RX65N GRROSE

Tags: arch:renesas

This documentation discusses the port of NuttX to “GR-ROSE” board produced by Gadget Renesas. This board features the RX65N (R5F565NEHDFP 100pin QFP).

Board Features

  • Micro controller - RX65N (R5F565NEHDFP 100pin QFP) RXv2 core [34 CoreMark/mA]

  • ROM/RAM - 2MB/640KB

  • Operating Frequency - 120MHz(12MHz 10 Multiplication)

  • RTC Clock - 32.768kHz

  • Sensors - Temperature(inside MCU)

  • ROS I/F - Ethernet, USB(rosserial)

  • Serial Servo I/F - TTL x 4, RS-485 x 1

  • Analog I/F - ADC(12bit) x 6, DAC x 1

  • Wireless - IEEE 802.11b/g/n

  • PMOD I/F - 1 (I2C, SPI, UART)

  • External power supply - USB VBUS or 4.5V~18V

  • Supply to external - 3.3V, 5V

See the RX65N GRROSE website for further information about this board: http://gadget.renesas.com/en/product/rose.html

Serial Console

RX65N GRROSE supports 12 serial ports (SCI0 - SCI12), however only 5 ports can be tested(SCI0, SCI1, SCI2, SCI5 & SCI6).

Please find the pin configurations for SCI0, SCI1, SCI2, SCI5 & SCI6

SCI0 Pin Configuration:

Pin

Function

P21

RXD0

P20

TXD0

SCI1 Pin Configuration:

Pin

Function

P30

RXD1

P26

TXD1

SCI2 Pin Configuration:

Pin

Function

P12

RXD2

P13

TXD2

SCI3 Pin Configuration (connected to WiFi module):

Pin

Function

P25

RXD3

P23

TXD3

SCI5 Pin Configuration:

Pin

Function

PC2

RXD5

PC3

TXD5

SCI6 Pin Configuration:

Pin

Function

P33

RXD6

P32

TXD6

SCI8 Pin Configuration (Half duplication mode with RS485 driver):

Pin

Function

PC6

RXD8

PC7

TXD8

PC5

Direction (L=TX, H=RX)

Serial Connection Configuration

  1. GRROSE board needs to be connected to PC terminal, using USB to Serial Chip.

  2. Connect TX of USB to serial chip to RX of SCIX(0,1,2,5,6)

  3. Connect RX of USB to serial chip to TX of SCIX(0,1,2,5,6)

  4. Connect GND to GND pin.

  5. Configure Teraterm to 115200 baud.

LEDs

The RX65N GRROSE board has 2 LED’s, 1 Power LED(LED3) and 2 User LED’s(LED1, LED2),which are enabled through software.

If enabled the LED is simply turned on when the board boots successfully, and is blinking on panic / assertion failed.

Networking

Ethernet Connections

Pin

Function

PA4

ET0_MDC

PA3

ET0_MDIO

PB2

REF50CK0

PB7

RMII0_CRS_DV

PB1

RMII0_RXD0

PB0

RMII0_RXD1

PB3

RMII0_RX_ER

PB5

RMII0_ETXD0

PB6

RMII0_ETXD1

PB4

RMII0_TXD_EN

PA5

ET0_LINKSTA

PA6_ET_RST

ETHER reset

NuttX Configurations

The following configurations need to be enabled for network.

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC=y: Enable the EMAC Peripheral for RX65N

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0=y: Enable the EMAC Peripheral for RX65N

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0_PHYSR=30: Address of PHY status register on LAN8720A

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0_PHYSR_100FD=0x18: Needed for LAN8720A

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0_PHYSR_100HD=0x08

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0_PHYSR_10FD=0x14

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0_PHYSR_10HD=0x04

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0_PHYSR_ALTCONFIG=y

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0_PHYSR_ALTMODE=0x1c

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0_RMII=y

  • CONFIG_RX65N_EMAC0_PHYADDR=0: LAN8720A PHY is at address 1

  • CONFIG_SCHED_WORKQUEUE=y: Work queue support is needed

  • CONFIG_SCHED_HPWORK=y: High Priority Work queue support

  • CONFIG_SCHED_LPWORK=y: Low Priority Work queue support

Using the network with NSH

The IP address is configured using DHCP, using the below mentioned configurations:

  • CONFIG_NETUTILS_DHCPC=y

  • CONFIG_NETUTILS_DHCPD=y

  • CONFIG_NSH_DHCPC=y

  • CONFIG_NETINIT_DHCPC=y

nsh> ifconfig
  eth0    HWaddr 00:e0:de:ad:be:ef at UP
          IPaddr:10.75.24.53 DRaddr:10.75.24.1 Mask:255.255.254.0

