4 OpenOCD provides on-chip programming and debugging support with a
5 layered architecture of JTAG interface and TAP support including:
7 - (X)SVF playback to facilitate automated boundary scan and FPGA/CPLD
9 - debug target support (e.g. ARM, MIPS): single-stepping,
10 breakpoints/watchpoints, gprof profiling, etc;
11 - flash chip drivers (e.g. CFI, NAND, internal flash);
12 - embedded TCL interpreter for easy scripting.
14 Several network interfaces are available for interacting with OpenOCD:
15 telnet, TCL, and GDB. The GDB server enables OpenOCD to function as a
16 "remote target" for source-level debugging of embedded systems using
17 the GNU GDB program (and the others who talk GDB protocol, e.g. IDA
20 This README file contains an overview of the following topics:
22 - quickstart instructions,
23 - how to find and build more OpenOCD documentation,
24 - list of the supported hardware,
25 - the installation and build process,
29 ============================
30 Quickstart for the impatient
31 ============================
33 If you have a popular board then just start OpenOCD with its config,
36 openocd -f board/stm32f4discovery.cfg
38 If you are connecting a particular adapter with some specific target,
39 you need to source both the jtag interface and the target configs,
42 openocd -f interface/ftdi/jtagkey2.cfg -c "transport select jtag" \
43 -f target/ti_calypso.cfg
45 openocd -f interface/stlink.cfg -c "transport select hla_swd" \
48 After OpenOCD startup, connect GDB with
50 (gdb) target extended-remote localhost:3333
57 In addition to the in-tree documentation, the latest manuals may be
58 viewed online at the following URLs:
61 http://openocd.org/doc/html/index.html
63 OpenOCD Developer's Manual:
64 http://openocd.org/doc/doxygen/html/index.html
66 These reflect the latest development versions, so the following section
67 introduces how to build the complete documentation from the package.
69 For more information, refer to these documents or contact the developers
70 by subscribing to the OpenOCD developer mailing list:
72 openocd-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
74 Building the OpenOCD Documentation
75 ----------------------------------
77 By default the OpenOCD build process prepares documentation in the
78 "Info format" and installs it the standard way, so that "info openocd"
81 Additionally, the OpenOCD User's Guide can be produced in the
82 following different formats:
84 # If PDFVIEWER is set, this creates and views the PDF User Guide.
85 make pdf && ${PDFVIEWER} doc/openocd.pdf
87 # If HTMLVIEWER is set, this creates and views the HTML User Guide.
88 make html && ${HTMLVIEWER} doc/openocd.html/index.html
90 The OpenOCD Developer Manual contains information about the internal
91 architecture and other details about the code:
93 # NB! make sure doxygen is installed, type doxygen --version
94 make doxygen && ${HTMLVIEWER} doxygen/index.html
104 AM335x, ARM-JTAG-EW, ARM-USB-OCD, ARM-USB-TINY, AT91RM9200, axm0432, BCM2835,
105 Bus Blaster, Buspirate, Cadence DPI, Cadence vdebug, Chameleon, CMSIS-DAP,
106 Cortino, Cypress KitProg, DENX, Digilent JTAG-SMT2, DLC 5, DLP-USB1232H,
107 embedded projects, Espressif USB JTAG Programmer,
108 eStick, FlashLINK, FlossJTAG, Flyswatter, Flyswatter2,
109 FTDI FT232R, Gateworks, Hoegl, ICDI, ICEBear, J-Link, JTAG VPI, JTAGkey,
110 JTAGkey2, JTAG-lock-pick, KT-Link, Linux GPIOD, Lisa/L, LPC1768-Stick,
111 Mellanox rshim, MiniModule, NGX, Nuvoton Nu-Link, Nu-Link2, NXHX, NXP IMX GPIO,
112 OOCDLink, Opendous, OpenJTAG, Openmoko, OpenRD, OSBDM, Presto, Redbee,
113 Remote Bitbang, RLink, SheevaPlug devkit, Stellaris evkits,
114 ST-LINK (SWO tracing supported), STM32-PerformanceStick, STR9-comStick,
115 sysfsgpio, Tigard, TI XDS110, TUMPA, Turtelizer, ULINK, USB-A9260, USB-Blaster,
