Documentation/Platforms/OpenRISC: Difference between revisions
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-D z -d in_asm,exec,int,op_opt | -D z -d in_asm,exec,int,op_opt | ||
== Pictures == | |||
[[File:Openrisc-system-boot-screenshot.png|400px|Linux booting up]<span style="margin:20px;"></span> | |||
[[File:Openrisc-system-commands-screenshot.png|400px|Linux command line execution]]<br><br> | |||
[[File:openrisc-user-screenshot.png|400px|Use more]]<br> | |||
== Links == | == Links == |
Revision as of 14:35, 23 February 2017
Description
OpenRISC is an open source processor architecture. While instruction sets like x86 are proprietary and owned by a single company, OpenRISC is free. Its main use is as a processor on an embedded system.
Full system emulation
To boot linux you can run the following.
qemu-system-or1k -cpu or1200 -M or1k-sim -kernel $LINUX/vmlinux -serial stdio -nographic -monitor none
For networking support you can add the following options, note the open_eth option requires an out of tree driver from openrisc/linux.
-device open_eth -netdev tap,id=or1k
User mode emulation
Using QEMU user mode emulation we can run and debug OpenRISC binaries on your host linux.
$ cat main.c #include <stdio.h> int main() { printf ("hello\n"); return 0; } $ or1k-linux-musl-gcc main.c # Here $LDPATH/lib/ld-musl-or1k.so.1 is linked to or1k-linux-musl/lib/libc.so $ qemu-or1k -L $LDPATH ./a.out hello
Debugging Tips
For debugging openrisc can listen on a gdb stub port with the following options
-gdb tcp::10001
To get good traces you can also add the following, this will output trace info the a file z
-D z -d in_asm,exec,int,op_opt
Pictures
[[File:Openrisc-system-boot-screenshot.png|400px|Linux booting up]
Links
- Video introducing OpenRISC
- The OpenRISC project site
- OpenRISC 1000 specification
- GCC toolchain releases and binaries
Contacts
Maintainer: Jia Liu