SPRABA5D January   2014  – January 2019 AM1802 , AM1802 , AM1806 , AM1806 , AM1808 , AM1808 , AM1810 , AM1810

 

  1.   Using the AM18xx Bootloader
    1.     Trademarks
    2. Introduction
    3. Boot Modes
    4. Non-AIS Boot Modes
      1. 3.1 NOR Boot
        1. 3.1.1 Legacy NOR Boot
        2. 3.1.2 Direct NOR Boot
        3. 3.1.3 AIS NOR Boot
      2. 3.2 Host Port Interface (HPI) Boot
      3. 3.3 Emulation Debug Boot
    5. Application Image Script (AIS) Boot
      1. 4.1  Section Load Command (0x58535901)
      2. 4.2  Section Fill Command (0x5853590A)
      3. 4.3  Enable CRC Command (0x58535903)
      4. 4.4  Disable CRC Command (0x58535904)
      5. 4.5  Validate CRC Command (0x58535902)
      6. 4.6  Jump & Close Command (0x58535906)
      7. 4.7  Jump Command (0x58535905)
      8. 4.8  Sequential Read Enable Command (0x58535963)
      9. 4.9  Function Execute Command (0x5853590D)
      10. 4.10 Boot Table Command (0x58535907)
    6. AISgen: Tool to Generate Boot Script (AIS Image)
      1. 5.1 Installation
      2. 5.2 Getting Started
      3. 5.3 Generating AIS
        1. 5.3.1  Boot Mode and Boot Peripheral Setup
        2. 5.3.2  Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) Setup
        3. 5.3.3  Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory (SDRAM) Setup
        4. 5.3.4  DDR Setup
        5. 5.3.5  PSC Setup
        6. 5.3.6  Pin Multiplexing Setup
        7. 5.3.7  Application File Selection
        8. 5.3.8  AIS File Selection
        9. 5.3.9  Status and Messages
        10. 5.3.10 Additional AIS Options
          1. 5.3.10.1 CRC
          2. 5.3.10.2 Specifying the Application Entrypoint
        11. 5.3.11 Command Line Usage
    7. Master Boot – Booting From a Slave Memory Device
      1. 6.1 I2C EEPROM Boot
      2. 6.2 SPI EEPROM or Flash Boot
      3. 6.3 NOR Flash Boot
      4. 6.4 NAND Flash Boot
      5. 6.5 MMC/SD Boot
    8. Slave Boot – Booting From an External Master Host
      1. 7.1 About the AIS Interpreter on the Host
      2. 7.2 Start-Word Synchronization (SWS)
      3. 7.3 Ping Op-Code Synchronization (POS)
      4. 7.4 Opcode Synchronization (OS)
    9. UART Boot Host - Using Your PC as a UART Boot Master
      1. 8.1 Getting Started
      2. 8.2 Booting the Device
      3. 8.3 The AIS_Util.cs Source Code
    10. Boot Requirements, Constraints and Default Settings
      1. 9.1 General Comments
      2. 9.2 UART-Boot Modes
      3. 9.3 I2C-Boot Modes
      4. 9.4 SPI-Boot Modes
      5. 9.5 NOR-Boot Modes
      6. 9.6 NAND-Boot Modes
      7. 9.7 MMC/SD-Boot Modes
      8. 9.8 HPI-Boot Modes
    11. 10 References
  2.   A Boot Mode Selection Table
    1.     A.1 Boot Mode Selection Table
  3.   B Details of Supported NAND Devices
    1.     B.1 Details of Supported NAND Devices
  4.   C CRC Computation Algorithm
    1.     C.1 CRC Computation Algorithm
  5.   D Details of Pre-Defined ROM Functions
    1.     D.1 PLL0 Configuration (Index = 0, Argument Count = 2)
    2.     D.2 PLL1 Configuration (Index = 1, Argument Count = 2)
    3.     D.3 Clock Configuration (Index = 2, Argument Count = 1)
      1.      D.3.1 SPI Master Register
      2.      D.3.2 I2C Master Register
      3.      D.3.3 UART Slave Register
      4.      D.3.4 MMC/SD Register
    4.     D.4 mDDR/DDR2 Controller Configuration (Index = 3, Argument Count = 8)
    5.     D.5 EMIFA SDRAM Configuration (Index = 4, Argument Count = 5)
    6.     D.6 EMIFA Async Configuration (Index = 5, Argument Count = 5)
    7.     D.7 PLL and Clock Configuration (Index = 6, Argument Count = 3)
    8.     D.8 Power and Sleep Configuration (PSC) (Index = 7, Argument Count = 1)
    9.     D.9 Pinmux Configuration (Index = 8, Argument Count = 3)
  6.   E ROM Revision History
    1.     E.1 ROMID: D800K002, Silicon Revision 1.0
    2.     E.2 ROMID: D800K004, Silicon Revision 1.1
    3.     E.3 ROMID: D800K006, Silicon Revision 2.0
    4.     E.4 ROMID: D800K008, Silicon Revision 2.1
  7.   Revision History

UART-Boot Modes

  • By default, UART boot operates at 115.2 kbps. The external UART device must be configured as follows: 115200 baud, 8 data bits, no parity, 1 stop bit, and no flow control.
  • To obtain a standard baud rate of 115.2 kbps with default settings, the device input clock must be 24.000 MHz. Optionally, boot pins BOOT[7:5] may be used to enable alternative input clock sources and baud rates. You must specify the appropriate input clock speed, PLL0 multiplier, and UART baud rate in the AISgen tool to ensure that the UART peripheral operates at constant speed throughout the boot process.

Table 7. UART Baud Rate Selection Using Boot Pins

BOOT[7..5] PLL0 Multiplier UART Divider UART Oversampling Input Clock (MHz) Resulting Baud Rate Usable Standard Baud
000 x1 8 x13 24 115384 115200
000 x1 8 x13 12 57692 57600
001 x1 9 x13 27 115384 115200
001 x1 9 x13 13.5 57692 57600
010 x1 10 x13 30 115384 115200
010 x1 10 x13 15 57692 57600
011 x25 70 x13 16.8 115384 115200
100 x25 80 x13 19.2 115384 115200
101 x20 82 x13 24.576 115272 115200
101 x20 82 x13 12.288 57636 57600
110 x23 96 x13 25 115184 115200
111 x21 91 x13 26 115384 115200
111 x21 91 x13 13 57692 57600

NOTE

ROM revision d800k002 ignores these pins and always uses the 000 configuration. To check your ROM revision, follow the instructions in Section 1.