Posts Tagged low-frequency oscillator
Reset clock fuse bits on AVR
I am just starting to learn about AVR programming and I really enjoy myself! 😀
Except maybe when I play with the fuse bytes and I screw things up…
Basically, I was using a ATtiny13A microcontroller and I configured the fuse bytes to use the internal low-frequency oscillator running at 128kHz. I thought it would be a good idea to check if my simple blinking LED program was still working with this internal oscillator.
The good news is the LED was still blinking. But the bad news is I wasn’t able to reprogram the chip anymore… 🙁 After some research, I figure it out: the ISP interface needs to run slower than the microcontroller in order to flash it! And obviously, my ISP interface was running faster than 128kHz…
These microcontrollers are very cheap so I could just throw it away. But I am not the kind of person to give up without a fight! 😉
So I talked to my friend Google and he suggested me to read the following article: Fixing a bad frequency fuse bit on an AVR.
I followed the instructions and here is the output:
C:\AVR>avrdude -p attiny13 -P usb -c usbtiny -tuF avrdude: initialization failed, rc=-1 avrdude: AVR device initialized and ready to accept instructions Reading | ################################################## | 100% 0.00s avrdude: Device signature = 0x000000 avrdude: Yikes! Invalid device signature. avrdude: Expected signature for ATtiny13 is 1E 90 07 avrdude> sck 1000 >>> sck 1000 avrdude: Setting SCK period to 250 usec avrdude> e >>> e avrdude: erasing chip avrdude> sck 10 >>> sck 10 avrdude: Setting SCK period to 10 usec avrdude> quit >>> quit avrdude done. Thank you.
However, there is a missing instruction in this article. Indeed, these instructions erased the chip but didn’t fix the fuses, so now it’s blank but the fuses are still wrong!
In order to reprogram the fuses, you need to use the ‘-B250’ in the command line:
avrdude -p attiny13 -P usb -c usbtiny -U lfuse:w:0x6A:m -U hfuse:w:0xFF:m -B250