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SW4STM32 and SW4Linux fully supports the STM32MP1 asymmetric multicore Cortex/A7+M4 MPUs

   With System Workbench for Linux, Embedded Linux on the STM32MP1 family of MPUs from ST was never as simple to build and maintain, even for newcomers in the Linux world. And, if you install System Workbench for Linux in System Workbench for STM32 you can seamlessly develop and debug asymmetric applications running partly on Linux, partly on the Cortex-M4.
You can get more information from the ac6-tools website and download (registration required) various documents highlighting:

System Workbench for STM32


Importing Cube example programs: F7-discovery

Hank

Thanks - that solved the greyed out issue but I’m still nowhere near getting anything loaded onto the chip.

I import the project and then when I build it it doesn’t find files like “main.h” which are clearly in the project directory.

There also seems to be the most complicated system to specify how to download the code to the chip. Why can’t I just select ST-LINK as the programmer/debugger and press “download” like every other IDE?

I’m very near to giving up having wasted over 10 hours without even getting a simple program downloaded onto the chip - something that took 5 minutes with Keil.

Can anyone point me at a USEFUL tutorial?

Peter