These files were produced by parsing some linux and/or sigmatel
provided headers and later tweaked by hand or by programs.
Each file describes one or more soc. A soc has a list of devices.
Each device can either be unique or have several copies at
different addresses. Each device has a list of registers which
can either be unique or indexed. Each register can further have
a list of fields. Registers with a SCT variant are also handled.
Change-Id: Ib50bb3fda268b6d5713f81bd8961de7978a5815e
These tools allow one to read a register description in a XML
file and to produce something useful out of it. Three example
programs are written:
- tester which simply prints the register tree
- headergen which produces a set of headers with the #define
- hwemulgen which produces something for the hwemul tool (to come)
Change-Id: I52573688b29d5faeaf64ce7c5ffe08ee8db3d33c
In the case of encrypted SB files without any key match, it is
still possible to dump the section headers. The force option
allows one to do so. It also allows to dump unencrypted sections
of encrypted files if there are some.
Change-Id: I36280230679ac5903f9c451c68c276f5c6959536
It should not exit() anymore on error except on malloc failure.
Resource leaks on errors (especially I/O) are quite likely though.
Change-Id: I6fcf72fb08fc683468b390d0b8745d31ca982b48
On Windows /dev/random does not exist, so trying to open it will fail. Replace
it with rand() which is available on all supported platforms and sufficient.
Fixes mkimxboot not working, as well as Rockbox Utility "crashing" (which is in
fact its error handler calling exit(), thus terminating Rockbox Utility) on
Windows.
Change-Id: Ia164f937f329877e8f80f473f27be8c5df2a0a68