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1. About this Document
2. Introduction
3. Nios® V Processor Hardware System Design with Intel® Quartus® Prime Pro Edition and Platform Designer
4. Nios® V Processor Software System Design
5. Nios® V Processor Configuration and Booting Solutions
6. Nios® V Processor - Using the MicroC/TCP-IP Stack
7. Nios® V Processor Debugging, Verifying, and Simulating
8. Document Revision History for the Nios® V Embedded Processor Design Handbook
5.1. Introduction
5.2. Linking Applications
5.3. Nios® V Processor Booting Methods
5.4. Introduction to Nios® V Processor Booting Methods
5.5. Nios® V Processor Booting from Configuration QSPI Flash
5.6. Nios V Processor Booting from On-Chip Memory (OCRAM)
5.7. Summary of Nios V Processor Vector Configuration and BSP Settings
7.4.1. Prerequisites
7.4.2. Setting Up and Generating Your Simulation Environment in Platform Designer
7.4.3. Creating Nios V Processor Software
7.4.4. Generating Memory Initialization File
7.4.5. Generating System Simulation Files
7.4.6. Running Simulation in the QuestaSim Simulator Using Command Line
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2.3.3. Software Design Flow
This section provides the design flow to generate and build a Nios® V/m processor software project. Steps on how to generate an Application and Board Support Package (BSP) project using the niosv-app and niosv-bsp utilities are provided. After that, you can choose to build the application project using Eclipse Embedded CDT, or through the command line interface. Intel will provide an IDE for the Nios® V processor in a future release of the Intel® Quartus® Prime software.
Note: You need to setup the PATH variable to include the installed open-source tools.
- If you use Eclipse Embedded CDT, refer to Building the Application Project using Eclipse Embedded CDT.
- If you use CLI, refer to Setting Up Open-Source Tools.