tricore-probe is an effort to deploy and debug rust programs with little effort
on Tricore chips. It uses publicly available Infineon tools to interface with the
chips debug controller. As its name suggests, it is inspired by probe-run and depends
on the defmt framework to integrate seamlessly just as probe-run does.
Currently only Windows and Linux are supported.
- Infineon DAS tool version 8.1.4
Please make sure the
DAS_HOMEenvironment variable points to the DAS tool installation directory. - Infineon AURIX™ Flasher Software Tool 3.0.0
Please make sure the
AURIX_FLASHER_PATHenvironment variable points to the AurixFlasher executable (<your-path>\AURIXFlasher.exe). defmt-printCLI utility:cargo install defmt-printobjcopyCLI utility (obtain e.g. as part of the MinGW-w64 project)addr2lineCLI utility (obtain e.g. as part of the MinGW-w64 project)- Rust toolchain
- bindgen requirements
Install tricore-probe:
cargo install tricore-probe --git https://github.com/veecle/tricore-probe --version 0.2.0The Linux setup is not officially supported by Infineon and thus might not work as expected. Please report any bugs or issues you encounter with the Linux setup only to this repository, not to Infineon.
- Place the Infineon DAS tool version 8.1.4 installer (
DAS_V8_1_4_SETUP.exe) in tricore-docker. - Place the Infineon AURIX™ Flasher Software Tool 3.0.0 installer (
AURIXFlasherSoftwareTool-setup_3.0.0_20241030-1737.exe) in tricore-docker. objcopyCLI utility- Rust toolchain
libudevlibrary (libudev-devon Ubuntu,systemd-libson Fedora)
Clone the repository and place the DAS tool installer and AurixFlasher installer into the tricore-docker directory. Build the docker container running the DAS tool, AurixFlasher and other utilities.
Note:
The veecle/flash-tricore container will contain an AurixFlasher and DAS installation in a Wine environment.
To use this setup, make sure you checked the terms and conditions of these programs and accept them by setting the required build argument with --build-arg=AGREE_INFINEON_TERMS=1 when building the docker image.
docker build . --tag veecle/flash-tricore --build-arg=AGREE_INFINEON_TERMS=1 -f tricore-docker/DockerfileInstall tricore-probe:
cargo install tricore-probe --git https://github.com/veecle/tricore-probe --version 0.2.0The Linux setup is based on a modified version of the wineftd2xx project by brentr.
> tricore-probe <your-executable>.elf --list-devices
Found 1 devices:
Device 0: "DAS JDS AURIX LITE KIT V2.0 (TC375) LK7KFCF1"
In case of a simple example based on the Bluewind blinky the output will look something like this:
> tricore-probe blinky.elf
DEBUG power on reset
└─ bw_r_drivers_tc37x::ssw::tc0::init_clock @ C:\Users\andra\.cargo\registry\src\github.com-d2f9efa20490c5c8\bw-r-drivers-tc37x-0.2.0\src\ssw\tc0.rs:12
INFO LED2 toggle
└─ blinky::main @ src\main.rs:46
For more sample code refer to the Bluewind bare-metal examples and to the Veecle PXROS examples.
This program can be configured as a runner.
Check main.rs for additional configuration options.
A simple runner config for a TC375 lite kit could look like this:
[target.tc162-htc-none]
runner = "tricore-probe"
# The default dwarf version of the HighTec compiler is version 2 in v0.2.0
# and version 3 in v1.0.0, both versions being incompatible with defmt location information.
rustflags = ["-Z", "dwarf-version=4"]
[build]
target = "tc162-htc-none"Then you can call cargo run in your project root which will run the built .elf on your board via tricore-probe.
Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.