Serprog/Arduino flasher: Difference between revisions

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<div class="boilerplate" style="background-color: red; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px dotted #aaa;">'''WARNING,if you don't add the resistors, the SPI levels are at 5V, while I tried it with 3.3V chip and that it worked(but DIO was at 4.3v which was over the maximum of 4v, during all the time that the chip was connected to the programmer), it may not work for you and break the chip...'''</div>
<div class="boilerplate" style="background-color: red; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px dotted #aaa;">'''WARNING, make sure that the Arduino SPI voltages and the flash chip voltages matches: Without any extra resistors or level shifter, the Arduino Uno and Duemillanove SPI pins are at 5V, while many common chips operate at 3.3v.'''</div>
== Building the flasher ==
== Building the flasher ==
This flasher require the following hardware parts:
This flasher require the following hardware parts:

Revision as of 15:27, 23 August 2015

WARNING, make sure that the Arduino SPI voltages and the flash chip voltages matches: Without any extra resistors or level shifter, the Arduino Uno and Duemillanove SPI pins are at 5V, while many common chips operate at 3.3v.

Building the flasher

This flasher require the following hardware parts:

  • An arduino uno or an arduino Duemilanove(way faster) and its usb cable
  • some wires(optionally some connectors to solder on(for easier plugin and more reliability)
  • a 10k resistor
  • 3 x 10k resistors (for the 3.3v version)
  • 3 x 15k resistors (for the 3.3v version)
  • A flash chip with the following characteristics:
    • supported by flashrom
    • SPI
    • 3.3v or 5v(the arduino has a 3.3v and a 5v output, only 3.3v was tested...)

5V version

Pictures

Building

Left pins of the BIOS chip:
--------------------------------------------------------
[pin1 of the bios chip] /CS<->10k resistor<->VCC 

[pin1 of the bios chip] /CS<->Arduino pin10(SS, PORTB2)
[pin2 of the bios chip] DO<->Arduino pin12(MISO, PORTB4)
[pin3 of the bios chip] /WP<->VCC
[pin4 of the bios chip] GND<->GND on the power pins

Right pins of the BIOS chip:
--------------------------------------------------------
[pin8 of the bios chip] VCC<->+3.3V on the power pins of the Arduino
[pin7 of the bios chip] /HOLD<->VCC
[pin6 of the bios chip] CLK<->Arduino pin13(SCK, PORTB5)
[pin5 of the bios chip] DIO<->Arduino pin11(MOSI, PORTB3)

The Bios chip used is a W25X80. 
The Arduino is an arduino uno.

3.3v version

Pictures

WARNING, I was told that by Simon Inns by mail: "The 3V3 fritzing example on the Wiki (the diagram of the breadboard) is quite wrong... The 3V3 output from the Uno is shorted to GND and the CLK and DI pins of the EEPROM are connected together after the 10K resistors. Might be a good idea to fix it before you get "You broke my Uno" emails ;)"

Improved version by Simon Inns

Shield with SPI and LPC/FWH for 5V Arduinos

Firmware and hardware sources Shield PCB shared at oshpark

  • This shield and firmware was built for 5V arduinos with FTDI, variations to that will need adaptations in building the shield and/or in the firmware.
  • This shield uses a different pin for SPI CS than the other circuits on this page, and has LPC/FWH capability, thus different firmware.
  • Note: do check for any incompatibilities between your arduino and the shield, eg. the PD7 used as LPC CLK clashes with BT reset in BT arduinos.
  • For LPC/FWH, current (15/03/25) flashrom trunk will not work, until that is fixed use this branch instead.

Compatibility, software and setup

Compatibility

There are some differences between the various arduinos that are relevant for this flasher:

Architecture

  • Only the AVR architecture is supported for now, because the code depends on avr-libc. In one hand that makes it portable across other non-arduino AVR boards, but it also makes it incompatible with the arduinos that don't have an AVR.

USB<->serial converter

  • Some Arduinos have an FTDI USB<->Serial converter, we can achieve a very high speed of 2000000 bauds with ir.
  • Some Arduino have a 8u2/16u2 instead: This is an extra microcontroller which does the USB<->serial conversion trough a firmware build on LUFA. While that brings lower cost and more flexibility, the downside is that in our case the default firmware was not written for speed over 115200. To get more speed we would need to write another firmware for it.
  • Some Arduinos don't have an USB<->serial converter, like the arduino leonardo. Instead they have a native USB port.
  • Most/All Arduinos have an accessible serial port on their pins. if you have an extra USB<->Serial converter, you can plug it to theses pins. BE SURE TO CHECK THE VOLTAGE COMPATIBILITY BEFORE ATTEMPTING THAT.

Voltage

  • Some arduinos are at 3.3v.
  • Some are at 5v. Unfortunately most SPI chips are at 3.3v at the time of writing.

Boards

Arduinos Hardware User notes
  • Arduino uno
  • Has a 8u2 or 16u2 for the USB<->Serial converter
  • Uses 5V logic levels.
  • Arduino nano
  • Uses 3.3v logic
  • Has an FTDI
  • using the three wires serial and lowering the speed all problems disappear; the code has to be changed to reflects the new speed (115200); to program the board use "avrdude -c arduino -vv -P /dev/ttyUSB* -p atmega328p -b 57600 -U flash:w:serprog.hex"
  • Arduino Duemilanove
  • Has an FTDI
  • Uses 5V logic.
  • Arduino leonardo
  • Lacks an USB<->Serial converter
  • Arduino Leonardo
  • Untested

Setup

Required software

To make it work you need:

  • A recent flashrom with the serprog protocol compiled in (most packaged versions do)
  • frser-duino which runs on the arduino
    • This page used to link to serprog-duino, frser-duino should build in a similar fashion and has better serial buffering and some other features (spi speed setting).
  • The avr toolchain(avr-gcc, avr-libc,make etc...)

Building the software

First get the firmware source:

$ git clone --recursive git://github.com/urjaman/frser-duino
$ cd frser-duino

Then build it:

For a board with a 8u2 or a 16u2:

$ make u2 && make flash-u2

For a board with an ftdi:

$ make ftdi && make flash-ftdi

Running flashrom

The right flashrom arguments are explained in the README.md, or here:

Available targets:
ftdi, flash-ftdi:
  For the Arduinos with an FTDI
  compatible flashrom arguments: flashrom -p serprog:dev=/dev/ttyUSB0:2000000
  Other boards using an hardware USB<->Serial converter might work too.
u2, flash-u2:
  For the Arduino with a 8u2 or a 16u2
  compatible flashrom arguments: flashrom -p serprog:dev=/dev/ttyACM0:115200

So for a board that has an ftdi that would give:

flashrom -p serprog:dev=/dev/ttyUSB0:2000000

Speed

The speed is very dependant on the flash chip used:

  • Its capacity impacts the speed a lot, as you would expect.
  • The chip model as also a huge impact.
Duemillanove

With the duemillanove:

# time flashrom -p serprog:dev=/dev/ttyUSB0:2000000 -r duemillanove.rom      
flashrom v0.9.7-r1711 on Linux 3.18.3-gnu-1 (i686)
flashrom is free software, get the source code at http://www.flashrom.org

Calibrating delay loop... delay loop is unreliable, trying to continue OK.
serprog: Programmer name is "serprog-duino"
Found Winbond flash chip "W25Q32.V" (4096 kB, SPI) on serprog.
Reading flash... done.
flashrom -p serprog:dev=/dev/ttyUSB0:2000000 -r duemillanove.rom

we have:

4.23s user 0.29s system 8% cpu 56.010 total
Uno

With the Arduino uno:

# flashrom -p serprog:dev=/dev/ttyACM0:115200 -r uno.rom                
flashrom v0.9.7-r1711 on Linux 3.18.3-gnu-1 (i686)
flashrom is free software, get the source code at http://www.flashrom.org

Calibrating delay loop... delay loop is unreliable, trying to continue OK.
serprog: Programmer name is "serprog-duino"
Found Winbond flash chip "W25Q32.V" (4096 kB, SPI) on serprog.
Reading flash... done.
flashrom -p serprog:dev=/dev/ttyACM0:115200 -r uno.rom

we have:

4.77s user 0.65s system 1% cpu 6:02.43 total

Tested chips

  • SST25VF016B => huge issues, not recognized by the 3.3v version, had to use the 5v version which is over maximum allowed voltage, also had to lower the serial speed to 115200, ultra slow to write(seem related to the chip itself, since that with the openmoko programmer it's even slower...)...
  • W25X80 works well in 3.3v mode(5v works also but it's highly not advised to use 5v)

Advantages and disadvantages

  • The speed isn't that great(about 3 minutes for reading+writing+verifying a 1M chip) Fixed by by Sebastian Parborg.
  • Voltage issues( SPI levels are at 5v, it's problematic for flashing 3.3v chips...)
  • it is made of very commonly available parts(if you can find an arduino uno, you will be able to build it).

TODO

  • Find a way to lower the voltage to 3.3v
  • Fix the arduino UNO speed and reliability issues Simply lowering the bauds as advised on the LUFA mailing list long time did fixed it.
  • Write a faster 8u2 firmware
  • Look at other AVR targets
  • Look if it's portable to other architectures (like ARM).