GlennSmith wrote:
Hi all,
@drogon : There is another way, if you're just looking to program GALs and the newer ATF16V / ATF22V "flash" substitutes : it's called afterburner, it's normally designed to be an Arduino shield, but the interface is so simple that it can be cobbled directly to almost any Atmel 8-bit controller on a breadboard.
I'm still waiting for my chinese T48 clone to arrive, but in the meantime I've built and had good results with the afterburner setup. I'm also a Linux-only shop.
The one I used is
ole00/afterburner, although a few others exist. I can send you a bare shield PCB if you like.
Good luck.
Hi,
Thanks. Yes, this is for the Atmel (Microchip) GALs as I can program the Lattice ones OK (For now, using a creaky old XP laptop and a G540 programmer)
I've looked at Afterburner, but not had the enthusiasm (so-far) to actually make one.
I've also just had the option of getting a genuine II+ from the US, although it'll cost me dearly in import duties, etc.
Hope that "clone" works OK - it turned out my TL8662A was a clone and when trying to upgrade it, it was "helpfully" deliberately bricked (for using under Win, but it still runs OK under Linux and the minipro code)
Quote:
P.S. Does anyone think it useful to document a complete toolchain tutorial for the ATF16V8 / ATF22V10 devices, as they are often mentioned and used for address decoding and sometimes even VGA video generation... I can document my trials and tribulations (from a Linux point of view, though)
Yes - but it boils down to 2 options: GALasm which is woefully lacking in documentation or CUPL under Wine - I did try to install the latter, but getting wine32 running under a 64-bit Linux seemed like a lot of work, so left it there...
Cheers,
-Gordon
_________________
--
Gordon Henderson.
See my
Ruby 6502 and 65816 SBC projects here:
https://projects.drogon.net/ruby/