3 * This file contains special DoxyGen information for the generation of the main page and other special
4 * documentation pages. It is not a project source file.
7 /** \mainpage CDC Class USB AVR Bootloader
9 * \section Sec_Compat Demo Compatibility:
11 * The following list indicates what microcontrollers are compatible with this demo.
13 * \li Series 7 USB AVRs (AT90USBxxx7)
14 * \li Series 6 USB AVRs (AT90USBxxx6)
15 * \li Series 4 USB AVRs (ATMEGAxxU4)
16 * \li Series 2 USB AVRs (AT90USBxx2, ATMEGAxxU2)
18 * \section Sec_Info USB Information:
20 * The following table gives a rundown of the USB utilization of this demo.
24 * <td><b>USB Mode:</b></td>
28 * <td><b>USB Class:</b></td>
29 * <td>Communications Device Class (CDC)</td>
32 * <td><b>USB Subclass:</b></td>
33 * <td>Abstract Control Model (ACM)</td>
36 * <td><b>Relevant Standards:</b></td>
37 * <td>USBIF CDC Class Standard</td>
40 * <td><b>Supported USB Speeds:</b></td>
41 * <td>Full Speed Mode</td>
45 * \section Sec_Description Project Description:
47 * This bootloader enumerates to the host as a CDC Class device (virtual serial port), allowing for AVR109
48 * protocol compatible programming software to load firmware onto the AVR.
50 * Out of the box this bootloader builds for the AT90USB1287 with an 8KB bootloader section size, and will fit
51 * into 4KB of bootloader space. If you wish to alter this size and/or change the AVR model, you will need to
52 * edit the MCU, FLASH_SIZE_KB and BOOT_SECTION_SIZE_KB values in the accompanying makefile.
54 * When the bootloader is running, the board's LED(s) will flash at regular intervals to distinguish the
55 * bootloader from the normal user application.
57 * \warning <b>THIS BOOTLOADER IS NOT SECURE.</b> Malicious entities can recover written data, even if the device
60 * \section Sec_Running Running the Bootloader
62 * On the USB AVR8 devices, setting the \c HWBE device fuse will cause the bootloader to run if the \c HWB pin of
63 * the AVR is grounded when the device is reset.
65 * The are two behaviours of this bootloader, depending on the device's fuses:
67 * <b>If the device's BOOTRST fuse is set</b>, the bootloader will run any time the system is reset from
68 * the external reset pin, unless no valid user application has been loaded. To initiate the bootloader, the
69 * device's external reset pin should be grounded momentarily.
71 * <b>If the device's BOOTRST fuse is not set</b>, the bootloader will run only if initiated via a software
72 * jump, or if the \c HWB pin was low during the last device reset (if the \c HWBE fuse is set).
74 * For board specific exceptions to the above, see below.
76 * \subsection SSec_XPLAIN Atmel Xplain Board
77 * Ground the USB AVR JTAG's \c TCK pin to ground when powering on the board to start the bootloader. This assumes the
78 * \c HWBE fuse is cleared and the \c BOOTRST fuse is set as the HWBE pin is not user accessible on this board.
80 * \subsection SSec_Leonardo Arduino Leonardo Board
81 * Ground \c IO13 when powering the board to start the bootloader. This assumes the \c HWBE fuse is cleared and the
82 * \c BOOTRST fuse is set as the HWBE pin is not user accessible on this board.
84 * \section Sec_Installation Driver Installation
86 * After running this bootloader for the first time on a new computer, you will need to supply the .INF
87 * file located in this bootloader project's directory as the device's driver when running under Windows.
88 * This will enable Windows to use its inbuilt CDC drivers, negating the need for custom drivers for the
89 * device. Other Operating Systems should automatically use their own inbuilt CDC-ACM drivers.
91 * \section Sec_HostApp Host Controller Application
93 * This bootloader is compatible with the open source application AVRDUDE, Atmel's AVRPROG, or other
94 * applications implementing the AVR109 protocol, which is documented on the Atmel website as an application
97 * \subsection SSec_AVRDude AVRDUDE (Windows, Mac, Linux)
99 * AVRDude is a free, cross-platform and open source command line programmer for Atmel and third party AVR
100 * programmers. It is available on the the Windows platform as part of the "WinAVR" package, or on other systems
101 * either from a build from the official source code, or in many distributions as a precompiled binary package.
103 * To load a new HEX file with AVRDude, specify "AVR109" as the programmer, with the allocated COM port. On Windows
104 * platforms this will be a COMx port name:
106 * avrdude -c AVR109 -p at90usb1287 -P COM0 -U flash:w:Mouse.hex
109 * On Linux systems, this will typically be a /dev/ttyACMx port name:
111 * avrdude -c AVR109 -p at90usb1287 -P /dev/ttyACM0 -U flash:w:Mouse.hex
114 * Refer to the AVRDude project documentation for additional usage instructions.
116 * \section Sec_API User Application API
118 * Several user application functions for FLASH and other special memory area manipulations are exposed by the bootloader,
119 * allowing the user application to call into the bootloader at runtime to read and write FLASH data.
