Hi Bastian, Thanks for the information. I thought that I can do some prototyping before the HW arrives. :)
Yes I am interested for your bare metal program boot_to_main run it on TSIM. Is Infineon TSIM free? I searched it and I didn't find any download link. Could you please give a link for that if it is from Infineon? s it(TSIM) trace32 simulator ? *https://repo.lauterbach.com/download_demo.html <https://repo.lauterbach.com/download_demo.html> *? This page *https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/Platforms/TriCore <https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/Platforms/TriCore>* shows SCU is under development. Could you let me know who is developing it ? is it possible to take an existing SCU and modify according to AURIX data sheet? I see that UART is possible to for Tricore like the one developed for ARM versatile platform Here is the link *https://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2016-10/msg04514.htm <https://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2016-10/msg04514.htm>*l I have aurix development trial version and able to compile a UART project using Tasking compiler and tried to run it on qemu, but I don't see any logs in the qemu terminal as you said there is no peripherals implemented qemu-system-tricore -machine KIT_AURIX_TC277_TRB -cpu tc27x -m 6M -nographic -kernel ASCLIN_Shell_UART_1_KIT_TC277_TFT.elf -serial stdio -append "console=ttyAMA0 console=ttyS0" Also do you know if there is a virtual UART framework to communicate between two Qemu instances or two TSIM instances running similar OS or different OS? I need to do prototype testing RPMSg communication between MCU and SOC using external physical UART/SPI which can be tested using vritual UART using two qemu instances. Regards, Sameer On Mon, Apr 15, 2024 at 7:51 AM Bastian Koppelmann < kbast...@mail.uni-paderborn.de> wrote: > Hi Sameer, > On Sun, Apr 14, 2024 at 06:15:56PM +0200, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote: > > Hi Sameer, > > > > On 13/4/24 14:52, Sameer Kalliadan Poyil wrote: > > > Hello All, > > > I see that Latest qemu supports for tricore TC277 and TC377 > > > image.png > > > But when I downloaded source code and checked for TC377 related file , > I > > > didn't find anything > > > > > > I want to run RTOS/bare metal code on TC377 . could you please let me > > > know how to start qemu on TC377 ? > > > Here is the latest version of qemu i have , I didn't download 9.0 > > > > $ qemu-system-tricore -cpu help > > Available CPUs: > > tc1796 > > tc1797 > > tc27x > > tc37x > > $ > > > > Try 'qemu-system-tricore -machine KIT_AURIX_TC277_TRB -cpu tc37x', > > this should start a TC377 SoC on an AURIX board (~KIT_A2G_TC377_TRB). > > This is the closest you will get to TC377 board. > > I'm not sure if QEMU is the best choice for you, if you want run a RTOS, as > qemu-system-tricore is lacking: > > - peripherals like SCU, SystemTimer that are a bare minimum to run a RTOS > > - Simulation of time: When your RTOS runs periodic tasks you might get > wrong > results, as QEMU does not simulate time accurately. The real CPU would > see time pass differently than QEMU. We make a best guess using the wall > time. > > I think for now Infineons TSIM is a better choice, as it does not lack the > points above. However it has significantly less performance compared to > QEMU. > > If you are only interested in running bare metal software, check out my > 'boot_to_main' test [1]. The Makefile [2] shows you how to build it using > tricore-gcc [3] and how to run it in QEMU. Also tricore-gdb [4] might be > interesting for you. > > If you have further questions, feel free to ask me. > > Cheers, > Bastian > > [1] > https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/blob/master/tests/tcg/tricore/c/test_boot_to_main.c?ref_type=heads > [2] > https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/blob/master/tests/tcg/tricore/Makefile.softmmu-target?ref_type=heads > [3] https://github.com/bkoppelmann/package_494 > [4] https://github.com/volumit/gdb-tricore >