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Robin Mueller d2369767b7 BSP update
- Add basic LED BSP
- Moved generic examples to the HAL
- Updated rust edition to 2021
- Updated README to provide full instructions for flashing and building
- Added jlink.gdb file to command line flashing
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Rust BSP for the Vorago REB1 development board

This is the Rust Board Support Package crate for the Vorago REB1 development board. Its aim is to provide drivers for the board features of the REB1 board

The BSP builds on top of the HAL crate for VA108xx devices.

Building

Building an application requires the thumbv6m-none-eabi cross-compiler toolchain. If you have not installed it yet, you can do so with

rustup target add thumbv6m-none-eabi

This repository provides some example applications to show how the BSP is used. For example you can build the blinky example with

cargo build --example blinky-leds

Flashing from the command line

A jlink.gdb file is provided to allow flashing of the board from the command line.

  1. Ensure that you have a suitable GDB application like arm-none-eabi-gdb or gdb-multiarch installed first. On Windows, you can use xPacks. On Linux, you can install gdb-multiarch from the package manager.

  2. Install the JLink Tools.

  3. Start the JLink GDB server with the GUI or from the command line. The device should be recognized automatically

  4. Make sure to select an appropriate runner in the .cargo/config.toml file depending on which GDB application you are using

  5. Use

    cargo run --example blinky-leds
    

    to flash the board. The debugger should stop at the start of the main.

Debugging with VS Code

The REB1 board features an on-board JTAG, so all that is required to flash the board is a Micro-USB cable and an You can debug applications on the REB1 board with a graphical user interface using VS Code with the Cortex-Debug plugin.

Some sample configuration files for VS code were provided as well. You can simply use Run and Debug to automatically rebuild and flash your application.

Flashing the non-volatile memory

Coming Soon