NAME

ice-gdb - JTAG ICE frontend for avr-gdb
 
ice-insight - JTAG ICE frontend for avr-insight

SYNOPSIS

ice-gdb/ice-insight [--debugger debugger] [--capture] [--ignore-intr] [--external] [gdb_arguments]

DESCRIPTION

ice-gdb (respectively ice-insight) starts avr-gdb (respectively avr-insight) and avarice to do on-chip debugging on Atmel AVR processors using their JTAG-based on-chip debug facilities, via the Atmel JTAG ICE pod.
 
The executable for the program being debugged is downloaded to the processor unless the --capture option is specified. A number of extra commands are available within gdb when started, see their description in NEW GDB COMMANDS below. Restrictions on debugging with the JTAG ICE pod are discussed in more detail in DEBUGGING WITH JTAG ICE below.
 
The arguments passed to avarice include the value of the AVARICE_ARGS environment variable. This is typically used to specify the serial port to which the JTAG ICE pod is connected by setting AVARICE_ARGS to "-j <serial port name>".

OPTIONS

--debugger debugger_command
Specify a different debugger than avr-gdb (or avr-insight). This other debugger should behave similarly to gdb.
--capture
Don't download the executable being debugged to the mote, just interrupt the current program and assume that it matches the executable passed to ice-gdb. This is similar to "attaching" to a running program within gdb.
--ignore-intr
Pass the --ignore-intr option to avarice. The single-step commands in gdb (s, n) will then "step over" interrupt handlers (i.e., if an interrupt occurs, execution will resume for the duration of the interrupt).
--external
Do not start avarice. Instead, avr-gdb will attempt to connect to an already running avarice on port localhost:6423.

NEW GDB COMMANDS

ice-restart
Restart avarice.
ice-load filename
Download executable filename to the Atmel processor and start debugging it (this replaces the gdb load command).
target-ice
Connect to a copy of avarice running on port localhost:6423.

DEBUGGING WITH JTAG ICE

The JTAG ICE debugging environment has a few restrictions and changes:
No "soft" breakpoints, and only three hardware breakpoints. The break command sets hardware breakpoints. The easiest way to deal with this restriction is to enable and disable breakpoints as needed.
Two 1-byte hardware watchpoints (but each hardware watchpoint takes away one hardware breakpoint). If you set a watchpoint on a variable which takes more than one byte, execution will be abysmally slow. Instead it is better to do the following:
watch *(char *)&myvariable
which watches the least significant byte of myvariable.
The Atmel AVR processors have a Harvard architecture (separate code and data buses). To distinguish data address 0 from code address 0, avr-gdb adds 0x800000 to all data addresses. Bear this in mind when examining printed pointers, or when passing absolute addresses to gdb commands.

ENVIRONMENT

AVARICE_ARGS
Extra arguments to pass to avarice at startup.

SEE ALSO

gdb(1), insight(1).

BUGS

On Windows, the ice-gdb and ice-insight commands only work in the cygwin environment. They do not work with the mingw environment.

Recommended readings

Pages related to ice-insight you should read also: