assembler, or
avr-objcopy(1)
for the final stage of the GNU toolchain for the AVR microcontroller.
Provided
libelf(3)
was present when compiling avrdude , the input file
can also be the final ELF file as produced by the linker. The appropriate
ELF section(s) will be examined, according to the memory area to write
to.
Avrdude can program the EEPROM and flash
ROM memory cells of supported AVR parts. Where supported by the serial
instruction set, fuse bits and lock bits can be programmed as well. These
are implemented within avrdude as separate memory
types and can be programmed using data from a file (see the
-m option) or from terminal mode (see the
dump and write commands). It is
also possible to read the chip (provided it has not been code-protected
previously, of course) and store the data in a file. Finally, a ``terminal''
mode is available that allows one to interactively communicate with the MCU,
and to display or program individual memory cells. On the STK500 and STK600
programmer, several operational parameters (target supply voltage, target
Aref voltage, master clock) can be examined and changed from within terminal
mode as well.
In order to control all the different operation modi, a number of options need
to be specified to avrdude .
-p
partno
- This is the only option that is mandatory for every invocation of
avrdude . It specifies the type of the MCU
connected to the programmer. These are read from the config file. For
currently supported MCU types use ? as partno, this will print a list of
partno ids and official part names on the terminal. (Both can be used with
the -p option.)
Following parts need special attention:
- AT90S1200
- The ISP programming protocol of the AT90S1200 differs in subtle ways
from that of other AVRs. Thus, not all programmers support this
device. Known to work are all direct bitbang programmers, and all
programmers talking the STK500v2 protocol.
- AT90S2343
- The AT90S2323 and ATtiny22 use the same algorithm.
- ATmega2560, ATmega2561
- Flash addressing above 128 KB is not supported by all programming
hardware. Known to work are jtag2, stk500v2, and bit-bang
programmers.
- ATtiny11
- The ATtiny11 can only be programmed in high-voltage serial mode.
-b
baudrate
- Override the RS-232 connection baud rate specified in the respective
programmer's entry of the configuration file.
-B
bitclock
- Specify the bit clock period for the JTAG interface or the ISP clock (JTAG
ICE only). The value is a floating-point number in microseconds.
Alternatively, the value might be suffixed with "Hz",
"kHz", or "MHz", in order to specify the bit clock
frequency, rather than a period. The default value of the JTAG ICE results
in about 1 microsecond bit clock period, suitable for target MCUs running
at 4 MHz clock and above. Unlike certain parameters in the STK500, the
JTAG ICE resets all its parameters to default values when the programming
software signs off from the ICE, so for MCUs running at lower clock
speeds, this parameter must be specified on the command-line. You can use
the 'default_bitclock' keyword in your
${HOME}/.avrduderc file to assign a default value
to keep from having to specify this option on every invocation.
-c
programmer-id
- Use the programmer specified by the argument. Programmers and their pin
configurations are read from the config file (see the
-C option). New pin configurations can be easily
added or modified through the use of a config file to make
avrdude work with different programmers as long as
the programmer supports the Atmel AVR serial program method. You can use
the 'default_programmer' keyword in your
${HOME}/.avrduderc file to assign a default
programmer to keep from having to specify this option on every invocation.
A full list of all supported programmers is output to the terminal by
using ? as programmer-id.
-C
config-file
- Use the specified config file to load configuration data. This file
contains all programmer and part definitions that
avrdude knows about. See the config file, located
at ${PREFIX}/etc/avrdude.conf, which contains a
description of the format.
If config-file is written as
+filename then this file is read after the
system wide and user configuration files. This can be used to add
entries to the configuration without patching your system wide
configuration file. It can be used several times, the files are read in
same order as given on the command line.
-D
- Disable auto erase for flash. When the
-U option
with flash memory is specified, avrdude will
perform a chip erase before starting any of the programming operations,
since it generally is a mistake to program the flash without performing an
erase first. This option disables that. Auto erase is not used for ATxmega
devices as these devices can use page erase before writing each page so no
explicit chip erase is required. Note however that any page not affected
by the current operation will retain its previous contents.
-e
- Causes a chip erase to be executed. This will reset the contents of the
flash ROM and EEPROM to the value
‘
0xff ’, and clear all lock bits.
Except for ATxmega devices which can use page erase, it is basically a
prerequisite command before the flash ROM can be reprogrammed again. The
only exception would be if the new contents would exclusively cause bits
to be programmed from the value ‘1 ’
to ‘0 ’. Note that in order to
reprogram EERPOM cells, no explicit prior chip erase is required since the
MCU provides an auto-erase cycle in that case before programming the
cell.
-E
exitspec[,exitspec]
- By default,
avrdude leaves the parallel port in
the same state at exit as it has been found at startup. This option
modifies the state of the ‘/RESET ’
and ‘Vcc ’ lines the parallel port is
left at, according to the exitspec arguments
provided, as follows:
- reset
- The ‘
/RESET ’ signal will be left
activated at program exit, that is it will be held
low, in order to keep the MCU in reset state
afterwards. Note in particular that the programming algorithm for the
AT90S1200 device mandates that the
‘/RESET ’ signal is active
before powering up the MCU, so in case an external
power supply is used for this MCU type, a previous invocation of
avrdude with this option specified is one of
the possible ways to guarantee this condition.
- noreset
- The ‘
/RESET ’ line will be
deactivated at program exit, thus allowing the MCU target program to
run while the programming hardware remains connected.
- vcc
- This option will leave those parallel port pins active (i. e.
high) that can be used to supply
‘
Vcc ’ power to the MCU.
- novcc
- This option will pull the ‘
Vcc ’
pins of the parallel port down at program exit.
- d_high
- This option will leave the 8 data pins on the parallel port active.
(i. e. high)
- d_low
- This option will leave the 8 data pins on the parallel port inactive.
(i. e. low)
Multiple exitspec arguments can be
separated with commas.
-F
- Normally,
avrdude tries to verify that the device
signature read from the part is reasonable before continuing. Since it can
happen from time to time that a device has a broken (erased or
overwritten) device signature but is otherwise operating normally, this
options is provided to override the check. Also, for programmers like the
Atmel STK500 and STK600 which can adjust parameters local to the
programming tool (independent of an actual connection to a target
controller), this option can be used together with
-t to continue in terminal mode.
-i
delay
- For bitbang-type programmers, delay for approximately
delay microseconds between each bit state change. If
the host system is very fast, or the target runs off a slow clock (like a
32 kHz crystal, or the 128 kHz internal RC oscillator), this can become
necessary to satisfy the requirement that the ISP clock frequency must not
be higher than 1/4 of the CPU clock frequency. This is implemented as a
spin-loop delay to allow even for very short delays. On Unix-style
operating systems, the spin loop is initially calibrated against a system
timer, so the number of microseconds might be rather realistic, assuming a
constant system load while
avrdude is running. On
Win32 operating systems, a preconfigured number of cycles per microsecond
is assumed that might be off a bit for very fast or very slow
machines.
-l
logfile
- Use logfile rather than stderr
for diagnostics output. Note that initial diagnostic messages (during
option parsing) are still written to stderr
anyway.
-n
- No-write - disables actually writing data to the MCU (useful for debugging
avrdude ).
-O
- Perform a RC oscillator run-time calibration according to Atmel
application note AVR053. This is only supported on the STK500v2, AVRISP
mkII, and JTAG ICE mkII hardware. Note that the result will be stored in
the EEPROM cell at address 0.
-P
port
- Use port to identify the device to which the
programmer is attached. By default the /dev/ppi0
port is used, but if the programmer type normally connects to the serial
port, the /dev/cuaa0 port is the default. If you
need to use a different parallel or serial port, use this option to
specify the alternate port name.
On Win32 operating systems, the parallel ports are referred to
as lpt1 through lpt3, referring to the addresses 0x378, 0x278, and
0x3BC, respectively. If the parallel port can be accessed through a
different address, this address can be specified directly, using the
common C language notation (i. e., hexadecimal values are prefixed by
‘0x ’ ).
For the JTAG ICE mkII and JTAGICE3, if
avrdude has been configured with libusb support,
port can alternatively be specified as
usb[:serialno]. This will
cause avrdude to search the programmer on USB.
If serialno is also specified, it will be matched
against the serial number read from any JTAG ICE mkII found on USB. The
match is done after stripping any existing colons from the given serial
number, and right-to-left, so only the least significant bytes from the
serial number need to be given.
As the AVRISP mkII device can only be talked to over USB, the
very same method of specifying the port is required there.
For the USB programmer "AVR-Doper" running in HID
mode, the port must be specified as avrdoper.
Libusb support is required on Unix but not on Windows. For more
information about AVR-Doper see
http://www.obdev.at/avrusb/avrdoper.html.
