Hi Nial,
Yes you are correct.
When I wrote my Srec-converter program, I looked at a nios-built Srec
file, and all records were contiguous. Later on, I realized in some
programs, nios-build will skip bytes here and there. Live and learn.
> cruzin <cruiser144@hotmail.com> wrote in message
> news:775730eb.0401172120.28d24bd6@posting.google.com...
> > Hi Petter,
> >
> > I wrote a program to convert an Srec file to a binary file and then
> > downloaded this over a PCI/Avalon bridge.
> >
> > I have found my problem, which was that I assumed the Srec file was
> > always writing a contiguous memory region, when in fact sometimes
> > addresses are skipped, presumably for alignment optimization.
>
> If you have a look at the srec spec, I'm fairly sure the
> first data after the 's' on every line is the address that
> line starts at.
>
>
> Nial
>
> ------------------------------------------------
> Nial Stewart Developments Ltd
> FPGA and High Speed Digital Design
> Cyclone based 'Easy PCI' dev board
> www.nialstewartdevelopments.co.uk
Reply by Nial Stewart●January 18, 20042004-01-18
cruzin <cruiser144@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:775730eb.0401172120.28d24bd6@posting.google.com...
> Hi Petter,
>
> I wrote a program to convert an Srec file to a binary file and then
> downloaded this over a PCI/Avalon bridge.
>
> I have found my problem, which was that I assumed the Srec file was
> always writing a contiguous memory region, when in fact sometimes
> addresses are skipped, presumably for alignment optimization.
If you have a look at the srec spec, I'm fairly sure the
first data after the 's' on every line is the address that
line starts at.
Nial
------------------------------------------------
Nial Stewart Developments Ltd
FPGA and High Speed Digital Design
Cyclone based 'Easy PCI' dev board
www.nialstewartdevelopments.co.uk
Reply by cruzin●January 18, 20042004-01-18
Hi Petter,
I wrote a program to convert an Srec file to a binary file and then
downloaded this over a PCI/Avalon bridge.
I have found my problem, which was that I assumed the Srec file was
always writing a contiguous memory region, when in fact sometimes
addresses are skipped, presumably for alignment optimization.
> cruiser144@hotmail.com (cruzin) writes:
>
> > I can download a program to memory using "nios-run my_prog.srec" and
> > it works fine.
> >
> > However, when I write the program into the same memory manually (ie.
> > memory fill command), nios will not wrong the program properly.
>
> Maybe a stupid question: How do you run your manually entered program?
> Are you using the go (G) command in germs? Can you use go to *re-run*
> the downloaded srec file?
>
> Petter
Reply by ●January 16, 20042004-01-16
cruiser144@hotmail.com (cruzin) writes:
> I can download a program to memory using "nios-run my_prog.srec" and
> it works fine.
>
> However, when I write the program into the same memory manually (ie.
> memory fill command), nios will not wrong the program properly.
Maybe a stupid question: How do you run your manually entered program?
Are you using the go (G) command in germs? Can you use go to *re-run*
the downloaded srec file?
Petter
--
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing on usenet and in e-mail?
Reply by fabbl●January 15, 20042004-01-15
What are you talking about?
"cruzin" <cruiser144@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:775730eb.0401142320.250e4218@posting.google.com...
> Hello,
>
> I can download a program to memory using "nios-run my_prog.srec" and
> it works fine.
>
> However, when I write the program into the same memory manually (ie.
> memory fill command), nios will not wrong the program properly.
>
> I verified that both methods write exactly the same program bytes into
> memory, but nios-run does something with the memory AFTER the program
> end. This must be the source of my problems. Why are bytes changed
> after the end of the program?
>
> I verified every byte up until the last byte written as defined by the
> S-Record.
>
> Any ideas on what steps nios-run goes through?
>
> Help is greatly appreciated.
Reply by cruzin●January 15, 20042004-01-15
Hello,
I can download a program to memory using "nios-run my_prog.srec" and
it works fine.
However, when I write the program into the same memory manually (ie.
memory fill command), nios will not wrong the program properly.
I verified that both methods write exactly the same program bytes into
memory, but nios-run does something with the memory AFTER the program
end. This must be the source of my problems. Why are bytes changed
after the end of the program?
I verified every byte up until the last byte written as defined by the
S-Record.
Any ideas on what steps nios-run goes through?
Help is greatly appreciated.