hackrf/firmware
Martin Ling 68688e0ec4 Don't send 16K of zeroes to the M0 at TX startup.
The M4 previously buffered 16K of zeroes for the M0 to transmit, whilst
waiting for the first USB bulk transfer from the host to complete. The
first bulk transfer was placed in the second 16K buffer.

This avoided the M0 transmitting uninitialised data, but was not a
reliable solution, and delayed the transmission of the first
host-supplied samples.

Now that the M0 is placed in TX_START mode, this trick is no longer
necessary, because the M0 can automatically send zeroes until the first
bulk transfer is completed.

As such, the first bulk transfer now goes to the first 16K buffer.
Once the M4 byte count is increased by the bulk transfer completion
callback, the M0 will start transmitting the samples immediately.
2022-02-13 16:46:12 +00:00
..
2018-03-22 12:29:27 -06:00

The primary firmware source code for USB HackRF devices is hackrf_usb.  Most of
the other directories contain firmware source code for test and development.
The common directory contains source code shared by multiple HackRF firmware
projects.  The cpld directory contains HDL source for the CPLD.


The firmware is set up for compilation with the GCC toolchain available here:

https://developer.arm.com/open-source/gnu-toolchain/gnu-rm/downloads

Required dependency:

https://github.com/mossmann/libopencm3

If you are using git, the preferred way to install libopencm3 is to use the
submodule:

$ cd ..
$ git submodule init
$ git submodule update

To build and install a standard firmware image for HackRF One:

$ cd hackrf_usb
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake ..
$ make
$ hackrf_spiflash -w hackrf_usb.bin

If you have a Jawbreaker, add -DBOARD=JAWBREAKER to the cmake command.
If you have a rad1o, use -DBOARD=RAD1O instead.

It is possible to use a USB Device Firmware Upgrade (DFU) method to load
firmware into RAM.  This is normally only required to recover a device that has
had faulty firmware loaded, but it can also be useful for firmware developers.

For loading firmware into RAM with DFU you will need:

http://dfu-util.sourceforge.net/

To start up HackRF One in DFU mode, hold down the DFU button while powering it
on or while pressing and releasing the RESET button.  Release the DFU button
after the 3V3 LED illuminates.

A .dfu file is built by default when building firmware.  Alternatively you can
use a known good .dfu file from a release package.  Load the firmware into RAM
with:

$ dfu-util --device 1fc9:000c --alt 0 --download hackrf_usb.dfu