116 USB-JTAG, USBprog, VPACLink, VSLLink, Wiggler, XDS100v2, Xilinx XVC/PCIe,
122 ARM: AArch64, ARM11, ARM7, ARM9, Cortex-A/R (v7-A/R), Cortex-M (ARMv{6/7/8}-M),
123 FA526, Feroceon/Dragonite, XScale.
124 ARCv2, AVR32, DSP563xx, DSP5680xx, EnSilica eSi-RISC, EJTAG (MIPS32, MIPS64),
125 ESP32, ESP32-S2, ESP32-S3, Intel Quark, LS102x-SAP, RISC-V, ST STM8,
131 ADUC702x, AT91SAM, AT91SAM9 (NAND), ATH79, ATmega128RFA1, Atmel SAM, AVR, CFI,
132 DSP5680xx, EFM32, EM357, eSi-RISC, eSi-TSMC, EZR32HG, FM3, FM4, Freedom E SPI,
133 GD32, i.MX31, Kinetis, LPC8xx/LPC1xxx/LPC2xxx/LPC541xx, LPC2900, LPC3180, LPC32xx,
134 LPCSPIFI, Marvell QSPI, MAX32, Milandr, MXC, NIIET, nRF51, nRF52 , NuMicro,
135 NUC910, Nuvoton NPCX, onsemi RSL10, Orion/Kirkwood, PIC32mx, PSoC4/5LP/6,
136 Raspberry RP2040, Renesas RPC HF and SH QSPI,
137 S3C24xx, S3C6400, SiM3x, SiFive Freedom E, Stellaris, ST BlueNRG, STM32,
138 STM32 QUAD/OCTO-SPI for Flash/FRAM/EEPROM, STMSMI, STR7x, STR9x, SWM050,
139 TI CC13xx, TI CC26xx, TI CC32xx, TI MSP432, Winner Micro w600, Xilinx XCF,
147 A Note to OpenOCD Users
148 -----------------------
150 If you would rather be working "with" OpenOCD rather than "on" it, your
151 operating system or JTAG interface supplier may provide binaries for
152 you in a convenient-enough package.
154 Such packages may be more stable than git mainline, where
155 bleeding-edge development takes place. These "Packagers" produce
156 binary releases of OpenOCD after the developers produces new "release"
157 versions of the source code. Previous versions of OpenOCD cannot be
158 used to diagnose problems with the current release, so users are
159 encouraged to keep in contact with their distribution package
160 maintainers or interface vendors to ensure suitable upgrades appear
163 Users of these binary versions of OpenOCD must contact their Packager to
164 ask for support or newer versions of the binaries; the OpenOCD
165 developers do not support packages directly.
167 A Note to OpenOCD Packagers
168 ---------------------------
170 You are a PACKAGER of OpenOCD if you:
172 - Sell dongles and include pre-built binaries;
173 - Supply tools or IDEs (a development solution integrating OpenOCD);
174 - Build packages (e.g. RPM or DEB files for a GNU/Linux distribution).
176 As a PACKAGER, you will experience first reports of most issues.
177 When you fix those problems for your users, your solution may help
178 prevent hundreds (if not thousands) of other questions from other users.
180 If something does not work for you, please work to inform the OpenOCD
181 developers know how to improve the system or documentation to avoid
182 future problems, and follow-up to help us ensure the issue will be fully
183 resolved in our future releases.
185 That said, the OpenOCD developers would also like you to follow a few
188 - Send patches, including config files, upstream, participate in the
190 - Enable all the options OpenOCD supports, even those unrelated to your
192 - Use "ftdi" interface adapter driver for the FTDI-based devices.
199 The INSTALL file contains generic instructions for running 'configure'
200 and compiling the OpenOCD source code. That file is provided by
201 default for all GNU autotools packages. If you are not familiar with
202 the GNU autotools, then you should read those instructions first.
204 The remainder of this document tries to provide some instructions for
205 those looking for a quick-install.
