ST B-U585I-IOT02A
This page discusses the port of NuttX to the STMicroelectronics B-U585I-IOT02A board. That board features the STM32U585AII6QU MCU with 2MiB of Flash and 768KiB of SRAM.
Status
2022-02-13: With TrustedFirmware-M from STM32CubeU5 and signing the Apache NuttX binary image to get a tfm_ns_init.bin, the board now boots and the basic NSH configuration works with Apache NuttX as the OS running in the non-secure world.
2022-04-03: The dependency on TrustedFirmware-M was dropped. I.e. the b-u585i-iot02a:nsh configuration now runs standalone.
Clock Source
Only the low speed external (LSE) 32.768kHz crystal (X2) is installed in default configurations.
FUNC
GPIO
OSC32_IN
PC14
OSC32_OUT
PC15
Arduino Connector
CN13 / SPI1 / D10 - D13
FUNC
GPIO
SPI1_NSS
PE12
SPI1_SCK
PE13
SPI1_MISO
PE14
SPI1_MOSI
PE15
Serial Consoles
Virtual COM Port on USART1
Default board is configured to use USART1 as console. USART1 is connected to the ST-LINKV3E Virtual COM port as well as made available on connector CN9.
Pins and Connectors:
FUNC
GPIO
Pin
NAME
TXD:
PA9
CN9 14
T.VCP_TX
RXD:
PA10
CN9 13
T.VCP_RX
Configurations
Information Common to All Configurations
Each configuration is maintained in a sub-directory and can be selected as follow:
tools/configure.sh b-u585i-iot02a:<subdir>
Before building, make sure the PATH environment variable includes the correct path to the directory than holds your toolchain binaries.
And then build NuttX by simply typing the following. At the conclusion of the make, the nuttx binary will reside in an ELF file called, simply, nuttx.:
make oldconfig
make
The <subdir> that is provided above as an argument to the tools/configure.sh must be is one of the following.
NOTES:
These configurations use the mconf-based configuration tool. To change any of these configurations using that tool, you should:
Build and install the kconfig-mconf tool. See nuttx/README.txt see additional README.txt files in the NuttX tools repository.
Execute ‘make menuconfig’ in nuttx/ in order to start the reconfiguration process.
Unless stated otherwise, all configurations generate console output on USART3, as described above under “Serial Console”. The elevant configuration settings are listed below:
CONFIG_STM32L5_USART3=y CONFIG_STM32L5_USART3_SERIALDRIVER=y CONFIG_STM32L5_USART=y CONFIG_USART3_SERIALDRIVER=y CONFIG_USART3_SERIAL_CONSOLE=y CONFIG_USART3_RXBUFSIZE=256 CONFIG_USART3_TXBUFSIZE=256 CONFIG_USART3_BAUD=115200 CONFIG_USART3_BITS=8 CONFIG_USART3_PARITY=0 CONFIG_USART3_2STOP=0
All of these configurations are set up to build under Linux using the “GNU Tools for ARM Embedded Processors” that is maintained by ARM (unless stated otherwise in the description of the configuration).
That toolchain selection can easily be reconfigured using ‘make menuconfig’. Here are the relevant current settings:
- Build Setup::
CONFIG_HOST_LINUX=y : Linux environment
- System Type -> Toolchain::
CONFIG_ARM_TOOLCHAIN_GNU_EABI=y : GNU ARM EABI toolchain
Configuration sub-directories
nsh:
Configures the NuttShell (nsh) located at examples/nsh. This configuration is focused on low level, command-line driver testing.