[Gta04-owner] Switching from RS232 to IrDA for debugging
Sven Dyroff
S.Dyroff at phytec.de
Fri Jul 20 14:52:44 CEST 2012
Hello Nikolaus,
thanks for reply. As far as I understood the TFDU6301 it's just a simple
converter from TTL to IrDA and vice versa. So we don't need any IrDA
protocol or drivers or other stuff like that. We just solder a cable that
connects another TFDU6301 to a TRS3386E and then plug this into a common
serial port of our PC. Add some power supply and that's all.
And because a) I remember having read within this list about the trouble
of someone other who wanted to try to build his own MLO and b) still
haven't managed to come to the end with building QtMoko, I hoped that you
could provide the binary...
Best regards,
Sven
Von: "Dr. H. Nikolaus Schaller" <hns at goldelico.com>
An: List for communicating with real GTA04 owners
<gta04-owner at goldelico.com>
Datum: 20.07.2012 13:55
Betreff: Re: [Gta04-owner] Switching from RS232 to IrDA for
debugging
Gesendet von: gta04-owner-bounces at goldelico.com
Hi Sven,
Am 20.07.2012 um 13:36 schrieb Sven Dyroff:
Hello Nikolaus,
I finally want to make my first steps in looking deeper into the GTA04 and
therefor I need access to the serial port. After having taken a look into
the schematics I still don't intend to open my GTA04 for this reason,
because it seems that only one GPIO is to be toggled, so that we can
connect _WIRELESS_ over IrDA to the UART of the OMAP.
Is it possible that you build a new MLO that sets this GPIO to zero? So we
only need to replace this new MLO with the current one on the SD card and
then can debug over IrDA. Whenever we don't want
Yes, changing the GPIO is definitively possible. It should be done in this
file:
http://git.goldelico.com/?p=gta04-xloader.git;a=blob;f=board/omap3530gta04/omap3530gta04.c;h=04f310d14e91276f207a524f9ea96b6d12715b9f;hb=HEAD
around line 1100. Maybe, changing the pull-up/down may be sufficient.
But to make it work, I think it is also needs to configure the UART a
little differently since the IrDA protocol uses impulse patterns to
indicate 0 and 1 states of the serialized data bytes. I.e. just adding a
LED to a TX line and switching it on if a 0 is transmitted, doesn't make
it IrDA receivable.
anymore to widespread our internal data into our environment for everyone,
but want to save some battery power, we just need to replace the MLO
again... ;-))
This idea only as a first step. The more better solution would be, that
the bootloader switches this GPIO according to the existence of a
flag-file like "IrDa.flag" within the FAT filesystem. And of course the
best solution would be to have the possibility to set or remove this
flag-file with a button, presented by the bootloader...
Well, the MLO could also check the AUX button being pressed, since it is
also a GPIO.
But I better like your idea of a special MLO variant, so that you can put
it in a SD card you use for kernel work. So it is not necessary to add
this feature to any MLO.
One other aspect to consider is that it is not possible to run the full
IrDA protocol. Just the lowest level stuff.
I.e. there is no error correction so you may garble u-boot commands you
send to the device...
So you need a special driver on your host-pc as well, that bypasses the
IrDA protocol stack.
Of couse I hope that currently the kernel doesn't set this GPIO. Am I
right in this assumption?
The current kernel doesn't touch the GPIO, but there should be a driver to
enable IrDA from user space...
Nikolaus
_______________________________________________
Gta04-owner mailing list
Gta04-owner at goldelico.com
http://lists.goldelico.com/mailman/listinfo/gta04-owner
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.goldelico.com/pipermail/gta04-owner/attachments/20120720/b70bd6e2/attachment.html>
More information about the Gta04-owner
mailing list