From a6cc91387a41f7039708e6fce0ea07384381fc29 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Arthur Heymans Date: Wed, 03 Aug 2016 08:58:37 -0400 Subject: node and subsection title switched: "How to program ..." Documentation did not build because node "How to program an SPI flash chip with BeagleBone Black" did not exist. Switching @node and @subsection title fixes this --- (limited to 'docs') diff --git a/docs/libreboot.texi b/docs/libreboot.texi index cddc8f3..4ea33be 100644 --- a/docs/libreboot.texi +++ b/docs/libreboot.texi @@ -2685,8 +2685,8 @@ However if you have mistakenly disabled developer mode and locked yourself out, @end menu -@node How to program an SPI flash chip with BeagleBone Black or Teensy 3.1 -@subsubsection How to program an SPI flash chip with the BeagleBone Black +@node How to program an SPI flash chip with BeagleBone Black +@subsubsection How to program an SPI flash chip with the BeagleBone Black or Teensy 3.1 This document exists as a guide for reading from or writing to an SPI flash chip with the BeagleBone Black, using the @uref{http://flashrom.org/Flashrom,flashrom} software. A BeagleBone Black, rev. C was used when creating this guide, but earlier revisions may also work. There was no justification for a further section for the Teensy. Simply refer to @uref{https://www.flashrom.org/Teensy_3.1_SPI_%2B_LPC/FWH_Flasher#ISP_Usage,this page on flashrom.org} for information about how to set it up, and correlate that with the pins on the SPI flash chip as per other guides in the libreboot documentation for each board. At the time of writing, the teensy is tested for flashing on the ThinkPad X200, but it should work for other targets. here is a photo of the setup for Teensy: @uref{http://h5ai.swiftgeek.net/IMG_20160601_120855.jpg,http://h5ai.swiftgeek.net/IMG_20160601_120855.jpg}. -- cgit v0.9.1