I'm trying to get a 'hello world' type program running on my Beagleboar-xm rev. C, by calling a C puts function from assembly.

So far I've been using this as a reference http://wiki.osdev.org/ARM_Beagleboard

Here's what I have so far, but there's no output.

hello.c

volatile unsigned int * const UART3DR = (unsigned int *)0x49020000;

void puts(const char *s) {
  while(*s != '\0') { 
    *UART3DR = (unsigned int)(*s); 
    s++; 
  }
}

void hello() {
  puts("Hello, Beagleboard!\n");
}

boot.asm

.global start
start:
   ldr sp, =stack_bottom
   bl hello
   b .

linker.ld

ENTRY(start)

MEMORY
{
    ram : ORIGIN = 0x80200000, LENGTH = 0x10000
}

SECTIONS
{
    .hello : { hello.o(.text) } > ram
    .text : { *(.text) } > ram
    .data : { *(.data) } > ram
    .bss : { *(.bss) } > ram
     . = . + 0x5000; /* 4kB of stack memory */
    stack_bottom = .;

}

Makefile

ARMGNU = arm-linux-gnueabi

AOPS = --warn --fatal-warnings
COPS = -Wall -Werror -O2 -nostdlib -nostartfiles -ffreestanding

boot.bin: boot.asm
   $(ARMGNU)-as boot.asm -o boot.o
   $(ARMGNU)-gcc-4.6 -c $(COPS) hello.c -o hello.o
   $(ARMGNU)-ld -T linker.ld hello.o boot.o -o boot.elf
   $(ARMGNU)-objdump -D boot.elf > boot.list
   $(ARMGNU)-objcopy boot.elf -O srec boot.srec
   $(ARMGNU)-objcopy boot.elf -O binary boot.bin

Using just the asm file like this works.

.equ UART3.BASE,        0x49020000
start:
   ldr r0,=UART3.BASE
   mov r1,#'c'

Here are some Beagleboard/minicom related info http://paste.ubuntu.com/829072/

Any pointers? :)

LE I also tried

void hello() {
  *UART3DR = 'c';
}

I'm using minicom and send the file via ymodem, then I try to run it with:

go 0x80200000

Hardware and software control flow in minicom are off.

link|improve this question
feedback

3 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

that should have worked for you. Here is some code I dug up from way back when, did not try it on a beagleboard tonight just made sure it compiled, it had worked at one time...

startup.s:

    .code 32

.globl _start
_start:

    bl main
hang: b hang

.globl PUT32
PUT32:
    str r1,[r0]
    bx lr

.globl GET32
GET32:
    ldr r0,[r0]
    bx lr

hello.c :

extern void PUT32 ( unsigned int, unsigned int );
extern unsigned int GET32 ( unsigned int );
void uart_send ( unsigned char x )
{
    while((GET32(0x49020014)&0x20)==0x00) continue;
    PUT32(0x49020000,x);
}
void hexstring ( unsigned int d )
{
    //unsigned int ra;
    unsigned int rb;
    unsigned int rc;

    rb=32;
    while(1)
    {
        rb-=4;
        rc=(d>>rb)&0xF;
        if(rc>9) rc+=0x37; else rc+=0x30;
        uart_send(rc);
        if(rb==0) break;
    }
    uart_send(0x0D);
    uart_send(0x0A);
}
int main ( void )
{
    hexstring(0x12345678);
    return(0);
}

memmap (linker script):

MEMORY
{
    ram : ORIGIN = 0x82000000, LENGTH = 256K
}

SECTIONS
{
    ROM : { startup.o } > ram
}

Makefile :

CROSS_COMPILE = arm-none-eabi

AOPS = --warn --fatal-warnings 
COPS = -Wall -Werror -O2 -nostdlib -nostartfiles -ffreestanding 

all : hello.bin

hello.bin : startup.o hello.o memmap
    $(CROSS_COMPILE)-ld startup.o hello.o -T memmap -o hello.elf  
    $(CROSS_COMPILE)-objdump -D hello.elf > hello.list
    $(CROSS_COMPILE)-objcopy hello.elf -O binary hello.bin

startup.o : startup.s
    $(CROSS_COMPILE)-as $(AOPS) startup.s -o startup.o

hello.o : hello.c 
    $(CROSS_COMPILE)-gcc -c $(COPS) hello.c -o hello.o

clean :
    rm -f *.o
    rm -f *.elf
    rm -f *.bin
    rm -f *.list

Looks like I just left the stack pointer wherever the bootloader had it. Likewise, as you, assumed the bootloader had initialized the serial port.

I assume you have serial port access working, you see uboot and you are able to type commands in order to download this program (xmodem, or whatever) into the boards ram? If you cant do that then it may be you are not connected to the serial port right. the beagleboards serial port is screwy, might need to make your own cable.

link|improve this answer
It works, thanks. Now I need to figure out what I'm doing wrong. It's the first piece of code != ASM that actually prints something. – rraf Feb 5 at 11:26
For further reference if someone is having trouble with this. I modified the Makefile CROSS_COMPILE = arm-none-linux-gnueabi as I'm using the codesourcery toolchain for linux. Loaded the file with loady via ymodem, and while de memmap has it's origin at 0x82000000 I went agead and ran it with go 0x80200000 even though you set the origin at 0x82000000. – rraf Feb 5 at 11:28
both arm-none-linux-gnueabi and arm-none-eabi are from codesourcery, if you dont make any system calls then either will work. Supposedly the non-linux version is better if you use gcclib calls (use divide or modulo or things like that). – dwelch Feb 5 at 11:52
not to imply arm-none-linux-gnueabi, can only be from code sourcery (now mentor graphics). you can certainly build either of the mentioned targets from gnu sources yourself and the above code will work. – dwelch Feb 5 at 11:54
1  
Not a problem, bare metal, low level stuff, is a lost art and I am interested in keeping it alive. thank you for not giving up on this, and I hope you continue to understand and learn things at this level. I am learning every day myself... – dwelch Feb 6 at 15:13
show 8 more comments
feedback

You can't just blindly write a string of characters to a UART - you need to check status on each character - it works in the single character example because the UART is always going to be ready for the first character, but for the second and subsequent characters you need to poll (or better yet use an ISR, but let's walk before we run).

There's some good example code here: http://hardwarefreak.wordpress.com/2011/08/30/some-experience-with-the-beagleboard-xm-part-2/

link|improve this answer
Check out the LE. I also tried printing only one character and I didn't get any output, nice article will check if it solves the issue, though I would really like to know what I do wrong and where. – rraf Feb 4 at 18:23
Maybe try running the code form the link I gave above and see if that works ? If it does work then you can compare with your code and see what's different ? – Paul R Feb 4 at 18:25
Tried, doesn't work. – rraf Feb 4 at 18:41
Make sure you turn off hardware flow control – Paul R Feb 4 at 19:15
it's off I said it in the later edit, last line. I've rerun the assembly example and it works, when calling C it doesn't. – rraf Feb 4 at 19:16
show 1 more comment
feedback

I've not enough repetation to comment.. But my answere to

Works either way. Now the weird thing is that I can print individual characters with with uart_send('c') for example, but cannot print strings print_string(char *str){ while (*str != '\0') uart_send (*str++); } print_string("Test"); . Any thoughts on this?

is:

You write faster in the output buffer, as UART is able to send.. So you've to check, if the output buffer is empty, before you send a new character.

I've done this in the code on my blog (http://hardwarefreak.wordpress.com/2011/08/30/some-experience-with-the-beagleboard-xm-part-2/)

link|improve this answer
I'm doing that :), I've also moved rodata to .text yet nothing on the screen except if I do print_char('c'); – rraf Feb 6 at 14:22
Mmh.. Are interrupts enabled? Can I see your code and compare with mine? – Hardwarefreak Feb 6 at 14:33
sorry, I messed up the starting address, thanks for your time and your great example :) – rraf Feb 6 at 15:05
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.