You can use ping to test for connectivity to the host (Careful, Window firewalls usually block ping-related ICMP traffic). On the target side, you can:

nsh> ping 10.75.24.250
PING 10.75.24.250 56 bytes of data
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=1 time=0 ms
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=2 time=0 ms
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=3 time=0 ms
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=4 time=0 ms
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=5 time=0 ms
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=6 time=0 ms
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=7 time=0 ms
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=8 time=0 ms
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=9 time=0 ms
56 bytes from 10.75.24.250: icmp_seq=10 time=0 ms
10 packets transmitted, 10 received, 0% packet loss, time 10100 ms

On the host side, you should also be able to ping the RX65N-GRROSE:

$ ping 10.75.24.53

Configure UDP blaster application as mentioned below:

CONFIG_EXAMPLES_UDPBLASTER_HOSTIP=0x0a4b1801  (10.75.24.1) ------> Gateway IP
CONFIG_EXAMPLES_UDPBLASTER_NETMASK=0xfffffe00 (255.255.254.0) --------> Netmask
CONFIG_EXAMPLES_UDPBLASTER_TARGETIP=0x0a4b189b (10.75.24.155) ---------> Target IP

RSPI

For GRROSE board only channel 1 can be tested since RSPI channel1 pinout is only brought out as Pin number 2 and 3 in CN4 is used for MOSIB and MISOB respectively.

USB Host

For the RX65N RSK2MB board, to be used as USB Device, the following Jumper settings need to be done:

  • J7: Short Pin 1 & Pin 2

  • J16: Short Pin 2 & Pin 3

USB Device

For the RX65N RSK2MB board, to be used as USB Device, the following Jumper settings need to be done:

  • J7: Short Pin 2 & Pin 3

  • J16: Short Pin 1 & Pin 2

RTC

RTC Testing

The test cases mentioned in Renesas_RX65N_RTC_Test_Cases.xls are to be executed as part of RTC testing.

The following configurations are to be enabled as part of testing RTC examples.

  • CONFIG_EXAMPLES_ALARM

  • CONFIG_EXAMPLES_PERIODIC

  • CONFIG_EXAMPLES_CARRY

USB Device Configurations

The following configurations need to be enabled for USB Device

  • CONFIG_USBDEV

  • CONFIG_CDCACM

  • CONFIG_STDIO_BUFFER_SIZE=64

  • CONFIG_STDIO_LINEBUFFER

USB Device Testing

The following testing is executed as part of USB Device testing on RX65N target for GRROSE board:

$ echo "This is a test for USB Device" > /dev/ttyACM0
$ xd 0 0x20000 > /dev/ttyACM0

The output of the commands mentioned above should be seen on the USB Device COM port on teraterm

RSPI Configurations

The following configurations need to be enabled for RSPI

  • CONFIG_SYSTEM_SPITOOL=y

RSPI Testing

The following testing is executed as part of RSPI testing on RX65N target for GRROSE board

On GRROSE board only channel 1 can be tested since RSPI channel1 pinout is only brought out.

The following command can be used for testing RSPI communication to the slave device:

$ spi exch -b 0 -x 4 aabbccdd

where b is bus number and x is number of words to exchange.

RIIC Configurations

The following configurations need to be enabled for RIIC

  • CONFIG_SYSTEM_I2CTOOL=y

RIIC Testing

On GRROSE board, none of the RIIC channel pins are brought out in the board so not tested for communication.

DTC Configurations

The following configurations need to be enabled for DTC.

  • CONFIG_SYSTEM_SPITOOL=y

DTC Testing

DTC has been tested using RSPI driver.

USB Host Configurations

The following configurations need to be enabled for USB Host Mode driver to support USB HID Keyboard class and MSC Class.

  • CONFIG_USBHOST=y

  • CONFIG_USBHOST_HIDKBD=y

  • CONFIG_FS_FAT=y

  • CONFIG_EXAMPLES_HIDKBD=y

USB Host Driver Testing

The Following Class Drivers were tested as mentioned below:

  • USB HID Keyboard Class

On the NuttX Console “hidkbd” application was executed

nsh> hidkbd

The characters typed from the keyboard were executed correctly.

  • USB MSC Class

The MSC device is enumerated as sda in /dev directory.

The block device is mounted using the command as mentioned below:

$ mount -t vfat /dev/sda /mnt

The MSC device is mounted in /dev directory

The copy command is executed to test the Read/Write functionality

$ cp /mnt/<file.txt> /mnt/file_copy.txt

USB Host Hub Configurations

The following configurations need to be enabled for USB Host Mode driver to support USB HID Keyboard class and MSC Class.

