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Description

RP2040 has two ARM Cortex-M0+ cores, and the second core normally remains dormant.

pico-debug runs on one core in a RP2040 and provides a USB CMSIS-DAP interface to debug the other core. No hardware is added; it is as if there were a virtual debug pod built-in.

Boot the RP2040 with the BOOTSEL button pressed, copy over pico-debug.uf2, and it immediately reboots as a CMSIS-DAP adapter. pico-debug loads as a RAM only .uf2 image, meaning that it is never written to flash and doesn't replace existing user code.

To cater to different user situations, there are two versions of pico-debug to download: MAXRAM and GIMMECACHE

Most users (including all arduino-pico users) should use the GIMMECACHE version.

With pico-debug-maxram, all 264kBytes of SRAM on the RP2040 is available for running user code; pico-debug shoehorns itself entirely into the 16kBytes of XIP_SRAM (aka flash cache).

With pico-debug-gimmecache, 248kBytes (94% of total) of SRAM is available for running user code; pico-debug gives plenty of elbow room by occupying only 6% near the very top of SRAM, and unlike MAXRAM, leaves the flash cache operational.

If viewing this on github, pre-built binaries are available for download on the right under "Releases".

Why pico-debug exists

pico-debug provides a debugger with only one RP2040 board instead of another debugger’s approach with two RP2040 boards plus fiddly wiring; this makes this capability more accessible to all users and means that any RP2040-based design can have this latent debug capability without added cost.

pico-debug uses the CMSIS-DAP standard, making it compatible with the considerable amount of software development that has already gone into an array of existing CMSIS-DAP compatible IDEs. This standards-based approach seems far preferable to re-inventing the wheel with yet another proprietary debugger protocol.

How to use

Please read howto/README.md for instructions on how to start using pico-debug.

Caveats whilst using pico-debug

The executive summary is:

pico-debug uses the USB port to provide debugging to the user, so the user's app can't be simultaneously using the USB port! :)

The specifics are:

License

TinyUSB and code specific to pico-debug is licensed under the MIT license.

ARM's CMSIS_5 code is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license.