Bluetooth: Peripheral Heart Rate Monitor with Coded PHY
The Peripheral Heart Rate Monitor with Coded PHY offers similar functionality to the Bluetooth: Peripheral HR sample from Zephyr. However, this sample supports LE Coded PHY.
Requirements
The sample supports the following development kits:
Hardware platforms |
PCA |
Board name |
Board target |
---|---|---|---|
PCA10175 |
|
||
PCA10095 |
|
||
PCA10056 |
|
Note
If you use nRF5340 DK, the additional configuration of the network core will be taken from the child_image
directory.
For more details, see Image-specific variables.
The sample also requires a device running a Heart Rate Server with LE Coded PHY support to connect to. For example, another development kit running the Bluetooth: Central Heart Rate Monitor with Coded PHY sample.
Overview
The sample demonstrates a basic Bluetooth® Low Energy Peripheral role functionality that exposes the Heart Rate GATT Service with LE Coded PHY support, which is not available in Zephyr Bluetooth LE Controller (See Controller for more information). Once it connects to a Central device, it generates dummy heart rate values. You can use it together with the Bluetooth: Central Heart Rate Monitor with Coded PHY sample.
User interface
The user interface of the sample depends on the hardware platform you are using.
- LED 1:
Blinks, toggling on/off every second, when the main loop is running and the device is advertising.
- LED 2:
Lit when the development kit is connected.
- LED 0:
Blinks, toggling on/off every second, when the main loop is running and the device is advertising.
- LED 1:
Lit when the development kit is connected.
Building and running
This sample can be found under samples/bluetooth/peripheral_hr_coded
in the nRF Connect SDK folder structure.
To build the sample, follow the instructions in Building an application for your preferred building environment. See also Programming an application for programming steps and Testing and optimization for general information about testing and debugging in the nRF Connect SDK.
Note
When building repository applications in the SDK repositories, building with sysbuild is enabled by default.
If you work with out-of-tree freestanding applications, you need to manually pass the --sysbuild
parameter to every build command or configure west to always use it.
Testing
After programming the sample to your development kit, you can test it by connecting to another development kit that runs the Bluetooth: Central Heart Rate Monitor with Coded PHY.
Connect to the kit that runs this sample with a terminal emulator (for example, nRF Connect Serial Terminal). See Testing and optimization for the required settings and steps.
Reset the kit.
Program the other kit with the Bluetooth: Central Heart Rate Monitor with Coded PHY sample.
Wait until the Coded advertiser is detected by the Central. In the terminal window, check for information similar to the following:
Connected: xx.xx.xx.xx.xx.xx (random), tx_phy 4, rx_phy 4
In the terminal window, observe that notifications are enabled:
<inf> hrs: HRS notifications enabled
Dependencies
This sample uses the following nRF Connect SDK library:
This sample uses the following Zephyr libraries:
include/zephyr/types.h
include/errno.h
include/zephyr.h
include/sys/printk.h
include/sys/byteorder.h
-
include/kernel.h
API:
include/bluetooth/bluetooth.h
include/bluetooth/conn.h
include/bluetooth/uuid.h
include/bluetooth/gatt.h
include/bluetooth/services/bas.h
include/bluetooth/services/hrs.h