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DFU-PROGRAMMER(1)					     DFU-PROGRAMMER(1)

NAME
       dfu-programmer - USB firmware upgrading for Atmel microcontrollers

SYNOPSIS
       dfu-programmer target command [options] [parameters]

DESCRIPTION
       dfu-programmer  is  a  Linux command line Device Firmware Upgrade (DFU)
       based programmer for the flash memory on	 Atmel	AVR,  AVR32  and  8051
       based  microcontrollers which ship with a USB boot loader.  It supports
       In System Programming (ISP)  for	 developers  and  potentially  product
       updates	in  the	 field.	  Those	 boot  loaders are patterned after the
       standard USB DFU 1.0 class  specification,  but	depend	on  extensions
       defined by Atmel to the extent that standard DFU drivers will not work.

       To use it, first connect the device to be programmed and ensure that it
       comes up in DFU mode.  The microcontrollers come up  in	that  mode  as
       shipped	by  Atmel;  or	they  may  reenter  that  mode after a special
       hardware reset.	Then invoke this program to  issue  one	 or  more  DFU
       commands.   You	will  normally	need  to  start by issuing the "erase"
       command; the default security policies prevent extracting firmware,  to
       prevent reverse engineering of what is usually proprietary code.

SUPPORTED MICROCONTROLLERS
       These chip names are used as the command line "target" parameter.

       8051 based controllers:
	      at89c51snd1c, at89c51snd2c, at89c5130, at89c5131, and at89c5132.

       AVR based controllers:
	      at90usb1287,  at90usb1286,  at90usb647,  at90usb646, at90usb162,
	      at90usb82,  atmega32u6,  atmega32u4,   atmega32u2,   atmega16u4,
	      atmega16u2 and atmega8u2.

       AVR32 based controllers:
	      at32uc3a0128,    at32uc3a1128,	at32uc3a0256,	 at32uc3a1256,
	      at32uc3a0512,  at32uc3a1512,   at32uc3a0512es,   at32uc3a1512es,
	      at32uc3a364,    at32uc3a364s,    at32uc3a3128,	at32uc3a3128s,
	      at32uc3a3256,    at32uc3a3256s,	 at32uc3b064,	  at32uc3b164,
	      at32uc3b0128,    at32uc3b1128,	at32uc3b0256,	 at32uc3b1256,
	      at32uc3b0256es,  at32uc3b1256es,	 at32uc3b1512,	 at32uc3b0512,
	      at32uc3c064,     at32uc3c0128,	at32uc3c0256,	 at32uc3c0512,
	      at32uc3c164,    at32uc3c1128,    at32uc3c1256,	 at32uc3c1512,
	      at32uc3c264, at32uc3c2128, at32uc3c2256 and at32uc3c2512.

USAGE
       There  are  no  mechanisms  for selecting which single device should be
       programmed, or to implement gang programming.   Accordingly,  you  will
       usually	avoid  connecting more than one device of a given family (AVR,
       AVR32 or 8051) at a time.

       All of  these  commands	support	 the  "global  options".   Unless  you
       override it, commands which write to the microcontroller will perform a
       validation step that rereads the data which was written, compares it to
       the expected result, and reports any errors.

       configure register [--suppress-validation] data
	      Bootloaders  for	8051 based controllers support writing certain
	      configuration bytes.

       dump
	      Reads all the available flash memory, and writes	it  as	binary
	      data to stdout.

       dump-eeprom
	      Reads  all  the available eeprom memory, and writes it as binary
	      data to stdout.

       dump-user
	      Reads the user space flash on the AVR32 chips and writes	it  as
	      binary data to stdout.

       erase [--suppress-validation]
	      Erases  all  the	flash  memory.	 This  is  required before the
	      bootloader will perform other commands.

       flash [--suppress-validation] [--suppress-bootloader-mem] file or STDIN
	      Writes flash memory.  The input file (or	stdin)	must  use  the
	      "ihex"	file   format	convention   for   a   memory	image.
	      --suppress-bootloader-mem	 ignores  any  data  written  to   the
	      bootloader  memory  space when flashing the device.  This option
	      is particularly useful for the AVR32 chips trampoline code.

       flash-user [--suppress-validation] file or STDIN
	      Writes to user space flash on the AVR32 chips.   This  block  of
	      flash is out of the normal range of flash blocks and is designed
	      to contain configuration parameters.  The input file (or	stdin)
	      mus use the "ihex" file format convention for a memory image.

       eeprom-flash [--suppress-validation] file or STDIN
	      Writes to eeprom memory.	The input file (or stdin) must use the
	      "ihex" file format convention for a memory image.

       get register
	      Displays various product identifier bytes.

       reset
	      Resets microcontroller using watchdog timer

       start
	      Starts the application firmware by  having  the  microcontroller
	      jump to address zero.

       version
	      This prints a string identifying the version of this utility.

   Global Options
       --quiet - minimizes the output

       --debug level - enables verbose output at the specified level

   Configure Registers
       The  standard  bootloader  for  8051  based chips supports writing data
       bytes which are not relevant for the AVR based chips.

       BSB - boot status byte
       SBV - software boot vector
       SSB - software security byte
       EB  - extra byte
       HSB - hardware security byte

   Get Register
       bootloader-version - currently flashed bootloader version
       ID1 - device boot identification 1
       ID2 - device boot identification 2
       manufacturer - the hardware manufacturer code
       family - the product family code
       product-name - the product name
       product-revision - the product revision
       HSB - same as the configure_register version
       BSB - same as the configure_register version
       SBV - same as the configure_register version
       SSB - same as the configure_register version
       EB  - same as the configure_register version

BUGS
       None known.

KNOWN ISSUES
       The at90usb series chips do not make available any  read/write  protect
       flags  so  the  dump or flash command may fail with a less than helpful
       error message.

       To remove any write or read protection from  any	 chips,	 a  full  chip
       erasure is required.

       You  may	 need to be a member of the uucp group in order to have access
       to the device without needing to be root.

AUTHOR
       Weston Schmidt <weston_schmidt@alumni.purdue.edu>

SEE ALSO
       http://dfu-programmer.sourceforge.net
       http://atmel.com/dyn/resources/prod_documents/doc7745.pdf

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 2005-2012 Weston Schmidt

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published  by  the
       Free  Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
       option) any later version.

       This program is distributed in the hope that it	will  be  useful,  but
       WITHOUT	 ANY   WARRANTY;   without   even   the	 implied  warranty  of
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR  A  PARTICULAR  PURPOSE.	 See  the  GNU
       General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
       with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
       51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA

DFU-PROGRAMMER		       December 22, 2012	     DFU-PROGRAMMER(1)
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