Open-TL866 is open-source firmware for the original TL866 (i.e., not II / PLUS). This firmware replaces the proprietary firmware for programming EPROMs, MCUs, GALs, etc. Note that this firmware is not meant to be a replacement for the original firmware, it is totally different with a different purpose. You can't use a TL866 programmed with this firmware with the original TL866 host software. This firmware exposes a simple ASCII-based interface over USB serial. This repository contains two primary components.
- An open-source firmware for the TL866 (Located in the
firmware
directory). - A Python library for interacting with open-source firmware (Located in the
py
directory).
Caution: This is alpha software. Use at your own risk.
FIXME 2022-11-02: we've made a breaking change. You'll need a new firmware release. In the meantime use git.
Do you just want to send low level TL866 commands from Python? This is useful if you have loose timing requirements.
Linux instructions:
git clone https://github.com/JohnDMcMaster/open-tl866.git && \
cd open-tl866 && \
( cd py && python3 setup.py install --user ) && \
wget https://github.com/JohnDMcMaster/open-tl866/releases/download/v0.0/tl866-bitbang.hex && \
otl866 self update tl866-bitbang.hex
Now test it:
python3 py/example/blinky.py
Building may be performed natively or via Docker. Regardless, there is a single common prerequisite: downloading Git submodules.
Install them with git submodule update --init
.
If one wishes to build natively, then install the following prerequisites:
-
The XC8 compiler from Microchip is used to compile our C code. Currently version 1.x is required. Download it from Microchip's site and install it. When activating, select the Free version.
Note: If you are installing to a 64-bit Ubuntu distribution, you must first get the 32-bit libc that isn't installed by default:
sudo apt-get install libc6:i386
. Then you can run Microchip's installer. -
CMake is needed to generate the build configuration. On Linux you should install it from your distribution's package manager (e.g.
sudo apt-get install cmake
). For Windows, an installer is available from the CMake website.
make build
To make any Make target with docker, prefix it with docker-
.
For instance, to build with Docker:
make docker-build
Flashable images are in firmware/build/dist/tl866-*.hex
The build configuration is maintained with CMake in CMakeLists.txt
.
Calling cmake .
interprets the CMake configuration and produces a set
of makefiles in the source tree. If you prefer an out-of-source build,
just call cmake
from the directory where you want the build output and
pass it the path to the firmware
directory.
There are multiple variants of the firmware with different
functionality, which are currently called "modes". Each mode produces a
separate firmware image under firmware/dist
. Each mode has a
corresponding target in the makefiles, so you can build just one mode
with e.g. make tl866-bitbang
. The currently implemented modes are:
Mode | Description |
---|---|
tl866-bitbang |
This mode is for generic pin control from Python via a serial interface |
tl866-at89 |
This mode is for reading and writing the AT-Atmel AT89S |
On Linux systems, the udev rules file contrib/96-opentl866.rules
should be copied into /etc/udev/rules.d/
. Doing so will allow non-root
users who are members of the plugdev
group to access the devices. Once
the rules file is installed udev needs to be reloaded. On modern Linux
systems that use systemd, that can be done by running:
sudo systemctl restart systemd-udevd
The Python client library provides a command-line client for the stock bootloader which can be used to flash any firmware to the TL866. To install the CLI tool, run:
( cd py && python3 setup.py install --user )
And then TLDR: otl866 self update firmware/build/dist/tl866-bitbang.hex
If that doesn't work, read on.
The first step in flashing any firmware is to get the TL866 to reboot into its bootloader. How exactly you need to go about that depends on which firmware your TL866 is currently running.
If your TL866 is running an older version of the stock firmware the update tool can request a reset into the bootloader without any help. If you have version 03.2.85 or newer of the stock firmware there's currently a bug that prevents that from working, so you'll need to use the hardware method below.
If your TL866 is running the open firmware the update tool can trigger
a reset into the bootloader: otl866 self update firmware/dist/tl866-epromv.hex
On Windows or if you multiple serial ports you may need to add
--reset-tty
(ex: --reset-tty COM6
on Windows)
If you flashed the open firmware onto the TL866 using a separate ICSP programmer the bootloader has been erased from your TL866. Do not reprogram a TL866's firmware using the ICSP connector on the same TL866. In order to use the update tool you'll need to flash the stock firmware via ICSP to restore the bootloader. You can find ICSP-ready images of the stock firmware in Radioman's repository.