  • CONFIG_RX65N_USBHOST=y

  • CONFIG_USBHOST_HUB=y

  • CONFIG_USBHOST_ASYNCH=y

  • CONFIG_USBHOST=y

  • CONFIG_USBHOST_HIDKBD=y

  • CONFIG_FS_FAT=y

  • CONFIG_EXAMPLES_HIDKBD=y

USB Host Hub Driver Testing

The Following Class Drivers were tested as mentioned below :

  • USB HID Keyboard Class

On the NuttX Console “hidkbd” application was executed

nsh> hidkbd

The characters typed from the keyboard were executed correctly.

  • USB MSC Class

The MSC device is enumerated as sda in /dev directory.

The block device is mounted using the command as mentioned below:

$ mount -t vfat /dev/sda /mnt

The MSC device is mounted in /dev directory

The copy command is executed to test the Read/Write functionality

$ cp /mnt/<file.txt> /mnt/file_copy.txt

Debugging

  1. NuttX needs to be compiled in Cygwin.

The following Configuration needs to be set, in order to do source level debugging:

CONFIG_DEBUG_SYMBOLS=y (Set this option, using menuconfig only, DO NOT Enable this as default configuration).

  1. Download & Install Renesas e2studio IDE.

  2. Load the project(NuttX built on Cygwin) as Makefile project with existing code

  3. Right click on the project, and select Debug Configurations.

  4. The binary(NuttX) needs to be loaded using E1/E2 Emulator.

  5. Select the Device name as R5F565NE and Emulator as E1/E2(whichever is being used)

  6. Select Connection type as FINE.

  7. Load and run the binary.

Flashing NuttX

Alternatively, NuttX binary can be flashed using Renesas flash programmer tool without using e2 studio/Cygwin

Below are the steps mentioned to flash NuttX binary using Renesas flash programmer tool(RFP).

  1. In order to flash using Renesas flash programmer tool, nuttx.mot file should be generated.

  2. Add the following lines in tools/Unix.mk file:

ifeq ($(CONFIG_MOTOROLA_SREC),y)
  @echo "CP: nuttx.mot"
  $(Q) $(OBJCOPY) $(OBJCOPYARGS) $(BIN) -O srec -I elf32-rx-be-ns nuttx.mot
endif
  1. Add CONFIG_MOTOROLA_SREC=y in defconfig file or choose make menuconfig -> Build Setup -> Binary Output Format -> Select Motorola SREC format.

  2. Download Renesas flash programmer tool from https://www.renesas.com/in/en/products/software-tools/tools/programmer/renesas-flash-programmer-programming-gui.html#downloads

  3. Refer to the user manual document, for steps to flash NuttX binary using RFP tool.

ROMFS

Overview

This directory contains logic to support a custom ROMFS system-init script and start-up script. These scripts are used by by the NSH when it starts provided that CONFIG_ETC_ROMFS=y. These scripts provide a ROMFS volume that will be mounted at /etc and will look like this at run-time:

NuttShell (NSH) NuttX-8.2
nsh> ls -Rl /etc
/etc:
 dr-xr-xr-x       0 .
 -r--r--r--      20 group
 dr-xr-xr-x       0 init.d/
 -r--r--r--      35 passwd
/etc/init.d:
 dr-xr-xr-x       0 ..
 -r--r--r--     110 rcS
 -r--r--r--     110 rc.sysinit
nsh>

/etc/init.d/rc.sysinit is system init script; /etc/init.d/rcS is the start-up script; /etc/passwd is a the password file. It supports a single user:

USERNAME:  admin
PASSWORD:  Administrator

nsh> cat /etc/passwd
admin:8Tv+Hbmr3pLVb5HHZgd26D:0:0:/

The encrypted passwords in the provided passwd file are only valid if the TEA key is set to: 012345678 9abcdef0 012345678 9abcdef0. Changes to either the key or the password word will require regeneration of the nsh_romfimg.h header file.

The format of the password file is:

user:x:uid:gid:home

Where:
user:  User name
x:     Encrypted password
uid:   User ID (0 for now)
gid:   Group ID (0 for now)
home:  Login directory (/ for now)

/etc/group is a group file. It is not currently used.

nsh> cat /etc/group
root:*:0:root,admin

The format of the group file is:

group:x:gid:users

Where:
group:  The group name
x:      Group password
gid:    Group ID
users:  A comma separated list of members of the group

/etc/init.d/rcS should have the following contents:

vi rcS
echo "This is NuttX"

Updating the ROMFS File System

The content on the nsh_romfsimg.h header file is generated from a sample directory structure. That directory structure is contained in the etc/ directory and can be modified per the following steps:

  1. Change directory to etc/:

    $ cd etc/
    
  2. Make modifications as desired.

  3. Create the new ROMFS image.

    $ genromfs -f romfs_img -d etc -V SimEtcVol
    
  4. Convert the ROMFS image to a C header file

    $ xxd -i romfs_img >nsh_romfsimg.h
    
  5. Edit nsh_romfsimg.h, mark both data definitions as const so that that will be stored in FLASH.