For the USBtinyISP, which is a simplicistic device not
implementing serial numbers, multiple devices can be distinguished by
their location in the USB hierarchy. See the the respective
Troubleshooting entry in the detailed documentation
for examples.
For programmers that attach to a serial port using some kind
of higher level protocol (as opposed to bit-bang style programmers),
port can be specified as
net:host:port.
In this case, instead of trying to open a local device, a TCP network
connection to (TCP) port on
host is established. The remote endpoint is
assumed to be a terminal or console server that connects the network
stream to a local serial port where the actual programmer has been
attached to. The port is assumed to be properly configured, for example
using a transparent 8-bit data connection without parity at 115200 Baud
for a STK500.
-q
- Disable (or quell) output of the progress bar while reading or writing to
the device. Specify it a second time for even quieter operation.
-s
- Disable safemode prompting. When safemode discovers that one or more fuse
bits have unintentionally changed, it will prompt for confirmation
regarding whether or not it should attempt to recover the fuse bit(s).
Specifying this flag disables the prompt and assumes that the fuse bit(s)
should be recovered without asking for confirmation first.
-t
- Tells
avrdude to enter the interactive
``terminal'' mode instead of up- or downloading files. See below for a
detailed description of the terminal mode.
-u
- Disable the safemode fuse bit checks. Safemode is enabled by default and
is intended to prevent unintentional fuse bit changes. When enabled,
safemode will issue a warning if the any fuse bits are found to be
different at program exit than they were when
avrdude was invoked. Safemode won't alter fuse
bits itself, but rather will prompt for instructions, unless the terminal
is non-interactive, in which case safemode is disabled. See the
-s option to disable safemode prompting.
If one of the configuration files has a line
default_safemode =
no;
safemode is disabled by default. The -u option's
effect is negated in that case, i. e. it enables
safemode.
Safemode is always disabled for AVR32, Xmega and TPI
devices.
-U
memtype:op:filename[:format]
- Perform a memory operation as indicated. The memtype
field specifies the memory type to operate on. The available memory types
are device-dependent, the actual configuration can be viewed with the
part command in terminal mode. Typically, a
device's memory configuration at least contains the memory types
flash and eeprom. All memory
types currently known are:
- calibration
- One or more bytes of RC oscillator calibration data.
- eeprom
- The EEPROM of the device.
- efuse
- The extended fuse byte.
- flash
- The flash ROM of the device.
- fuse
- The fuse byte in devices that have only a single fuse byte.
- hfuse
- The high fuse byte.
- lfuse
- The low fuse byte.
- lock
- The lock byte.
- signature
- The three device signature bytes (device ID).
- fuseN
- The fuse bytes of ATxmega devices, N is an integer
number for each fuse supported by the device.
- application
- The application flash area of ATxmega devices.
- apptable
- The application table flash area of ATxmega devices.
- boot
- The boot flash area of ATxmega devices.
- prodsig
- The production signature (calibration) area of ATxmega devices.
- usersig
- The user signature area of ATxmega devices.
The op field specifies what operation to
perform:
- r
- read device memory and write to the specified file
- w
- read data from the specified file and write to the device memory
- v
- read data from both the device and the specified file and perform a
verify
The filename field indicates the name of
the file to read or write. The format field is
optional and contains the format of the file to read or write.
Format can be one of:
- i
- Intel Hex
- s
- Motorola S-record
- r
- raw binary; little-endian byte order, in the case of the flash ROM
data
- e
- ELF (Executable and Linkable Format)
- m
- immediate; actual byte values specified on the command line, separated
by commas or spaces. This is good for programming fuse bytes without
having to create a single-byte file or enter terminal mode.
- a
- auto detect; valid for input only, and only if the input is not
provided at stdin.
- d
- decimal; this and the following formats are only valid on output. They
generate one line of output for the respective memory section, forming
a comma-separated list of the values. This can be particularly useful
for subsequent processing, like for fuse bit settings.
- h
- hexadecimal; each value will get the string 0x
prepended.
- o
- octal; each value will get a 0 prepended unless it
is less than 8 in which case it gets no prefix.
- b
- binary; each value will get the string 0b
prepended.
The default is to use auto detection for input files, and raw
binary format for output files. Note that if
filename contains a colon, the
format field is no longer optional since the
filename part following the colon would otherwise be misinterpreted as
format.
