SPRAD28 October 2022 AM2431 , AM2432 , AM2434 , AM2631 , AM2631-Q1 , AM2632 , AM2632-Q1 , AM2634 , AM2634-Q1 , AM263P4 , AM263P4-Q1 , AM26C31 , AM26C31-EP , AM26C31M , AM26C32 , AM26C32-EP , AM26C32C , AM26C32M , AM26LS31 , AM26LS31M , AM26LS32A , AM26LS32AC , AM26LS32AM , AM26LS33A , AM26LS33A-SP , AM26LS33AM , AM26LV31 , AM26LV31E , AM26LV31E-EP , AM26LV32 , AM26LV32E , AM26LV32E-EP , AM26S10 , AM2732 , AM2732-Q1
Once a debug session is started, you can create a more permanent group. This Fixed Group has a specific node in the Debug view that has its own debug context. Selecting this group debug context causes debug commands to be sent to all group members without the need to select them individually. Note, that while the commands are sent simultaneously, how synchronously the commands are executed depends on if the hardware target itself supports synchronous execution.
In the screenshot below, a Fixed Group is created for just the first and second CPUs in the Debug view by multi-selecting them and then using the Group core(s) option:
This causes a new group called Group 1 to appear in the Debug view, with the CPUs members.