A small tool to write files in TI's CC3200 SimpleLink (TM) filesystem.
Copyright (C) 2016-2020 Allterco Robotics
NO LONGER ACTIVELY MAINTAINED HERE
Forks with CC3220 support exist, but not sure which one works best. @mon has adopted support for CC3200, go to https://github.com/mon/cc3200tool
The only other tool which can officially do this is Uniflash, but good luck using that on a modern Linux system.
There is also cc3200prog
which Energia sneak in their toolchain tarball,
but it's not open source and can only write to /sys/mcuimg.bin
.
Finally, there's the great guys at Cesanta who reversed the CC3200 bootloader protocol just enough to make day-to-day development on the platform possible. However, their tool is specific to smart.js and feeds on specially-crafted zip archives.
This tool is based on the work done by Cesanta but is written in Python and exposes a generic cli interface for uploading user files and application binaries on a CC3200-attached serial flash.
cc3200tool
can upload NWP/MAC/PHY firmwares (/sys/servicepack.ucf
), but it seems
this only works on a clean FS. The tool also implements the functionality
described in TI's Application Note CC3100/CC3200 Embedded Programming.
This runs on Python >=3.6 with recent pySerial.
To install, if you have pip and want system-wide:
pip install git+git://github.com/mon/cc3200tool.git
or clone this repǫ
git clone https://github.com/mon/cc3200tool.git
cd cc3200tool
then it's just like any other python package:
python setup.py install # as root, system-wide
# or in a virtualenv with pip
virtualenv env && ./env/bin/activate
pip install -e .
# then get updates with
git pull
You need a serial port connected to the target's UART interface. For
programming to work, SOP2 needs to be asserted (i.e. tied to VCC) and a reset
has to be peformed to switch the chip in bootloader mode. cc3200tool
can
optionally use the RTS and DTR lines of the serial port controller to
automatically perform these actions via the --sop2
and --reset
options.
See cc3200tool -h
and cc3200tool <subcommand> -h
for complete description
of arguments. Some examples:
# upload an application
cc3200tool -p /dev/ttyUSB2 --sop2 ~dtr --reset prompt \
write_file ./exe/myapp.bin /sys/mcuimg.bin
# format and upload an application binary
cc3200tool -p /dev/ttyUSB2 \
format_flash --size 1M \
write_file exe/program.bin /sys/mcuimg.bin
# dump a file on stdout
cc3200tool read_file /sys/mcuimg.bin -
# format the flash, upload a servciepack and two files
cc3200tool -p /dev/ttyUSB2 --sop2 ~rts --reset dtr \
format_flash --size=1M \
write_file --file-size=0x20000 \
--signature ../servicepack-ota/ota_1.0.1.6-2.6.0.5.ucf.signed.bin \
../servicepack-ota/ota_1.0.1.6-2.6.0.5.ucf.ucf /sys/servicepack.ucf \
write_file ../application_bootloader/gcc/exe/application_bootloader.bin /sys/mcuimg.bin \
write_file yourapp.bin /sys/mcuimg1.bin
# list file and filesystem statistics (occupied and free block sequences)
cc3200tool -p /dev/ttyUSB2 list_filesystem