When reading any kind of flash memory area (including the
various sub-areas in Xmega devices), the resulting output file will be
truncated to not contain trailing 0xFF bytes which indicate unprogrammed
(erased) memory. Thus, if the entire memory is unprogrammed, this will
result in an output file that has no contents at all.
As an abbreviation, the form -U
filename is equivalent to specifying
-U
flash:w:filename:a. This will
only work if filename does not have a colon in
it.
-v
- Enable verbose output. More
-v options increase
verbosity level.
-V
- Disable automatic verify check when uploading data.
-x
extended_param
- Pass extended_param to the chosen programmer
implementation as an extended parameter. The interpretation of the
extended parameter depends on the programmer itself. See below for a list
of programmers accepting extended parameters.
In this mode, avrdude only initializes communication
with the MCU, and then awaits user commands on standard input. Commands and
parameters may be abbreviated to the shortest unambiguous form. Terminal mode
provides a command history using
readline(3),
so previously entered command lines can be recalled and edited. The following
commands are currently implemented:
- dump memtype addr nbytes
- Read nbytes bytes from the specified memory area,
and display them in the usual hexadecimal and ASCII form.
- dump
- Continue dumping the memory contents for another
nbytes where the previous dump
command left off.
- write memtype addr byte1 ... byteN
- Manually program the respective memory cells, starting at address
addr, using the values byte1
through byteN. This feature is not implemented for
bank-addressed memories such as the flash memory of ATMega devices.
- erase
- Perform a chip erase.
- send b1 b2 b3 b4
- Send raw instruction codes to the AVR device. If you need access to a
feature of an AVR part that is not directly supported by
avrdude , this command allows you to use it, even
though avrdude does not implement the command.
When using direct SPI mode, up to 3 bytes can be omitted.
- sig
- Display the device signature bytes.
- spi
- Enter direct SPI mode. The pgmled pin acts as slave
select. Only supported on parallel bitbang
programmers.
- part
- Display the current part settings and parameters. Includes chip specific
information including all memory types supported by the device, read/write
timing, etc.
- pgm
- Return to programming mode (from direct SPI mode).
- vtarg voltage
- Set the target's supply voltage to voltage Volts.
Only supported on the STK500 and STK600 programmer.
- varef [channel]
voltage
- Set the adjustable voltage source to voltage Volts.
This voltage is normally used to drive the target's Aref
input on the STK500. On the Atmel STK600, two reference voltages are
available, which can be selected by the optional
channel argument (either 0 or 1). Only
supported on the STK500 and STK600 programmer.
- fosc freq[M|k]
- Set the master oscillator to freq Hz. An optional
trailing letter M multiplies by 1E6, a trailing
letter k by 1E3. Only supported on the
STK500 and STK600 programmer.
- fosc off
- Turn the master oscillator off. Only supported on the STK500
and STK600 programmer.
- sck period
- STK500 and STK600 programmer only: Set the SCK clock
period to period microseconds.
JTAG ICE only: Set the JTAG ICE bit clock
period to period microseconds. Note that unlike
STK500 settings, this setting will be reverted to its default value
(approximately 1 microsecond) when the programming software signs off
from the JTAG ICE. This parameter can also be used on the JTAG ICE mkII,
JTAGICE3, and Atmel-ICE to specify the ISP clock period when operating
the ICE in ISP mode.
- parms
- STK500 and STK600 programmer only: Display the current
voltage and master oscillator parameters.
JTAG ICE only: Display the current target
supply voltage and JTAG bit clock rate/period.
- verbose [level]
- Change (when level is provided), or display the
verbosity level. The initial verbosity level is controlled by the number
of
-v options given on the commandline.
- ?
-
- help
- Give a short on-line summary of the available commands.
- quit
- Leave terminal mode and thus
avrdude .
(these can be changed, see the -c option)
Pin number |
Function |
2-5 |
Vcc (optional power supply to MCU) |
7 |
/RESET (to MCU) |
8 |
SCK (to MCU) |
9 |
MOSI (to MCU) |
10 |
MISO (from MCU) |
18-25 |
GND |
The debugWire protocol is Atmel's proprietary one-wire (plus ground) protocol to
allow an in-circuit emulation of the smaller AVR devices, using the
‘/RESET ’ line. DebugWire mode is
initiated by activating the ‘DWEN ’ fuse,
and then power-cycling the target. While this mode is mainly intended for
debugging/emulation, it also offers limited programming capabilities.
