Quality RTOS & Embedded Software

 Real time embedded FreeRTOS RSS feed 
Quick Start Supported MCUs PDF Books Trace Tools Ecosystem


Loading

LPC1768 Red Suite

Posted by alpha86 on April 4, 2012
Hi I have a RDB1768v2 board and I have followed the freeRTOS example at :
http://www.freertos.org/index.html?http://www.freertos.org/LPC1768_RedSuite.html

I first solved the ethernet issue due to the different component used in the demo for the RDB1768v1.

When I run the program from LPCxpresso, I get this at console, is that fine?:
set remotetimeout 60000
set mem inaccessible-by-default off
mon ondisconnect cont
set arm force-mode thumb

I will like to know what is the best way to get started. I am thinking of deleting all tasks from the example project mentioned above, and include the CMSIS folder (as with the official RDB1768v2 examples found on CodeRed website). However, I find that the core_cm3 file in the CodeRed examples(v2.1) are different from the one used in the freeRTOS demo (v1.3). Is it safe to just use the core_cm3 v2.1?

RE: LPC1768 Red Suite

Posted by MEdwards on April 4, 2012
set remotetimeout 60000
set mem inaccessible-by-default off
mon ondisconnect cont
set arm force-mode thumb


These are commands being sent by a script run in the IDE to GDB (the debugger). It is nothing to do with FreeRTOS and nothing to be concerned about as expected behavior.

I recommend always using the latest CMSIS files.

RE: LPC1768 Red Suite

Posted by alpha86 on April 9, 2012
Thanks edwards3, yup juz realized the gdb commands being sent.

Okay, I'll just use the latest CMSIS files then. Anyway, how can I know what is freeRTOS doing on the driver/interrupt/clock of the cortex-m3 and is the code written at this low level configuration compliant to CMSIS? I think my question is how can I see these codes and see if they reflect the new CMSIS and if not, I can change them. Is it recommended to touch these codes?


[ Back to the top ]    [ About FreeRTOS ]    [ Privacy ]    [ Sitemap ]    [ ]


Copyright (C) Amazon Web Services, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Latest News

NXP tweet showing LPC5500 (ARMv8-M Cortex-M33) running FreeRTOS.

Meet Richard Barry and learn about running FreeRTOS on RISC-V at FOSDEM 2019

Version 10.1.1 of the FreeRTOS kernel is available for immediate download. MIT licensed.

View a recording of the "OTA Update Security and Reliability" webinar, presented by TI and AWS.


Careers

FreeRTOS and other embedded software careers at AWS.



FreeRTOS Partners

ARM Connected RTOS partner for all ARM microcontroller cores

Espressif ESP32

IAR Partner

Microchip Premier RTOS Partner

RTOS partner of NXP for all NXP ARM microcontrollers

Renesas

STMicro RTOS partner supporting ARM7, ARM Cortex-M3, ARM Cortex-M4 and ARM Cortex-M0

Texas Instruments MCU Developer Network RTOS partner for ARM and MSP430 microcontrollers

OpenRTOS and SafeRTOS

Xilinx Microblaze and Zynq partner