NXP MIMXRT1050-EVK

Overview

The i.MX RT1050 is a new processor family featuring NXP’s advanced implementation of the ARM Cortex-M7 Core. It provides high CPU performance and real-time response.

The i.MX RT1050 provides various memory interfaces, including SDRAM, Raw NAND FLASH, NOR FLASH, SD/eMMC, Quad SPI, HyperBus and a wide range of other interfaces for connecting peripherals, such as WLAN, Bluetooth™, GPS, displays, and camera sensors. As with other i.MX processors, i.MX RT1050 also has rich audio and video features, including LCD display, basic 2D graphics, camera interface, SPDIF, and I2S audio interface.

The following document refers to the discontinued MIMXRT1050-EVK board. For the MIMXRT1050-EVKB board, refer to Board Revisions section.

MIMXRT1050-EVK

Hardware

  • MIMXRT1052DVL6A MCU (600 MHz, 512 KB TCM)

  • Memory

    • 256 KB SDRAM

    • 64 Mbit QSPI Flash

    • 512 Mbit Hyper Flash

  • Display

    • LCD connector

    • Touch connector

  • Ethernet

    • 10/100 Mbit/s Ethernet PHY

  • USB

    • USB 2.0 OTG connector

    • USB 2.0 host connector

  • Audio

    • 3.5 mm audio stereo headphone jack

    • Board-mounted microphone

    • Left and right speaker out connectors

  • Power

    • 5 V DC jack

  • Debug

    • JTAG 20-pin connector

    • OpenSDA with DAPLink

  • Sensor

    • FXOS8700CQ 6-axis e-compass

    • CMOS camera sensor interface

  • Expansion port

    • Arduino interface

  • CAN bus connector

For more information about the MIMXRT1050 SoC and MIMXRT1050-EVK board, see these references:

Supported Features

The mimxrt1050_evk board configuration supports the following hardware features:

Interface

Controller

Driver/Component

NVIC

on-chip

nested vector interrupt controller

SYSTICK

on-chip

systick

DISPLAY

on-chip

display

GPIO

on-chip

gpio

I2C

on-chip

i2c

SDHC

on-chip

disk access

SPI

on-chip

spi

UART

on-chip

serial port-polling; serial port-interrupt

ENET

on-chip

ethernet

USB

on-chip

USB device

The default configuration can be found in the defconfig file:

boards/arm/mimxrt1050_evk/mimxrt1050_evk_defconfig

Other hardware features are not currently supported by the port.

Connections and IOs

The MIMXRT1050 SoC has five pairs of pinmux/gpio controllers.

Name

Function

Usage

GPIO_AD_B0_00

LPSPI3_SCK

SPI

GPIO_AD_B0_01

LPSPI3_SDO

SPI

GPIO_AD_B0_02

LPSPI3_SDI/LCD_RST| SPI/LCD Display

GPIO_AD_B0_03

LPSPI3_PCS0

SPI

GPIO_AD_B0_05

GPIO

SD Card

GPIO_AD_B0_09

GPIO/ENET_RST

LED

GPIO_AD_B0_10

GPIO/ENET_INT

GPIO/Ethernet

GPIO_AD_B0_11

GPIO

Touch Interrupt

GPIO_AD_B0_12

LPUART1_TX

UART Console

GPIO_AD_B0_13

LPUART1_RX

UART Console

GPIO_AD_B1_00

LPI2C1_SCL

I2C

GPIO_AD_B1_01

LPI2C1_SDA

I2C

GPIO_AD_B1_06

LPUART3_TX

UART BT HCI

GPIO_AD_B1_07

LPUART3_RX

UART BT HCI

WAKEUP

GPIO

SW0

GPIO_B0_00

LCD_CLK

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_01

LCD_ENABLE

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_02

LCD_HSYNC

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_03

LCD_VSYNC

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_04

LCD_DATA00

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_05

LCD_DATA01

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_06

LCD_DATA02

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_07

LCD_DATA03

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_08

LCD_DATA04

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_09

LCD_DATA05

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_10

LCD_DATA06

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_11

LCD_DATA07

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_12

LCD_DATA08

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_13

LCD_DATA09

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_14

LCD_DATA10

LCD Display

GPIO_B0_15

LCD_DATA11

LCD Display

GPIO_B1_00

LCD_DATA12

LCD Display

GPIO_B1_01

LCD_DATA13

LCD Display

GPIO_B1_02

LCD_DATA14

LCD Display

GPIO_B1_03

LCD_DATA15

LCD Display

GPIO_B1_04

ENET_RX_DATA00

Ethernet

GPIO_B1_05

ENET_RX_DATA01

Ethernet

GPIO_B1_06

ENET_RX_EN

Ethernet

GPIO_B1_07

ENET_TX_DATA00

Ethernet

GPIO_B1_08

ENET_TX_DATA01

Ethernet

GPIO_B1_09

ENET_TX_EN

Ethernet

GPIO_B1_10

ENET_REF_CLK

Ethernet

GPIO_B1_11

ENET_RX_ER

Ethernet

GPIO_B1_12

GPIO

SD Card

GPIO_B1_14

USDHC1_VSELECT

SD Card

GPIO_B1_15

BACKLIGHT_CTL

LCD Display

GPIO_EMC_40

ENET_MDC

Ethernet

GPIO_EMC_41

ENET_MDIO

Ethernet

GPIO_AD_B0_09

ENET_RST

Ethernet

GPIO_AD_B0_10

ENET_INT

Ethernet

GPIO_SD_B0_00

USDHC1_CMD

SD Card

GPIO_SD_B0_01

USDHC1_CLK

SD Card

GPIO_SD_B0_02

USDHC1_DATA0

SD Card

GPIO_SD_B0_03

USDHC1_DATA1

SD Card

GPIO_SD_B0_04

USDHC1_DATA2

SD Card

GPIO_SD_B0_05

USDHC1_DATA3

SD Card

System Clock

The MIMXRT1050 SoC is configured to use the 24 MHz external oscillator on the board with the on-chip PLL to generate a 600 MHz core clock.

Serial Port

The MIMXRT1050 SoC has eight UARTs. LPUART1 is configured for the console, LPUART3 for the Bluetooth Host Controller Interface (BT HCI), and the remaining are not used.

USB

The RT1050 SoC has two USB OTG (USBOTG) controllers that supports both device and host functions through its micro USB connectors. Only USB device function is supported in Zephyr at the moment.

Programming and Debugging

Build and flash applications as usual (see Building an Application and Run an Application for more details).

Configuring a Debug Probe

A debug probe is used for both flashing and debugging the board. This board is configured by default to use the OpenSDA DAPLink Onboard Debug Probe, however the pyOCD Debug Host Tools do not yet support programming the external flashes on this board so you must reconfigure the board for one of the following debug probes instead.

Configuring a Console

Regardless of your choice in debug probe, we will use the OpenSDA microcontroller as a usb-to-serial adapter for the serial console. Check that jumpers J30 and J31 are on (they are on by default when boards ship from the factory) to connect UART signals to the OpenSDA microcontroller.

Connect a USB cable from your PC to J28.

Use the following settings with your serial terminal of choice (minicom, putty, etc.):

  • Speed: 115200

  • Data: 8 bits

  • Parity: None

  • Stop bits: 1

Flashing

Here is an example for the Hello World application.

# From the root of the zephyr repository
west build -b mimxrt1050_evk samples/hello_world
west flash

Open a serial terminal, reset the board (press the SW4 button), and you should see the following message in the terminal:

***** Booting Zephyr OS v1.14.0-rc1 *****
Hello World! mimxrt1050_evk

Debugging

Here is an example for the Hello World application.

# From the root of the zephyr repository
west build -b mimxrt1050_evk samples/hello_world
west debug

Open a serial terminal, step through the application in your debugger, and you should see the following message in the terminal:

***** Booting Zephyr OS v1.14.0-rc1 *****
Hello World! mimxrt1050_evk

Troubleshooting

If the debug probe fails to connect with the following error, it’s possible that the boot header in HyperFlash is invalid or corrupted. The boot header is configured by CONFIG_NXP_IMX_RT_BOOT_HEADER.

Remote debugging using :2331
Remote communication error.  Target disconnected.: Connection reset by peer.
"monitor" command not supported by this target.
"monitor" command not supported by this target.
You can't do that when your target is `exec'
(gdb) Could not connect to target.
Please check power, connection and settings.

You can fix it by erasing and reprogramming the HyperFlash with the following steps:

  1. Set the SW7 DIP switches to ON-ON-ON-OFF to prevent booting from HyperFlash.

  2. Reset by pressing SW4

  3. Run west debug or west flash again with a known working Zephyr application.

  4. Set the SW7 DIP switches to OFF-ON-ON-OFF to boot from HyperFlash.

  5. Reset by pressing SW4

Board Revisions

The original MIMXRT1050-EVK (rev A0) board was updated with a newer MIMXRT1050-EVKB (rev A1) board, with these major hardware differences:

- SoC changed from MIMXRT1052DVL6**A** to MIMXRT1052DVL6**B**
- Hardware bug fixes for: power, interfaces, and memory
- Arduino headers included

For more details, please see the following NXP i.MXRT1050 A0 to A1 Migration Guide.

Current Zephyr build supports the new MIMXRT1050-EVKB