210 GCC or Clang is currently required to build OpenOCD. The developers
211 have begun to enforce strict code warnings (-Wall, -Werror, -Wextra,
212 and more) and use C99-specific features: inline functions, named
213 initializers, mixing declarations with code, and other tricks. While
214 it may be possible to use other compilers, they must be somewhat
215 modern and could require extending support to conditionally remove
216 GCC-specific extensions.
222 - pkg-config >= 0.23 or pkgconf
224 OpenOCD uses jimtcl library; build from git can retrieve jimtcl as git
227 Additionally, for building from git:
233 Optional USB-based adapter drivers need libusb-1.0.
235 Optional USB-Blaster, ASIX Presto and OpenJTAG interface adapter
237 - libftdi: http://www.intra2net.com/en/developer/libftdi/index.php
239 Optional CMSIS-DAP adapter driver needs HIDAPI library.
241 Optional linuxgpiod adapter driver needs libgpiod library.
243 Optional J-Link adapter driver needs libjaylink library.
245 Optional ARM disassembly needs capstone library.
247 Optional development script checkpatch needs:
253 Permissions delegation
254 ----------------------
256 Running OpenOCD with root/administrative permissions is strongly
257 discouraged for security reasons.
259 For USB devices on GNU/Linux you should use the contrib/60-openocd.rules
260 file. It probably belongs somewhere in /etc/udev/rules.d, but
261 consult your operating system documentation to be sure. Do not forget
262 to add yourself to the "plugdev" group.
264 For parallel port adapters on GNU/Linux and FreeBSD please change your
265 "ppdev" (parport* or ppi*) device node permissions accordingly.
267 For parport adapters on Windows you need to run install_giveio.bat
268 (it's also possible to use "ioperm" with Cygwin instead) to give
269 ordinary users permissions for accessing the "LPT" registers directly.
274 To build OpenOCD, use the following sequence of commands:
276 ./bootstrap (when building from the git repository)
277 ./configure [options]
281 The 'configure' step generates the Makefiles required to build
282 OpenOCD, usually with one or more options provided to it. The first
283 'make' step will build OpenOCD and place the final executable in
284 './src/'. The final (optional) step, ``make install'', places all of
285 the files in the required location.
287 To see the list of all the supported options, run
290 Cross-compiling Options
291 -----------------------
293 Cross-compiling is supported the standard autotools way, you just need
294 to specify the cross-compiling target triplet in the --host option,
295 e.g. for cross-building for Windows 32-bit with MinGW on Debian:
297 ./configure --host=i686-w64-mingw32 [options]
299 To make pkg-config work nicely for cross-compiling, you might need an
300 additional wrapper script as described at
302 https://autotools.io/pkgconfig/cross-compiling.html
304 This is needed to tell pkg-config where to look for the target
305 libraries that OpenOCD depends on. Alternatively, you can specify
306 *_CFLAGS and *_LIBS environment variables directly, see "./configure
307 --help" for the details.
309 For a more or less complete script that does all this for you, see
311 contrib/cross-build.sh
313 Parallel Port Dongles
314 ---------------------
316 If you want to access the parallel port using the PPDEV interface you
317 have to specify both --enable-parport AND --enable-parport-ppdev, since
318 the later option is an option to the parport driver.
320 The same is true for the --enable-parport-giveio option, you have to
321 use both the --enable-parport AND the --enable-parport-giveio option
322 if you want to use giveio instead of ioperm parallel port access
326 ==========================
327 Obtaining OpenOCD From GIT
328 ==========================
330 You can download the current GIT version with a GIT client of your
331 choice from the main repository:
333 git://git.code.sf.net/p/openocd/code
335 You may prefer to use a mirror:
337 http://repo.or.cz/r/openocd.git
338 git://repo.or.cz/openocd.git
340 Using the GIT command line client, you might use the following command
341 to set up a local copy of the current repository (make sure there is no
342 directory called "openocd" in the current directory):
344 git clone git://git.code.sf.net/p/openocd/code openocd
346 Then you can update that at your convenience using
350 There is also a gitweb interface, which you can use either to browse
351 the repository or to download arbitrary snapshots using HTTP:
353 http://repo.or.cz/w/openocd.git
355 Snapshots are compressed tarballs of the source tree, about 1.3 MBytes
356 each at this writing.