Effectively, the only memory areas that can be read or programmed in this mode
are flash ROM and EEPROM. It is also possible to read out the signature. All
other memory areas cannot be accessed. There is no chip
erase functionality in debugWire mode; instead, while reprogramming the
flash ROM, each flash ROM page is erased right before updating it. This is
done transparently by the JTAG ICE mkII (or AVR Dragon). The only way back
from debugWire mode is to initiate a special sequence of commands to the JTAG
ICE mkII (or AVR Dragon), so the debugWire mode will be temporarily disabled,
and the target can be accessed using normal ISP programming. This sequence is
automatically initiated by using the JTAG ICE mkII or AVR Dragon in ISP mode,
when they detect that ISP mode cannot be entered.
Bootloaders using the FLIP protocol version 1 experience some very specific
behaviour.
These bootloaders have no option to access memory areas other than
Flash and EEPROM.
When the bootloader is started, it enters a security
mode where the only acceptable access is to query the device
configuration parameters (which are used for the signature on AVR devices).
The only way to leave this mode is a chip erase. As a chip
erase is normally implied by the -U option when
reprogramming the flash, this peculiarity might not be very obvious
immediately.
Sometimes, a bootloader with security mode already disabled seems
to no longer respond with sensible configuration data, but only 0xFF for all
queries. As these queries are used to obtain the equivalent of a signature,
avrdude can only continue in that situation by
forcing the signature check to be overridden with the
-F option.
A chip erase might leave the EEPROM unerased, at
least on some versions of the bootloader.
- JTAG ICE mkII
-
- JTAGICE3
-
- Atmel-ICE
-
- AVR Dragon
- When using the JTAG ICE mkII, JTAGICE3, Atmel-ICE or AVR Dragon in JTAG
mode, the following extended parameter is accepted:
- jtagchain=UB,UA,BB,BA
- Setup the JTAG scan chain for UB units before,
UA units after, BB bits
before, and BA bits after the target AVR,
respectively. Each AVR unit within the chain shifts by 4 bits. Other
JTAG units might require a different bit shift count.
- AVR910
-
- devcode=VALUE
- Override the device code selection by using
VALUE as the device code. The programmer is not
queried for the list of supported device codes, and the specified
VALUE is not verified but used directly within
the ‘
T ’ command sent to the
programmer. VALUE can be specified using the
conventional number notation of the C programming language.
- no_blockmode
- Disables the default checking for block transfer capability. Use
no_blockmode only if your
AVR910 programmer creates errors during initial
sequence.
- buspirate
-
- reset={cs,aux,aux2}
- The default setup assumes the BusPirate's CS output pin connected to
the RESET pin on AVR side. It is however possible to have multiple
AVRs connected to the same BP with MISO, MOSI and SCK lines common for
all of them. In such a case one AVR should have its RESET connected to
BusPirate's CS pin, second AVR's RESET
connected to BusPirate's AUX pin and if your
BusPirate has an AUX2 pin (only available on
BusPirate version v1a with firmware 3.0 or newer) use that to activate
RESET on the third AVR.
It may be a good idea to decouple the BusPirate and the
AVR's SPI buses from each other using a 3-state bus buffer. For
example 74HC125 or 74HC244 are some good candidates with the latches
driven by the appropriate reset pin (cs, aux or aux2). Otherwise the
SPI traffic in one active circuit may interfere with programming the
AVR in the other design.
- spifreq=<0..7>
- The SPI speed for the Bus Pirate's binary SPI mode:
0 .. 30 kHz (default)
1 .. 125 kHz
2 .. 250 kHz
3 .. 1 MHz
4 .. 2 MHz
5 .. 2.6 MHz
6 .. 4 MHz
7 .. 8 MHz
- rawfreq=<0..3>
- Sets the SPI speed and uses the Bus Pirate's binary
"raw-wire" mode:
0 .. 5 kHz
1 .. 50 kHz
2 .. 100 kHz (Firmware v4.2+ only)
3 .. 400 kHz (v4.2+)
The only advantage of the "raw-wire" mode is the
different SPI frequencies available. Paged writing is not
implemented in this mode.
- ascii
- Attempt to use ASCII mode even when the firmware supports BinMode
(binary mode). BinMode is supported in firmware 2.7 and newer, older
FW's either don't have BinMode or their BinMode is buggy. ASCII mode
is slower and makes the above reset=,
spifreq= and rawfreq=
parameters unavailable. Be aware that ASCII mode is not guaranteed to
work with newer firmware versions, and is retained only to maintain
compatibility with older firmware versions.