121 * By default, the bootloader API jump table is located 32 bytes from the end of the device's FLASH memory, and follows the
125 * #define BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_SIZE 32
126 * #define BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_START ((FLASHEND + 1UL) - BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_SIZE)
127 * #define BOOTLOADER_API_CALL(Index) (void*)((BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_START + (Index * 2)) / 2)
129 * void (*BootloaderAPI_ErasePage)(uint32_t Address) = BOOTLOADER_API_CALL(0);
130 * void (*BootloaderAPI_WritePage)(uint32_t Address) = BOOTLOADER_API_CALL(1);
131 * void (*BootloaderAPI_FillWord)(uint32_t Address, uint16_t Word) = BOOTLOADER_API_CALL(2);
132 * uint8_t (*BootloaderAPI_ReadSignature)(uint16_t Address) = BOOTLOADER_API_CALL(3);
133 * uint8_t (*BootloaderAPI_ReadFuse)(uint16_t Address) = BOOTLOADER_API_CALL(4);
134 * uint8_t (*BootloaderAPI_ReadLock)(void) = BOOTLOADER_API_CALL(5);
135 * void (*BootloaderAPI_WriteLock)(uint8_t LockBits) = BOOTLOADER_API_CALL(6);
137 * #define BOOTLOADER_MAGIC_SIGNATURE_START (BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_START + (BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_SIZE - 2))
138 * #define BOOTLOADER_MAGIC_SIGNATURE 0xDCFB
140 * #define BOOTLOADER_CLASS_SIGNATURE_START (BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_START + (BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_SIZE - 4))
141 * #define BOOTLOADER_CDC_SIGNATURE 0xDF00
143 * #define BOOTLOADER_ADDRESS_START (BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_START + (BOOTLOADER_API_TABLE_SIZE - 8))
144 * #define BOOTLOADER_ADDRESS_LENGTH 4
147 * From the application the API support of the bootloader can be detected by reading the FLASH memory bytes located at address
148 * \c BOOTLOADER_MAGIC_SIGNATURE_START and comparing them to the value \c BOOTLOADER_MAGIC_SIGNATURE. The class of bootloader
149 * can be determined by reading the FLASH memory bytes located at address \c BOOTLOADER_CLASS_SIGNATURE_START and comparing them
150 * to the value \c BOOTLOADER_CDC_SIGNATURE. The start address of the bootloader can be retrieved by reading the bytes of FLASH
151 * memory starting from address \c BOOTLOADER_ADDRESS_START.
153 * \subsection SSec_API_MemLayout Device Memory Map
154 * The following illustration indicates the final memory map of the device when loaded with the bootloader.
157 * +----------------------------+ 0x0000
166 * | User Application |
174 * +----------------------------+ FLASHEND - BOOT_SECTION_SIZE
176 * | Bootloader Application |
177 * | (Not User App. Accessible) |
179 * +----------------------------+ FLASHEND - 96
180 * | API Table Trampolines |
181 * | (Not User App. Accessible) |
182 * +----------------------------+ FLASHEND - 32
183 * | Bootloader API Table |
184 * | (User App. Accessible) |
185 * +----------------------------+ FLASHEND - 8
186 * | Bootloader ID Constants |
187 * | (User App. Accessible) |
188 * +----------------------------+ FLASHEND
191 * \section Sec_KnownIssues Known Issues:
193 * \par On Linux machines, the CDC bootloader is unstable or inaccessible.
194 * A change to the \c ModemManager module in many Linux distributions causes
195 * this module to try to take control over inserted CDC devices, corrupting the
196 * datastream. A UDEV rule is required to prevent this.
197 * See <a href=https://groups.google.com/d/msg/lufa-support/CP9cy2bc8yo/kBqsOu-RBeMJ>here</a> for resolution steps.
198 * If the issue still persists then uninstall modemmanager by executing <tt>sudo apt-get remove modemmanager</tt>, or
199 * the equivalent using your chosen distribution's package manager.
201 * \par On Linux machines, the CDC bootloader is inaccessible.
202 * On many Linux systems, non-root users do not have automatic access to newly
203 * inserted CDC devices. Root privileges or a UDEV rule is required to gain
205 * See <a href=https://groups.google.com/d/msg/lufa-support/CP9cy2bc8yo/kBqsOu-RBeMJ>here</a> for resolution steps.
207 * \section Sec_Options Project Options
209 * The following defines can be found in this demo, which can control the demo behaviour when defined, or changed in value.
213 * <th><b>Define Name:</b></th>
214 * <th><b>Location:</b></th>
215 * <th><b>Description:</b></th>
218 * <td>NO_BLOCK_SUPPORT</td>
219 * <td>AppConfig.h</td>
220 * <td>Define to disable memory block read/write support in the bootloader, requiring all reads and writes to be made
221 * using the byte-level commands.</td>
224 * <td>NO_EEPROM_BYTE_SUPPORT</td>
225 * <td>AppConfig.h</td>
226 * <td>Define to disable EEPROM memory byte read/write support in the bootloader, requiring all EEPROM reads and writes
227 * to be made using the block-level commands.</td>
230 * <td>NO_FLASH_BYTE_SUPPORT</td>
231 * <td>AppConfig.h</td>
232 * <td>Define to disable FLASH memory byte read/write support in the bootloader, requiring all FLASH reads and writes
233 * to be made using the block-level commands.</td>
236 * <td>NO_LOCK_BYTE_WRITE_SUPPORT</td>
237 * <td>AppConfig.h</td>
238 * <td>Define to disable lock byte write support in the bootloader, preventing the lock bits from being set programmatically.</td>