Gazell ACK Payload Host

This sample shows the Host role for basic Gazell communication. As a single sample, the Host receives packets from the Device and transmits acknowledgements with the payload. Follow the instructions and use the files from this page, and the Gazell ACK Payload Device sample.

Requirements

Note

Follow the steps from and include the Gazell ACK Payload Device sample with this sample.

The sample supports the following development kits:

Hardware platforms

PCA

Board name

Build target

nRF52840 DK

PCA10056

nrf52840dk_nrf52840

nrf52840dk_nrf52840

nRF52833 DK

PCA10100

nrf52833dk_nrf52833

nrf52833dk_nrf52833

nRF52 DK

PCA10040

nrf52dk_nrf52832

nrf52dk_nrf52832

You can use any two of the development kits listed above and mix different development kits.

Overview

The sample uses the Gazell Link Layer library to exchange packets with payload in two directions. It consists of two applications, a Device and a Host.

  • Device

    A Device sends a packet and adds a new packet to the TX queue every time it receives an ACK from Host. Before adding a packet to the TX queue, the contents of the buttons are copied to the first payload byte (byte 0). When the Device receives an ACK, the contents of the first payload byte of the ACK are output to the LEDs.

  • Host

    A Host listens for a packet and sends an ACK when it has received the packet. The contents of the first payload byte of the received packet is output to LEDs. The contents of buttons are sent in the first payload byte (byte 0) of the ACK packet.

The Device transmits packets with its buttons state and the Host acknowledges all successfully received packets from the Device and adds its buttons state in the ACK packets it transmits. Both devices display the peer’s buttons state on their LEDs You can use this sample to enable simple, bidirectional data exchange over the Gazell protocol between two devices.

User interface

LED 1-4:

Indicate that packets are received. An LED is turned off when the corresponding button is pressed on the other kit.

Button 1-4:

The button pressed state bitmask is sent to the other kit. A button pressed is sent as 0 and a button released is sent as 1.

Building and running

The Device sample is under samples/gazell/gzll_ack_payload_device in the nRF Connect SDK folder structure. The Host sample is under samples/gazell/gzll_ack_payload_host in the nRF Connect SDK folder structure.

See Building and programming an application for information about how to build and program the application.

Testing

After programming the Device sample on one of the development kits and the Host sample on the other kit, test them by performing the following steps:

  1. Power on both kits.

  2. Observe that all the LEDs light up on both kits.

  3. Press Button 1 for the Device sample. Observe that the Host sample turns off LED 1 on the other kit.

  4. Press Button 2 for the Host sample. Observe that the Device sample turns off LED 2 on the other kit.

  5. Optionally, connect to the kits with a terminal emulator (for example, PuTTY). See How to connect with PuTTY for the required settings.

  6. Observe the logging output for both kits.

Dependencies

This sample uses the following nRF Connect SDK libraries:

It uses the following nrfxlib library:

It uses the following Zephyr libraries: