This utility allows you to form a bridge between Segger's Real Time Transfer (RTT) and a pseudo-terminal interface (PTY).
It behaves similarly to common USB to serial adapters, instantiating a PTY
device while the utility is running, allowing you to send and receive data
through the device using any number of common utilities (minicom
, etc.).
Since RTT is a proprietary standard, it will only work with a Segger J-Link or
compatible device, and you will need to download the appropriate jlink arm
library (libjlinkarm.so
on Linux, libjlinkarm.dylib
on OS X).
The application will search for libjlinkarm.so
in common paths by default,
but you can specify the file location using the -j <filename>
option.
The following command-line parameters are available (rtt2pty --help
):
rtt2pty: Segger RTT to PTY bridge
rtt2pty [-opt <param>]
Options:
-d <devname> Segger device name
-s <serial> J-Link serial number
-S <speed> SWD/JTAG speed
-b <name> Buffer name
-2 Enable bi-directional comms
-j <filename> libjlinkarm.so/dylib location
The Segger target device name string. The default value is nrf52
.
NOTE: You can get a full list of device names by opening JLinkExe
and
entering the following command: expdevlist <path to output file>
.
If you have more than one J-Link connected to your computer, the first device
found will be selected by default. You can indicate the device you intend to
connect to by supplying the J-Link's serial number, which is visible any time
you run JLinkExe
.
By default, the tool only allows communication in one direction (target to PC).
Setting the -2
flag allows communication in both directions.
On OS X, you can run the following command to open a PTY device with bi-directional communication over RTT:
$ ./rtt2pty -j libjlinkarm.dylib -2 1
Connected to:
#################
S/N: ############
Searching for RTT control block...
Using up-buffer #0 (size=1024)
Using down-buffer #0 (size=16)
PTY name is /dev/ttys003
You can then connect to the PTY using a tool like minicom
as follows:
$ minicom -D /dev/ttys003