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  2. In-circuit emulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-circuit_emulation

    In-circuit emulation (ICE) is the use of a hardware device or in-circuit emulator used to debug the software of an embedded system. It operates by using a processor with the additional ability to support debugging operations, as well as to carry out the main function of the system.

  3. debugWIRE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DebugWIRE

    debugWIRE is supported by all modern hardware debuggers from Microchip.This includes Atmel-ICE, [3] JTAGICE3, AVR Dragon, JTAGICE mkII, and SNAP. [4] It is also possible to build a cheap debugWIRE hardware debugger [5] based on an open-source Arduino sketch, [6] using a general USB-Serial adaptor or ATtiny85 board, [7] or a CH552 microcontroller.

  4. MPLAB devices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MPLAB_devices

    The MPLAB REAL ICE. The MPLAB REAL ICE (In-Circuit Emulator) is a high-speed emulator for Microchip devices. It debugs and programs PIC and dsPIC microcontrollers in conjunction with the MPLAB IDE, while the target device is "in-circuit". [6] [7] The REAL ICE is significantly faster than the ICD 2, for programming and debugging. [8] [9]

  5. List of ARM Cortex-M development tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ARM_Cortex-M...

    Available as a plugin for Atmel Studio and an Eclipse-based IDE. Eclipse as IDE, with GNU Tools as compiler/linker, e.g. aided with GNU ARM Eclipse plug-ins [13] [14] EmBitz (formerly Em::Blocks) – free, fast (non-eclipse) IDE for ST-LINK (live data updates), OpenOCD, including GNU Tools for ARM and project wizards for ST, Atmel, EnergyMicro ...

  6. AVR microcontrollers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AVR_microcontrollers

    The Atmel ICE is the currently supported inexpensive tool to program and debug all AVR devices (unlike the AVRISP/AVRISP mkII, Dragon, etc. discussed below). It connects to and receives power from a PC via USB, and supports JTAG , PDI , aWire , debugWIRE , SPI , SWD , TPI , and UPDI (the Microchip Unified Program and Debug Interface) interfaces.

  7. Atmel ARM-based processors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmel_ARM-based_processors

    Atmel ARM-based processors are microcontrollers and microprocessors integrated circuits, by Microchip Technology (previously Atmel), that are based on various 32-bit ARM processor cores, with in-house designed peripherals and tool support.

  8. Segger Microcontroller Systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Segger_Microcontroller_Systems

    Segger Microcontroller is a private company involved in the embedded systems industry. [1] It provides products used to develop and manufacture four categories of embedded systems: real-time operating systems (RTOS) and software libraries (), debugging and trace probes, programming tools (integrated development environment (IDE), compiler, linker), and in-system programmers (Flasher line of ...

  9. Texas Instruments TMS1100 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Instruments_TMS1100

    The TMS1100 is a family of microcontrollers introduced by Texas Instruments in 1975. This type of microprocessors are an expanded memory version of the TMS1000. [1]The 1100 is built on PMOS technology [2] with clock speed is 400 kHz.