mirror of
https://github.com/tillitis/tillitis-key1.git
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354aecbed6
Change links to the new ch552_fw directory.
198 lines
6.9 KiB
Markdown
198 lines
6.9 KiB
Markdown
# Toolchain setup
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**NOTE:** Documentation migrated to dev.tillitis.se, this is kept for
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history. This is likely to be outdated.
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Here are instructions for setting up the tools required to build the
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project. Tested on Ubuntu 22.10.
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## General development environment
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The following is intended to be a complete list of the packages that
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are required for doing all of the following:
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- building and developing [TKey device and client
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apps](https://github.com/tillitis/tillitis-key1-apps)
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- building our [QEMU machine](https://github.com/tillitis/qemu/tree/tk1)
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(useful for apps dev)
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- building and developing firmware and FPGA gateware (which also
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requires building the toolchain below)
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```
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sudo apt install build-essential clang lld llvm bison flex libreadline-dev \
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gawk tcl-dev libffi-dev git mercurial graphviz \
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xdot pkg-config python3 libftdi-dev \
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python3-dev libeigen3-dev \
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libboost-dev libboost-filesystem-dev \
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libboost-thread-dev libboost-program-options-dev \
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libboost-iostreams-dev cmake libusb-1.0-0-dev \
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ninja-build libglib2.0-dev libpixman-1-dev \
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golang clang-format \
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gcc-arm-none-eabi libnewlib-arm-none-eabi \
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libstdc++-arm-none-eabi-newlib
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```
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## Device permissions
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To allow sudo-less programming, you can install a udev rule that will
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assign the tkey programmer, and also an unprogrammed CH552, to the
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dialout group. You will also need to add your user to this group:
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```
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sudo cp contrib/99-tillitis.rules /etc/udev/rules.d
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sudo udevadm control --reload-rules
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sudo usermod -aG dialout ${USER}
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```
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To apply the new group, log out and then log back in.
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You can check the device permissions to determine if the group was
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successfully applied. First, use lsusb to find the location of the
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programmer:
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```
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lsusb -d 1209:8886
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Bus 001 Device 023: ID 1209:8886 Generic TP-1
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```
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Then, you can check the permissions by using the bus and device
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number reported above. Note that this pair is ephimeral and may
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change after every device insertion:
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```
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ls -l /dev/bus/usb/001/023
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crw-rw---- 1 root dialout 189, 22 Feb 16 14:58 /dev/bus/usb/001/023
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```
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## Gateware: Yosys/Icestorm toolchain
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If the LED of your TKey is steady white when you plug it, then the
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firmware is running and it's already usable! If you want to develop
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TKey apps, then only the above general development environment is
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needed.
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Compiling and installing Yosys and friends is only needed if your TKey
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is not already running the required firmware and FPGA gateware, or if
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you want to do development on these components.
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These steps are used to build and install the
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[icestorm](http://bygone.clairexen.net/icestorm/) toolchain. The
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binaries are installed in `/usr/local`. Note that if you have or
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install other versions of these tools locally, they could conflict
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(case in point: `yosys` installed on MacOS using brew).
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git clone https://github.com/YosysHQ/icestorm
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cd icestorm
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git checkout d20a5e9001f46262bf0cef220f1a6943946e421d
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make -j$(nproc)
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sudo make install
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cd ..
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# Custom iceprog for the RPi 2040-based programmer (will be upstreamed).
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# Note: install dependencies for building tillitis-iceprog on Ubuntu:
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# sudo apt install libftdi-dev libusb-1.0-0-dev
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git clone -b interfaces https://github.com/tillitis/icestorm tillitis--icestorm
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cd tillitis--icestorm/iceprog
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make
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sudo make PROGRAM_PREFIX=tillitis- install
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cd ../..
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git clone https://github.com/YosysHQ/yosys
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cd yosys
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git checkout yosys-0.26
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make -j$(nproc)
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sudo make install
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cd ..
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git clone https://github.com/YosysHQ/nextpnr
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cd nextpnr
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git checkout nextpnr-0.5
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cmake -DARCH=ice40 -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local .
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make -j$(nproc)
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sudo make install
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cd ..
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References:
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* http://bygone.clairexen.net/icestorm/
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## Firmware: riscv toolchain
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The TKey implements a [picorv32](https://github.com/YosysHQ/picorv32)
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soft core CPU, which is a RISC-V microcontroller with the C
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instructions and Zmmul extension, multiply without divide
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(RV32ICZmmul). You can read
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[more](https://www.sifive.com/blog/all-aboard-part-1-compiler-args)
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about it.
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The project uses the LLVM/Clang suite and version 15 or later is
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required. As of writing Ubuntu 22.10 has version 15 packaged. You may
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be able to get it installed on older Ubuntu and Debian using the
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instructions on https://apt.llvm.org/ . There are also binary releases
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here: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/releases
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References:
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* https://github.com/YosysHQ/picorv32
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If your available `objcopy` and `size` commands is anything other than
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the default `llvm-objcopy` and `llvm-size` define `OBJCOPY` and `SIZE`
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to whatever they're called on your system before calling `make`.
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## Circuit board designs: KiCad 6.0
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The circuit board designs were all created in [KiCad
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6.0](https://www.kicad.org/).
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## MTA1-USB-V1 and TP-1 programming board firmware
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The TP-1 programming boards runs a custom firmware developed by
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Blinkinlabs. Source code for this firmware can be found at
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[hw/boards/tp1/firmware/](../hw/boards/tp1/firmware/). There is also a
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pre-built firmware binary at
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[hw/boards/tp1/firmware/bin/main.uf2](../hw/boards/tp1/firmware/bin/main.uf2).
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To update the firmware on the programmer board, either build the file
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`main.uf2` (more instructions below), or get the pre-built file to
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your host computer. Then do the following:
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1. Disconnect the programming board from the host computer
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2. Press and hold the "BOOTSEL" button on the RPi2040 sub-board on the
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programming board
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3. Reconnect the programming board to the host computer
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4. Release the "BOOTSEL" button after connecting the programming board
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to the host. The board should now appear to the host as a USB
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connected storage device
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5. Open the storage device and drop the firmware file `main.uf2` into
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the storage device
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The programmer will update its firmware with the file and restart
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itself. After reboot the storage device will automatically be
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disconnected.
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### Building the TP-1 firmware
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The firmware requires the Raspberry Pi Pico SDK:
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cd ~
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git clone --branch 1.5.0 https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-sdk.git
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cd pico-sdk
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git submodule update --init
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Note that our container image places the pico-sdk directory in
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/usr/local. For normal development, it is usually left in the
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users home directory.
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See
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[hw/boards/tp1/firmware/README.md](../hw/boards/tp1/firmware/README.md)
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for further instructions.
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## CH552 USB to Serial firmware
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The USB to Serial firmware runs on the CH552 microcontroller, and
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provides a USB CDC profile which should work with the default drivers
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on all major operating systems. MTA1-USB-V1 and TK-1 devices come
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with the CH552 microcontroller pre-programmed.
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Toolchain setup and build instructions for this firmware are detailed
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in the
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[ch552_fw directory](../hw/usb_interface/ch552_fw/README.md)
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