STM32

From base48
Revision as of 15:29, 10 November 2016 by imported>Rmarko (formatting)

STM32 programming

Boot mode configuration

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">BOOT0 BOOT1 Boot mode Address

 x     0   Main Flash memory                      0x8000000
 0     1   System memory (built-in bootloader)    0x1FFFB000
 1     1   Embedded SRAM                          0x20000000
 in Main flash memory and System memory boot modes address is aliased to 0x0</syntaxhighlight>


STM32F103C86T dev board boot pins

Legend

 o o o BOOT1
 o o o BOOT0
 ---
 |R|   Reset button
 ---

Boot to bootloader (built-in bootloader)

  • Allows flashing over USART
 o [=]
 [=] o
 ---
 |R|
 ---

Boot to main flash (user code)

 [=] o
 o o o
 ---
 |R|
 ---

Flashing

  • Flashing is done via USART1 (A9 TX A10 RX)

Converting Elf to Bin

Required if you only have elf files produced by your toolchain - stm32flash accepts only *.bin files.

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> arm-none-eabi-objcopy -O binary miniblink.elf miniblink.bin </syntaxhighlight>

Using stm32flash

Test connection with

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> stm32flash /dev/ttyUSB0 </syntaxhighlight>

Flash and run from 0x0

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> stm32flash /dev/ttyUSB0 -w miniblink.bin -g 0x0 </syntaxhighlight>

Pinout

Libraries

libopencm3

Minimalistic firmware library/framework.

Bootstrapping on Fedora

Library

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">dnf install arm-none-eabi* mkdir embedded git clone https://github.com/libopencm3/libopencm3 cd libopencm3

  1. Edit TARGETS in Makefile and keep only targets that you need (or just stm32/f1 for example).

make -j8 cd ..</syntaxhighlight>

DFU bootloader

This is a bootloader for Device Firmware Update via USB (stm32/f1).

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">git clone https://git.48.io/libopencm3_dfu cd libopencm3_dfu

  1. connect JTAG

make flash

  1. or flash via USART & stm32flash, see flashing section above

make stm32flash</syntaxhighlight>

Sample application

For use with DFU bootloader (stm32/f1).

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">git clone https://git.48.io/libopencm3_template cd libopencm3_template

  1. flash via dfu

make dfu

  1. or with JTAG

make flash</syntaxhighlight>

Library examples

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">git clone https://github.com/libopencm3/libopencm3-examples

  1. Either fetch git submodule pointing to libopencm3 and repeat steps in Library section
  2. or symlink libopecm3 dir to previously built libopencm3

cd libopencm3-examples rmdir libopencm3 ln -s <PATH_TO-->/libopencm3 .

  1. try building miniblink example

cd examples/stm32/f1/stm32-h103/miniblink make</syntaxhighlight>

Troubleshooting
  • use make V=1 when make fails
Locked device

If you can't flash and 'make V=1 flash' reports something similar

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">Info : Device Security Bit Set stm32x unlocked</syntaxhighlight>

You need to unlock your device first (with JTAG):

<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">openocd -f jlink_swd_f103.cfg telnet 127.0.0.1 4444

  1. in telnet issue:

stm32f1x unlock 0</syntaxhighlight>

Calculating Timer Frequency

MUCH WIP

period_target_ms = p1 period_hz = p2

1000ms / p1 = p2

E.g. for 20ms (servo) period

1000ms / 20 ms = 50 hz

cpu_freq = 72Mhz prescale = 72

72MHz / 72 = 1Mhz

This increases out count register CNT by 1 000 000 each second. To calculate what is the correct value for the ARR register (which defines the period), we divide the result of the prescaled frequency by the intended frequency for our period:

1 000 000 Hz / 50 Hz = 20 000

Now every time the CNT register is increased by one, this is the equivalent to 1us. The duty cycle now could by set easily. E.g. for a 1.5ms duty cycle we set the CCRx register to 1500.


Stepper

driver_max_duty = 250khz

From http://www.kaltpost.de/?page_id=412