- nopagedwrite
- Firmware versions 5.10 and newer support a binary mode SPI command
that enables whole pages to be written to AVR flash memory at once,
resulting in a significant write speed increase. If use of this mode
is not desirable for some reason, this option disables it.
- nopagedread
- Newer firmware versions support in binary mode SPI command some AVR
Extended Commands. Using the "Bulk Memory Read from Flash"
results in a significant read speed increase. If use of this mode is
not desirable for some reason, this option disables it.
- cpufreq=<125..4000>
- This sets the AUX pin to output a frequency of n
kHz. Connecting the AUX pin to the XTAL1 pin of your MCU, you can
provide it a clock, for example when it needs an external clock
because of wrong fuses settings. Make sure the CPU frequency is at
least four times the SPI frequency.
- serial_recv_timeout=<1...>
- This sets the serial receive timeout to the given value. The timeout
happens every time avrdude waits for the BusPirate prompt. Especially
in ascii mode this happens very often, so setting a smaller value can
speed up programming a lot. The default value is 100ms. Using 10ms
might work in most cases.
- Wiring
- When using the Wiring programmer type, the following optional extended
parameter is accepted:
- snooze=<0..32767>
- After performing the port open phase, AVRDUDE will wait/snooze for
snooze milliseconds before continuing to the
protocol sync phase. No toggling of DTR/RTS is performed if
snooze is greater than 0.
- PICkit2
- Connection to the PICkit2 programmer:
(AVR) (PICkit2)
RST - VPP/MCLR (1)
VDD - VDD Target (2) -- possibly optional if AVR self powered
GND - GND (3)
MISO - PGD (4)
SCLK - PDC (5)
MOSI - AUX (6)
Extended commandline parameters:
- clockrate=<rate>
- Sets the SPI clocking rate in Hz (default is 100kHz). Alternately the
-B or -i options can be used to set the period.
- timeout=<usb-transaction-timeout>
- Sets the timeout for USB reads and writes in milliseconds (default is
1500 ms).
- /dev/ppi0
- default device to be used for communication with the programming
hardware
- ${PREFIX}/etc/avrdude.conf
- programmer and parts configuration file
- ${HOME}/.avrduderc
- programmer and parts configuration file (per-user overrides)
- ~/.inputrc
- Initialization file for the
readline(3)
library
- ${PREFIX}/share/doc/avrdude/avrdude.pdf
- Schematic of programming hardware
avrdude: jtagmkII_setparm(): bad response to set parameter command: RSP_FAILED
avrdude: jtagmkII_getsync(): ISP activation failed, trying debugWire
avrdude: Target prepared for ISP, signed off.
avrdude: Please restart avrdude without power-cycling the target.
If the target AVR has been set up for debugWire mode (i. e. the
DWEN fuse is programmed), normal ISP connection attempts
will fail as the /RESET pin is not available. When using
the JTAG ICE mkII in ISP mode, the message shown indicates that
avrdude has guessed this condition, and tried to
initiate a debugWire reset to the target. When successful, this will leave
the target AVR in a state where it can respond to normal ISP communication
again (until the next power cycle). Typically, the same command is going to
be retried again immediately afterwards, and will then succeed connecting to
the target using normal ISP communication.
Avrdude was written by Brian S. Dean
<bsd@bsdhome.com>.
This man page by Joerg Wunsch.
Please report bugs via
http://savannah.nongnu.org/bugs/?group=avrdude.
The JTAG ICE programmers currently cannot write to the flash ROM
one byte at a time. For that reason, updating the flash ROM from terminal
mode does not work.
Page-mode programming the EEPROM through JTAG (i.e. through an
-U option) requires a prior chip erase. This is an
inherent feature of the way JTAG EEPROM programming works. This also applies
to the STK500 and STK600 in parallel programming mode.
The USBasp and USBtinyISP drivers do not offer any option to
distinguish multiple devices connected simultaneously, so effectively only a
single device is supported.
The avrftdi driver allows one to select specific devices using any
combination of vid,pid serial number (usbsn) vendor description (usbvendoror
part description (usbproduct) as seen with lsusb or whatever tool used to
view USB device information. Multiple devices can be on the bus at the same
time. For the H parts, which have multiple MPSSE interfaces, the interface
can also be selected. It defaults to interface 'A'.
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