cp command

Synopsis

cp source target count
cp.b source target count
cp.w source target count
cp.l source target count
cp.q source target count

Description

The cp command is used to copy count chunks of memory from the source address to the target address. If the target address points to NOR flash, the flash is programmed. When the target address points at ordinary memory, memmove() is used, so the two regions may overlap.

The number bytes in one chunk is defined by the suffix defaulting to 4 bytes:

suffix

chunk size

.b

1 byte

.w

2 bytes

.l

4 bytes

.q

8 bytes

<none>

4 bytes

source

source address, hexadecimal

target

target address, hexadecimal

count

number of words to be copied, hexadecimal

Examples

The example device has a NOR flash where the lower part of the flash is protected. We first copy to RAM, then to unprotected flash. Last we try to write to protectd flash.

=> mtd list
List of MTD devices:
* nor0
  - device: flash@0
  - parent: root_driver
  - driver: cfi_flash
  - path: /flash@0
  - type: NOR flash
  - block size: 0x20000 bytes
  - min I/O: 0x1 bytes
  - 0x000000000000-0x000002000000 : "nor0"
=> cp.b 4020000 5000000 200000
=> cp.b 4020000 1e00000 20000
Copy to Flash... done
=> cp.b 4020000 0 20000
Copy to Flash... Can't write to protected Flash sectors
=>

Configuration

The cp command is available if CONFIG_CMD_MEMORY=y. Support for 64 bit words (cp.q) is only available on 64-bit targets. Copying to flash depends on CONFIG_MTD_NOR_FLASH=y.

Return value

The return value $? is set to 0 (true) if the command was successfully, 1 (false) otherwise.