If you're having trouble resetting to the bootloader from within the firmware currently installed on your TL866, you can force it to boot into the bootloader by shorting pin RC1 of the microcontroller to Vcc while you plug it in to the USB. The easiest points to short with a piece of jumper wire are from pin 2 of J1 (the ICSP header) or the tab of the adjacent voltage regulator to the side of R26 nearest J1.
If you find yourself using this method frequently it can be worthwhile to solder a mini tactile switch between R26 and the side of R2 nearest the edge of the board. That side of R2 is also Vcc and is much closer to R26 than the voltage regulator is.
To flash the open firmware, open a command prompt and navigate to the
folder where you built the firmware. Call the update tool, passing it
the path to the Intel Hex file. If your TL866 is already running the
stock firmware you'll also need the --reset-tty
option (see above).
otl866 self update --reset-tty COM6 dist/default/production/firmware.production.hex
The update tool can also flash the stock firmware. To do so you'll need
the update.dat
file from the official software. If you installed it
with the default settings that should be at C:\MiniPro\update.dat
.
You'll need to pass the --stock
option to tell the updater that you
want to flash the stock firmware, and you'll also need to use the
--reset-tty
option if your TL866 is running the open firmware.
otl866 self update --reset-tty COM6 --stock C:\MiniPro\update.dat
The above programming instructions apply to users only of the firmware and assume the code protection bit of the TL866 PIC is enabled.
For doing development of open-tl866
, an external ICSP programmer such as PICkit
is highly recommended to get access to debugging features. All open firmware
images generated by open-tl866
are placed in the microcontroller's
memory after the bootloader. A developer wishing to selectively reprogram
and debug the payload must disable code protection beforehand.
Code protection disable is ICSP is implemented as a full erase of the microcontroller's address space, including the bootloader. Radioman's TL866 Updater is capable of generating a full firmware image, including a bootloader, with code protection disabled, which should be flashed onto TL866 using an external ICSP programmer.
At this point, as user should be able to use an external ICSP programmer to
reprogram an open-tl866
payload (Radioman's Updater provides a stock payload),
all while leaving the bootloader intact. Debug facilities should also be
available from the ICSP programmer.
Due to a bug mentioned before, the stock firmware is incapable of resetting back to the bootloader if code protection is disabled; the open firmwares do not have this problem.
The TL866 with the open firmware will identify itself as a serial port (USB CDC). A Python library is provided which makes it easy to drive the bitbang mode.
CMD> ?
open-tl866 (bitbang)
VPP
E val VPP: enable and/or disable (VPP_DISABLE/VPP_ENABLE)
V val VPP: set voltage enum (VPP_SET)
p val VPP: set active pins (VPP_WRITE)
VDD
e val VDD: enable and/or disable (VDD_DISABLE/VDD_ENABLE)
v val VDD: set voltage enum (VDD_SET)
d val VDD: set active pins (VDD_WRITE)
GND
g val GND: set active pins (GND_WRITE)
I/O
t val I/O: set ZIF tristate setting (ZIF_DIR)
T I/O: get ZIF tristate setting (ZIF_DIR_READ)
z val I/O: set ZIF pins (ZIF_WRITE)
Z I/O: get ZIF pins (ZIF_READ)
Misc
L val LED on/off (LED_ON/LED_OFF)
m z val Set pullup/pulldown (MYSTERY_ON/MYSTERY_OFF}
s Print misc status
i Re-initialize
b Reset to bootloader (RESET_BOOTLOADER)
With that in mind...
Blink the yellow LED:
CMD> L 1
CMD> L 0
Set pin 1 to 5.1V via VDD:
# Enable all (possible) VDD outputs
d 0000000001
# Voltage enum 3 => 5.1V (see aclient.py)
v 3
# Enable VDD
e 1
Set all pins logic low using I/O except 1) pin 1 is tristated 2) pin 2 to logic high:
z 0000000002
t 0000000001
v0.0
- I believe this is where the 0.0 release .hex comes from, but TBH it was just random file "known to work"
v0.1 (future)
- bitbang: zif format string endianess changed. Pin 1 went from 0100000000 to 0000000001
- read_rom added (82S129, 74S287, 63S281, 74LS471)
- In support of mega866 (https://github.com/JohnDMcMaster/mega866-src) * Small bug fixes