248 lines
9.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
248 lines
9.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
==============
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Boards Support
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==============
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This page discusses the board support logic for NuttX.
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The ``nuttx/boards`` directory is a part of the internal OS. It should contain
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only OS bring-up logic and driver initialization logic.
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**THERE SHOULD BE NO APPLICATION CALLABLE LOGIC IN THIS DIRECTORY.**
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If you have board-specific, application callable logic, that logic should not
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go here. Please consider using a sub-directory under ``apps/platform`` instead.
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Board-Specific Configurations
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=============================
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The NuttX configuration consists of:
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* Processor architecture specific files. These are the files contained
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in the ``arch/<arch>/`` directory.
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* Chip/SoC specific files. Each processor architecture is embedded
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in a chip or System-on-a-Chip (SoC) architecture. The full chip
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architecture includes the processor architecture plus chip-specific
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interrupt logic, general purpose I/O (GIO) logic, and specialized,
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internal peripherals (such as UARTs, USB, etc.).
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These chip-specific files are contained within chip-specific
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sub-directories in the ``arch/<arch>/`` directory and are selected
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via the ``CONFIG_ARCH_name`` selection
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* Board specific files. In order to be usable, the chip must be
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contained in a board environment. The board configuration defines
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additional properties of the board including such things as
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peripheral LEDs, external peripherals (such as network, USB, etc.).
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These board-specific configuration files can be found in the
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``boards/<arch>/<chip>/<board>/`` sub-directories.
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Additional configuration information may be available in board-specific documentation pages
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at ``Documentation/platforms/<arch>/<chip>/<board>``.
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The ``boards/`` subdirectory contains configuration data for each board. These
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board-specific configurations plus the architecture-specific configurations in
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the ``arch/`` subdirectory completely define a customized port of NuttX.
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``boards/`` Directory Structure
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===============================
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The ``boards/`` directory contains board specific configuration logic. Each
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board must provide a subdirectory ``<board>`` under ``boards/`` with the
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following characteristics::
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<board>
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|-- include/
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| `-- (board-specific header files)
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|-- src/
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| |-- Makefile
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| `-- (board-specific source files)
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|-- <config1-dir>
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| |-- Make.defs
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| `-- defconfig
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|-- <config2-dir>
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| |-- Make.defs
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| `-- defconfig
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...
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Summary of Files
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================
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* ``include/`` -- This directory contains board specific header files. This
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directory will be linked as include/arch/board at configuration time and
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can be included via #include <arch/board/header.h>``. These header file
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can only be included by files in ``arch/<arch>include/`` and
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``arch/<arch>/src``
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* ``src/`` -- This directory contains board specific drivers. This
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directory will be linked as ``arch/<arch>/src/board`` at configuration
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time and will be integrated into the build system.
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* ``src/Makefile`` -- This makefile will be invoked to build the board specific
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drivers. It must support the following targets: ``libext$(LIBEXT)``, ``clean``,
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and ``distclean``.
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A board may have various different configurations using these common source
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files. Each board configuration is described by two files: Make.defs and
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defconfig. Typically, each set of configuration files is retained in a
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separate configuration sub-directory (``<config1-dir>``, ``<config2-dir>``, ..
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in the above diagram).
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* ``Make.defs`` -- This makefile fragment provides architecture and
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tool-specific build options. It will be included by all other
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makefiles in the build (once it is installed). This make fragment
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should define::
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Tools: CC, LD, AR, NM, OBJCOPY, OBJDUMP
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Tool options: CFLAGS, LDFLAGS
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When this makefile fragment runs, it will be passed TOPDIR which
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is the path to the root directory of the build. This makefile
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fragment should include::
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$(TOPDIR)/.config : NuttX configuration
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$(TOPDIR)/tools/Config.mk : Common definitions
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Definitions in the ``Make.defs`` file probably depend on some of the
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settings in the ``.config`` file. For example, the ``CFLAGS`` will most likely be
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different if ``CONFIG_DEBUG_FEATURES=y``.
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The included ``tools/Config.mk`` file contains additional definitions that may
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be overridden in the architecture-specific ``Make.defs`` file as necessary::
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COMPILE, ASSEMBLE, ARCHIVE, CLEAN, and MKDEP macros
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* ``defconfig`` -- This is a configuration file similar to the Linux
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configuration file. In contains variable/value pairs like::
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CONFIG_VARIABLE=value
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This configuration file will be used at build time:
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(1) as a makefile fragment included in other makefiles, and
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(2) to generate include/nuttx/config.h which is included by
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most C files in the system.
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Configuration Variables
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=======================
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At one time, this section provided a list of all NuttX configuration
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variables. However, NuttX has since converted to use the kconfig-frontends
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tools (See https://bitbucket.org/nuttx/tools/src/master/kconfig-frontends/.)
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Now, the NuttX configuration is determined by a self-documenting set of
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Kconfig files.
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The current NuttX configuration variables are also documented in separate,
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auto-generated configuration variable document. That configuration variable
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document is generated using the kconfig2html tool that can be found in the
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nuttx/tools directory. That tool analyzes the NuttX Kconfig files and
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generates an excruciatingly boring HTML document.
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The latest boring configuration variable documentation can be regenerated at
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any time using that tool or, more appropriately, the wrapper script at
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nuttx/tools/mkconfigvars.sh. That script will generate the file
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nuttx/Documentation/NuttXConfigVariables.html.
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Supported Boards
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================
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The list of supported boards can be found in :ref:`Supported Platforms <platforms>`.
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Configuring NuttX
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=================
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Configuring NuttX requires only copying::
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boards/<arch>/<chip>/<board>/<config-dir>/Make.def to ${TOPDIR}/Make.defs
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boards/<arch>/<chip>/<board>/<config-dir>/defconfig to ${TOPDIR}/.config
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- ``tools/configure.sh``
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There is a script that automates these steps. The following steps will
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accomplish the same configuration::
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tools/configure.sh <board>:<config-dir>
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There is an alternative Windows batch file that can be used in the
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windows native environment like::
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tools\configure.bat <board>:<config-dir>
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See :doc:`tools/index` for more information about these scripts.
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And if your application directory is not in the standard location (``../apps``
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or ``../apps-<version>``), then you should also specify the location of the
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application directory on the command line like::
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cd tools
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./configure.sh -a <app-dir> <board>:<config-dir>
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Adding a New Board Configuration
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================================
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Okay, so you have created a new board configuration directory.
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Now, how do you hook this board into the configuration system so
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that you can select with ``make menuconfig``?
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You will need modify the file ``boards/Kconfig``. Let's look at
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the STM32F4-Discovery configuration in the ``Kconfig`` file and
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see how we would add a new board directory to the configuration.
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For this configuration let's say that you new board resides in the
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directory ``boards/myarch/mychip/myboard``; It uses an MCU
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selected with ``CONFIG_ARCH_CHIP_MYMCU``; and you want the board
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to be selected with ``CONFIG_ARCH_BOARD_MYBOARD``. Then here is
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how you can clone the STM32F4-Discovery configuration in
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``boards/Kconfig`` to support your new board configuration.
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In ``boards/Kconfig`` for the stm32f4-discovery, you will see a
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configuration definition like this:
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The above selects the STM32F4-Discovery board. The ``select``
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lines say that the board has both LEDs and buttons and that the
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board can generate interrupts from the button presses. You can
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just copy the above configuration definition to a new location
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(notice that they the configurations are in alphabetical order).
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Then you should edit the configuration to support your board. The
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final configuration definition might look something like:
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Later in the ``boards/Kconfig`` file, you will see a long, long
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string configuration with lots of defaults like this:
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This logic will assign string value to a configuration variable
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called ``CONFIG_ARCH_BOARD`` that will name the directory where
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the board-specific files reside. In our case, these files reside
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in ``boards/myarch/mychip/myboard`` and we add the following to
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the long list of defaults (again in alphabetical order):
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Now the build system knows where to find your board configuration!
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And finally, add something like this near the bottom of
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``boards/myarch/mychip/myboard``:
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This includes additional, board-specific configuration variable
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definitions in ``boards/myarch/mychip/myboard/Kconfig``.
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Building Symbol Tables
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======================
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Symbol tables are needed at several of the binfmt interfaces in order to bind
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a module to the base code. These symbol tables can be tricky to create and
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will probably have to be tailored for any specific application, balancing
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the number of symbols and the size of the symbol table against the symbols
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required by the applications.
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The top-level System.map file is one good source of symbol information
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(which, or course, was just generated from the top-level nuttx file
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using the GNU 'nm' tool).
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There are also common-separated value (CSV) values in the source try that
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provide information about symbols. In particular::
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nuttx/syscall/syscall.csv - Describes the NuttX RTOS interface, and
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nuttx/lib/libc.csv - Describes the NuttX C library interface.
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There is a tool at nuttx/tools/mksymtab that will use these CSV files as
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input to generate a generic symbol table. See ``nuttx/tools/README.txt`` for
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more information about using the mksymtab tool.
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