- erase command
- RTT
- ITM
- GDB
- Backtrace
- verify command
- replace goblin with object
This crate provides a cargo subcommand to flash ELF binaries onto ARM chips.
Various chip families including but not limited to nRF5x, STM32 and LPC800 can be flashed using DAPLink, ST-Link or J-Link. To check if your specific chip is supported, use rover --list-chips
If you think rover makes your embedded journey more enjoyable or even earns you money, please consider supporting the project on Github Sponsors for better support and more features.
You can install this utility with cargo, after installing the necessary prerequisites:
cargo install rover
Binary releases are not available.
You can use it like any cargo command would be used
rover <args>
which will then build your binary and download the contents onto the connected target.
rover --general.chip nrf58122
rover --release --general.chip nRF51822 --target thumbv6m-none-eabi --example gpio_hal_blinky
rover --release --general.chip-descriptions nRF51822.yaml --target thumbv6m-none-eabi --example gpio_hal_blinky
To manually select a chip, you can use the --general.chip <chip name>
argument. The chip name is an identifier such as nRF51822
or STM32F042
. Capitalization does not matter; Special characters do matter.
You can add a temporary chip family description by using the --general.chip-descriptions <chip description file paths>
argument. You need to pass it the path to a valid yaml family description.
All the targets of the family will then be added to the registry temporarily and will override existing variants with the same name.
You can use this feature to tinker with a chip family description until it works and then submit it to upstream for inclusion.
You can extract the family description file by running target-gen on a .pack
file with cargo run -- file.pack out_dir
. You can obtain the pack from ARM for example. Their online registry is a good start :)
You can also reference to an already unziped pack
directory instead of the file.pack
archive file.
If you have a chip you want to flash, feel free to contribute to probe-rs.
rover
can be built using cargo, after installing the necessary prerequisites. See the list below for your operating
system.
FTDI support is optional. You can enable it with the ftdi
feature. You also need the correct prerequisites from the next section installed.
rover depends on the libusb and optionally on libftdi libraries, which need to be installed to build rover.
On Ubuntu, the following packages need to be installed:
> sudo apt install -y pkg-config libusb-1.0-0-dev libftdi1-dev
On Windows you can use vcpkg to install the prerequisites:
# dynamic linking 64-bit
> vcpkg install libftdi1:x64-windows libusb:x64-windows
> set VCPKGRS_DYNAMIC=1
# static linking 64-bit
> vcpkg install libftdi1:x64-windows-static-md libusb:x64-windows-static-md
On macOS, homebrew is the suggested method to install libftdi:
> brew install libftdi