Thanks for that suggestion! Obvious next step. As it turns out, there's
nothing "stable" coming out of the TXD(pin 3) - in fact on some resets it
latches to vcc... ?  although I also got a nice pulse train on another reset
- but mostly I see nothing! So need to investigate those issues.  I
assembled a plain vanilla amforth 4.5 using the example template and
appturnkey files... assume if all is well that will give me a simple forth
prompt so further assuming my issue is hardware or the fuse bytes.

On Tue, Oct 4, 2011 at 8:44 PM, D Nyberg <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 10/4/2011 10:43:00 AM, Mark Malmros ([email protected]) wrote:
>  > What am I missing?
>  >
>  > I am attempting to put amforth on a Atmega328p following more or less
> the
>  > Amforth Users Guide (which was written for Amforth 4.2). I am working
>  > from
>  > Linux.
> ...
>
> Can you put  a scope  or even just a logic probe in capture mode on the
> uart pins, to see if they're being wiggled at all? If so, then the speed
> field of the fuse bits may be where you should be looking. I had some
> difficulty with this on a 324. I eventually brute forced it by trying
> many settings until I got console I/O that looked  right. I still have
> no idea why the value  I settled  on is the correct one.
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a
> definitive record of customers, application performance, security
> threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes
> sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense.
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy1
> _______________________________________________
> Amforth-devel mailing list for http://amforth.sf.net/
> [email protected]
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/amforth-devel
>
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a
definitive record of customers, application performance, security
threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes
sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy1
_______________________________________________
Amforth-devel mailing list for http://amforth.sf.net/
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/amforth-devel

Reply via email to