Oberon RTK

Change Note 2026-06-03

New website, lib/v3.1 for all supported MCUs

Website

You are reading this on a newly structured website. You may also note a slightly changed appearance. The site is now rendered using a new custom renderer, which completely decouples the source Markdown authoring structure from the site structure that you see here. The target structure is defined by a single site definition file, importing the source files. References (links) use global labels assigned to source pages, not their position inside directories and their sub-directories. Which allows to re-arrange the target structure at any time without breaking a single link – hopefully for the benefit of keeping the site current.

A few notable new sections and documents include:

The home page is also revised.

Some of the pages are still stubs, or will require updates, due the extended range of supported MCUs, S/NS work, and a more systematic conceptual and technical framework structure.

References to the repository are given as <repo>/path/to/dir-or-file.

lib/v3.1

  • The framework library is ported to all four supported MCUs: RP2040, RP2350, STM32U585, and STM32H573. This does not imply that all MCUs are supported to the same extent yet.

  • The framework consistently implements the concepts as described in Program Startup, Device Modules, and Secure/Non-secure Program Structure (the latter only for the Cortex-M33 MCUs with TrustZone).

  • Consider this the first consolidated and consistent release of lib/v3.1.

Example & Test Programs

  • The current programs are based on lib/v3.1.

  • All programs provide a .vscode/launch.json file for debugging in VisualStudio Code.

  • The S/NS programs provide build scripts (build-elf.cmd, build-db-elf.cmd); the plan is to provide similar scripts for all example programs with multi-step build procedures, in particular for debugging.

  • A set of guides gets you up and running, including configuration and set-up.

Debugging

  • Debugging support is stable across all supported MCUs.

  • Using the debugger is now my default set-up during programming: loading of the binaries using Cortex-Debug (in VisualStudio Code) is one-click-simple and uniform across all MCU types, and running the program or module under development inside the debugger spares me using output statements to hunt down my mistakes. And – any peripheral device register can easily be inspected.

  • See Your First Debug Session for a starting point.

Astrobe Configuration Files

  • The configuration files in <repo>/config are now placed into sub-directories per library version, for example <repo>/config/astrobe-rp2350/u585i-iot-v31.

  • See Astrobe Configuration Files for more details.

Environment Configuration and Set-up

Tools

  • The OpenOCD server connect scripts have been moved to <repo>/tools/server-scripts. You may need to update your $PATH accordingly.

  • The custom OpenOCD config files have been moved to <repo>/tools/server-scripts/openocd. This does not require any configuration change, since the config files are used by the server scripts.

Last updated: 3 June 2026