Equipment/Bus Pirate: Difference between revisions
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=== How to get a shell anything UART === | === How to get a shell anything UART === | ||
Follow this step to get a shell using the bus pirate to you UART devices. | Follow this step to get a shell using the bus pirate to you UART devices. | ||
1. First find the UART baud rate for the device. You can generally find this information from the constructors manual or using an oscilloscope.Note it on a piece of paper. | * 1. First find the UART baud rate for the device. You can generally find this information from the constructors manual or using an oscilloscope.Note it on a piece of paper. | ||
2. Find the connecting plug for it. Need some magic here. It mostly trying to find the GND first using tester and trying to find the voltage pin and data pin. | * 2. Find the connecting plug for it. Need some magic here. It mostly trying to find the GND first using tester and trying to find the voltage pin and data pin. | ||
3. Connect you bus pirate to your device. | * 3. Connect you bus pirate to your device. | ||
4. Find the new device using 'ls /dev/tty*' | * 4. Find the new device using 'ls /dev/tty*' | ||
5. Start a shell. Either trough minicom or screen. | * 5. Start a shell. Either trough minicom or screen. | ||
6. m ( for mode) | * 6. m ( for mode) | ||
7. 3 (for selecting the UART) | * 7. 3 (for selecting the UART) | ||
8. select your baud rate ( most common baud rate are 9600 or 115200) | * 8. select your baud rate ( most common baud rate are 9600 or 115200) | ||
9. default work in most of the case to get your shell on any devices 8 | * 9. default work in most of the case to get your shell on any devices 8 | ||
10. select stop bits is 1 most of the case | * 10. select stop bits is 1 most of the case | ||
11. enjoy your shell. | * 11. enjoy your shell. | ||
== Real life example == | == Real life example == |
Revision as of 12:11, 8 August 2022
Bus Pirate
Description
The Bus Pirate is a low-level interface to:
- 1-Wire
- UART
- I2C
- SPI
- JTAG
- raw 2-wire
- raw 3-wire
- PC keyboard
- HD44780 LCDs
- MIDI
It includes an ADC and can bit bash these protocols at the wire level. It can also be put into UART bridge mode, acting as a simple serial port.
Reference
Our connector
brown - GND red - +3.3 orange - +5 yellow - ADC green - VPU blue - AUX purple - CLK grey - MOSI white - CS black - MISO
NB This order depends on attachment as connector is symmetrical and may be inverted.
Sparkfun Connectors
I have noticed that the sparkfun connector and buspirate uses the following mappings
black – gnd white – 3.3V grey – 5V purple – ADC blue – VExtern green – aux1 yellow – clk orange – MOSI red – CS brown – MISO
AVRDude bus pirate mappings
+ * BusPirate AVR Chip + * --------- -------- + * GND <-> GND + * +5V <-> Vcc + * CS <-> RESET + * MOSI <-> MOSI + * MISO <-> MISO + * SCL/CLK <-> SCK
Information about the schematics to use with any of the supported protocols can be found here [1]
How to get a shell anything UART
Follow this step to get a shell using the bus pirate to you UART devices.
- 1. First find the UART baud rate for the device. You can generally find this information from the constructors manual or using an oscilloscope.Note it on a piece of paper.
- 2. Find the connecting plug for it. Need some magic here. It mostly trying to find the GND first using tester and trying to find the voltage pin and data pin.
- 3. Connect you bus pirate to your device.
- 4. Find the new device using 'ls /dev/tty*'
- 5. Start a shell. Either trough minicom or screen.
- 6. m ( for mode)
- 7. 3 (for selecting the UART)
- 8. select your baud rate ( most common baud rate are 9600 or 115200)
- 9. default work in most of the case to get your shell on any devices 8
- 10. select stop bits is 1 most of the case
- 11. enjoy your shell.
Real life example
As it happened at the LHS, the bus pirate interacting with a Hitachi HM55B compass module: