96Boards Argonkey

Overview

96Boards Argonkey board is based on the ST Microelectronics STM32F412CG Cortex M4 CPU.

This board acts as a sensor hub platform for all 96Boards compliant family products. It can also be used as a standalone board.

96Boards Argonkey

Fig. 61 96Boards Argonkey

Hardware

96Boards Argonkey provides the following hardware components:

  • STM32F412CG in UFQFPN48 package

  • ARM® 32-bit Cortex®-M4 CPU with FPU

  • 100 MHz max CPU frequency

  • 1.8V work voltage

  • 1024 KB Flash

  • 256 KB SRAM

  • On board sensors:

    • Humidity: STMicro HTS221

    • Temperature/Pressure: STMicro LPS22HB

    • ALS: Intersil ISL29034

    • Proximity: STMicro VL53L0X

    • Accelerometer/Gyroscope: STMicro LSM6DSL

    • Geomagnetic: STMicro LIS2MDL

    • AMR Hall sensor: MRMS501A

    • Microphone: STMicro MP34DT05

  • 2 User LEDs

  • 16 General purpose LEDs

  • GPIO with external interrupt capability

  • UART

  • I2C (3)

  • SPI (1)

  • I2S (1)

Supported Features

The Zephyr 96b_argonkey board configuration supports the following hardware features:

Interface

Controller

Driver/Component

NVIC

on-chip

nested vector interrupt controller

SYSTICK

on-chip

system clock

UART

on-chip

serial port

GPIO

on-chip

gpio

PINMUX

on-chip

pinmux

FLASH

on-chip

flash

SPI

on-chip

spi

I2C

on-chip

i2c

More information about the board can be found at the ARGONKEY website 1.

The default board configuration can be found in the defconfig file:

boards/arm/96b_argonkey/96b_argonkey_defconfig

Connections and IOs

LED

  • LED1 / User1 LED = PB2

  • LED2 / User2 LED = PC13

Push buttons

  • BUTTON = RST (BT1)

  • BUTTON = USR (BT2)

System Clock

96Boards Argonkey can be driven by an internal oscillator as well as the main PLL clock. In default board configuration, the 16MHz external oscillator is used to drive the main PLL clock to generate a System Clock (SYSCLK) at 84MHz. On the bus side, AHB clock runs at 84MHz, while APB1/APB2 clock runs at 42MHz.

Serial Port

On 96Boards Argonkey, Zephyr console output is assigned to USART1. Default settings are 115200 8N1.

I2C

96Boards Argonkey board has up to 3 I2Cs. The default I2C mapping is:

  • I2C1_SCL : PB6

  • I2C1_SDA : PB7

  • I2C2_SCL : PB10

  • I2C2_SDA : PB9

  • I2C3_SCL : PA8

  • I2C3_SCL : PB4

I2C3 goes to the P2 connector and can be used to attach external sensors. It goes to 100Kbit maximum.

SPI

96Boards Argonkey board has 2 SPIs. SPI1 is used in slave mode as the communication bus with the AP. SPI2 is used in master mode to control the LSM6DSL sensor. The default SPI mapping is:

  • SPI1_NSS : PA4

  • SPI1_SCK : PA5

  • SPI1_MISO : PA6

  • SPI1_MOSI : PA7

  • SPI2_NSS : PB12

  • SPI2_SCK : PB13

  • SPI2_MISO : PB14

  • SPI2_MOSI : PB15

Programming and Debugging

Building

Here is an example for building the Hello World application.

# From the root of the zephyr repository
west build -b 96b_argonkey samples/hello_world

Flashing

96Boards Argonkey can be flashed by two methods, one using the ROM bootloader and another using the SWD debug port (which requires additional hardware).

Flashing using the ROM bootloader requires a special activation pattern, which can be triggered by using the BOOT0 pin. The ROM bootloader supports flashing via USB (DFU), UART, I2C and SPI, but this document describes the UART case only. You can read more about how to enable and use the ROM bootloader by checking the application note AN2606 2 .

Using ROM bootloader:

Hereafter the documents describes basic steps to perform ArgonKey firmware flashing on a Linux PC using UART as communication channel.

  1. Connect ArgonKey UART to your Linux PC using, for example, a USB-TTL serial cable. The flashing procedure has been tested using a TTL-232RG 5 cable with FTDI chip. The UART pins on ArgonKey can be found on the P3 low speed expansion connector on the back of the board.

    • GND (black) to ArgonKey GND (P3.1)

    • TXD (orange) to ArgonKey UART0_TXD (P3.5)

    • RXD (yellow) to ArgonKey UART0_RXD (P3.7)

    When the USB cable is inserted to the Linux PC the following device will be created: /dev/ttyUSBx (x is usually ‘0’).

  2. Force STM32F412CG to enter in Bootloader mode

    • Connect BOOT0 to 1V8 (link P2.1 to P3.30)

    • Press and release the RST button

  3. Use stm32flash utility to flash the ArgonKey:

$ stm32flash  -w zephyr.bin -v -g 0x08000000 /dev/ttyUSB0

See References section for more info on stm32flash 3.

Using SWD debugger:

Select a commercial JTAG/SWD h/w tool and connect it to ArgonKey P4 connector.

The ArgonKey has been tested using the ST-LINK/V2 4 tool. Once that the tool is connected to the PC through USB, it presents itself as a USB composite device with mass storage capability. The device can be then mounted in linux and the f/w can be actually copied there and will be automatically flashed by the ST-LINK onto the ArgonKey.

Example:

$ mount /dev/sdb /mnt
$ cp zephyr.bin /mnt
$ umount /mnt

Debugging

References

1

https://www.st.com/en/evaluation-tools/steval-mki187v1.html

2

https://www.st.com/resource/en/application_note/cd00167594.pdf

3

https://sourceforge.net/p/stm32flash/wiki/Home/

4

http://www.st.com/en/development-tools/st-link-v2.html

5

http://www.ftdichip.com/Support/Documents/DataSheets/Cables/DS_TTL-232RG_CABLES.pdf