Debug ELF/Dwarf Binaries in VS Code without a Project or Build

Sometimes, all what I have is a ELF/Dwarf binary, and I need to debug it. I don’t want to build it, only debug it. The NXP VS Code extension makes that possible. I simply import the binary and start debugging.

Debugging Executable
Debugging Executable
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Using Windows USB Devices and Debug Probes inside Docker Dev Container

Docker or Development Container are great for isolation. And they work very well with things outside which are TCP/IP based. But most debug probes are USB only. Docker container don’t work well with USB. In Remote Debugging with DevContainer and VS Code, I showed how to use USB based debug probes. I demonstrated using them with an IP connection. In this article I show how Windows USB devices can be used from a container, with the help of usbipd.

usb shared between windows and linux container
USB shared between windows and Linux container
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Using CAN FD for Remote Hardware Debugging of Cortex-M Devices

Today’s projects and systems get more and more complex. Many systems include multiple MCUs, connected with a field bus or network, for example CAN. For example there can be up to 70 CAN nodes in modern cars. Such larger and connected systems are a challenge for debugging.

Traditional hardware debugging requires a hardware debug probe, connected with a dedicated SWD/JTAG debug cable to the target device. This needs dedicated pins on the target device plus physical access to the device itself. In many cases, this is not possible in the final product. The hardware debug probes, cables, pins and high speed signals are costly. And worse they can introduce new problems and are prone to interference.

If there is a field bus like CAN connecting all the MCUs, why not use it for hardware debugging? Hardware debugging meaning programming the FLASH memory, halt the MCU, inspect the memory and registers, and step through the code?

Cortex-M Hardware Debugging over CAN

Yes, we can! With the help of a rather unknown hardware feature on ARM Cortex-M devices. We can use the ARM DebugMonitor Interrupt to control and debug the target system. As we would use a JTAG/SWD connection. Instead, we use the CAN bus :-).

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Streamlining LinkServer Installation for CI/CD

I’m shifting more and more of my CI/CD testing infrastructure using the LinkServer runner. One reason is the LinkServer runner can run the test on-target. It can also collect GNO gcov coverage information at the same time. LinkServer is a suite of software tools for launching and managing GDB servers for NXP debug probes.

Streamlined LinkServer Installation on Linux
Streamlined LinkServer Installation on Linux
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Optimizing CI/CD with RAM Target Applications

Usually, I run applications in the micro-controller FLASH memory. But for a CI/CD or testing environment that is not the best choice.

It is possible to have a ‘RAM target’, where the application is running in RAM instead of FLASH memory. This has the advantage not to ‘wear-out’ the FLASH memory. Plus loading and running in RAM is faster. This makes having RAM targets especially useful for testing.

In this article I’m using the NXP LPC55S16-EVK board, but any other target or board is applicable.

NXP LPC55S16-EVK
NXP LPC55S16-EVK
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Setup Guide for FRDM-IMX93 as Debug Server

In Using Raspberry Pi and MCU-Link for Remote Embedded Debugging I created a remote server for debugging. I did order the NXP FRDM-IMX93 a few weeks ago, and did not had a chance to use it. So why not doing the same?

FRDM-i.MX93 with MCU-Link
FRDM-i.MX93 with MCU-Link

Here is how it can be uses as remote debug server,

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Using Raspberry Pi and MCU-Link for Remote Embedded Debugging

Remote debugging an embedded target is very useful: I don’t need a direct debug probe or USB cable connection. Instead, I’m using a network connection (wired or even wireless) over TCP/IP to talk to the debug probe and target. That way I can place the debug probe and target system away from my desk.

In Debugging ARM Cores with IP based Debug Probes and Eclipse I have used IP-based debug probes. This is a logical path, but expensive.

In Remote Debugging with USB based JTAG/SWD Debug Probes I showed how normal USB based debug probes can be used. This approach uses a remote host machine (e.g. desktop machine or notebook). This approach is still expensive, not scalable and the host machine needs a lot of space too.

So what if I use a Raspberry Pi instead? The RPi is small, inexpensive and ideal for such a task. Additionally, I can easily use it to build a test or debug farm. In this article, I show the use of the Raspberry Pi for remote debugging. A sub $20 or embedded target debug probe can be employed.

Raspberry Pi with NXP MCU-Link for Embedded Target Debugging
Raspberry Pi with NXP MCU-Link for Embedded Target Debugging
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MCU-Link-MR: Affordable CMSIS-DAP Debug Probe for Robotics and beyond

The MCU-Link-MR from NXP is a CMSIS-DAP debug probe. It includes dedicated connection headers found on mobile robotic systems. These systems include the Pixhawk/PX4 drone and robotics hardware.

MCU-Link-MR CMSIS-DAP Debug probe with Pixhawk 6x RT
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Workaround for FreeRTOS Runtime Counter Issues in VS Code

FreeRTOS has a great performance measurement feature built-in: Performance counters. At each context switch, the RTOS can do a bookkeeping of time spent in tasks. With this, it can estimate the runtime distribution between the tasks. A very useful feature to get a feeling what the tasks are doing.

But I noticed that with recent FreeRTOS versions, VS Code extension have issues showing the correct runtime counter values:

Unknown Runtime Counters in VS Code Extension (mcu-debug.rtos-views)
Unknown Runtime Counters in VS Code Extension (mcu-debug.rtos-views)
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Remote Debugging with DevContainer and VS Code

This is the second part describing how to use DevContainer for embedded applications with VS Code.

In Optimizing Embedded Development with VS Code and DevContainer I use VS Code with a docker ‘development’ container. The container is created with a recipe to install the development tools and SDK. With VS Code and DevContainer I have the same developer experience as I would develop locally on the host.

One thing not addressed in that earlier article is debugging. Using USB debug probes like a SEGGER J-Link or NXP MCU-Link is a challenge inside a container. This applies to any other debug probe as well.

The solution is to transform an USB based debug probe into one with a network connection:

VS Code DevContainer with Hardware Debugging
VS Code DevContainer with Hardware Debugging

In this article, I show how to do this.

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