% render "layouts/basic.html" do %# HTML tags can be embedded in mark down files if you want to do specific custom %# formatting like this, but in most cases that is not required.

<%= Origen.config.name %> (<%= Origen.app.version %>)

### Purpose This plugin provides a common API for easily reading memory image files in any format so that their contained data can then be used in Origen: ~~~ruby # Read in an s-record srec = OrigenMemoryImage.new("srecs/test_atd.abs.S19") # Write it to the DUT, or otherwise work with it, however you like srec.to_a.each do |addr, data| $dut.write_memory data, address: addr end ~~~ ### How To Import ##### To use in an application: Add the following to your application's Gemfile: ~~~ruby gem 'origen_memory_image', '<%= Origen.app.version %>' ~~~ ##### To use in a plugin: Add the following to your plugin's gemspec: ~~~ruby spec.add_runtime_dependency 'origen_memory_image', '~> <%= Origen.app.version.major %>', '>= <%= Origen.app.version %>' ~~~ and require the gem in your code: ~~~ruby require 'origen_memory_image' ~~~ ### How To Use Create a memory map object that points to a specific source file, note that you do not need to supply the format. Also note that the format is detected by looking at the file content and the naming and extension of the file has no relevance (so it can be called anything). The path to the file can be absolute or relative to Origen.root: ~~~ruby my_srec = OrigenMemoryImage.new("source_files/test_atd.abs.S19") my_hex = OrigenMemoryImage.new("source_files/math.hex") ~~~ Memory images can also be created directly from a string: ~~~ruby str = <<-END @2D100E00 0D 15 0F 13 0E 14 10 12 00 00 04 17 04 03 05 06 END my_hex = OrigenMemoryImage.new(str, source: String) ~~~ Every memory image object then supports a common API. The start_address method returns the start (execution start) address: ~~~ruby my_srec.start_address # => 0x3000_F000 ~~~ The to_a method returns the file content as an array of address/data pairs, this method supports options to set the data width and to flip the data endianness: ~~~ruby my_srec.to_a # => [[0x3000_F000, 0x11223344], [0x3000_F004, 0x55667788], ...] my_srec.to_a(flip_endianness: true) # => [[0x3000_F000, 0x44332211], [0x3000_F004, 0x88776655], ...] my_srec.to_a(data_width_in_bytes: 2) # => [[0x3000_F000, 0x1122], [0x3000_F002, 0x3344], [0x3000_F004, 0x5566], ...] ~~~ Such an array can be iterated on like this to separate the address and data: ~~~ruby my_srec.to_a.each do |address, data| # Process as required end ~~~ ### Currently Supported Formats #### S-Records Any valid S-record: ~~~text S017000068656C6C6F5F776F726C645F6576622E73726563D6 S3153F00002018F09FE518F09FE518F09FE518F09FE55B S3153F00003018F09FE500F020E314F09FE514F09FE5EC S3113F000270F406003F102100407800003FDC S3153F0005B05FF0FF301B4908605FF0FF301A49086063 S3093F0006F0704700000A S7053F000410A7 ~~~ #### Hex Files The data lines can be grouped into any size: ~~~text @18000000 1E E0 02 1C 22 40 1B E0 02 1C 22 43 18 E0 02 1C 5A 78 0A 43 03 E0 03 4B F7 21 5A 78 0A 40 00 20 22 E0 84 42 22 D3 1F E0 84 42 1F D9 1C E0 84 42 @180000E0 002B20D1 03E0012A 01D1002B 1BD00223 2340022A 02D1002B 15D103E0 032A01D1 @180001F0 780000187C0000188200001888000018 ~~~ ### How To Setup a Development Environment [Clone the repository from Github](https://github.com/Origen-SDK/origen_memory_image). Follow the instructions here if you want to make a 3rd party app workspace use your development copy of the <%= Origen.app.config.initials %> plugin: [Setting up a Plugin Development Environment](http://origen-sdk.org/origen/latest/guides/plugins) This plugin also contains a test suite, makes sure this passes before committing any changes! ~~~text origen specs ~~~ % end