Arduino Due: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 12:21, 5 February 2019
Arduino Due | |
---|---|
Primary Contact | Michael Erskine |
Created | 2013-08-12 |
Status | In Progress |
QR code |
The new Arduino Due board is the first Arduino to be based on an ARM Coretex M3 micro (rather than the usual AVR micro). This is still an Atmel chip but it will have more in common with the Mbed, LPCXpresso, etc. At time of writing I am still yet to receive my first Due board but I'm reliably informed that it's in the post!
So what is all the fuss about? Did you even notice any fuss? Well, it's a move away from the old AVR architecture and into a bigger arena. ARM is massive! What we, as Arduino users, get is an Arduino with a shed load more speed, and capacity. There are some potential downsides in the area of legacy Arduino convenience (e.g. the 3.3v logic) but these are small problems for those who appreciate the extra power.
Useful links in these early days:-
- http://arduino.cc/en/Main/ArduinoBoardDue
- Due Arduino forum: http://arduino.cc/forum/index.php/board,87.0.html
- Atmel's ARM page: http://www.atmel.com/arm/?sf13808117=1
- CMCIS standard for ARM Coretex: http://www.arm.com/products/processors/cortex-m/cortex-microcontroller-software-interface-standard.php
- BOSSA: http://www.shumatech.com/web/products/bossa
- Teensy 3 and Due: http://rcarduino.blogspot.fi/2012/09/arduino-due.html
This handy comparison table is from one of the sites above - not sure of the origin but I know that the 250k EEPROM for the Due is wrong as it doesn't have any!
|
Arduino UNO |
Arduino Mega |
Arduino Due |
MCU |
ATMega 328 |
ATMega 2560 |
AT91SAM3X8E |
Architecture |
8 bit AVR |
8 bit AVR |
32 bit ARM Cortex M3 |
CPU Speed |
16Mhz |
16Mhz |
84 Mhz |
Flash Memory |
32K |
256K |
512K |
RAM |
2K |
8K |
96K |
EEPROM |
1K |
4K |
250K |
Digital Pins |
14 |
54 |
54 |
PWM Pins |
6 |
15 |
16 |
AnalogInputs |
6 |
16 |
12 |
DAC |
0 |
0 |
2 |
First Due Arrived
OK, Aug 15th 2013, and I've got my first Due clone: a nice red SainSmart Due (http://www.sainsmart.com/sainsmart-due-atmel-sam3x8e-arm-cortex-m3-board.html) for the bargain price of £25 (a UK ebay seller).
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alongside Arduino Mega R3 and Renesas RSK+RX63N
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alongside Arduino Mega R3
Pinout diagram: http://forum.arduino.cc/index.php?topic=132130.0
New Magic
The main new magic is a pair of USB sockets: "programming port" and "native port". We also have an "erase" button which looks scary!
I first set up the Arduino 1.5.2 zip install onto a Windows XP machine and had a jolly old time with the various CDC serial port drivers! After a while everything was pretty nice using the programming port for uploading code and running a small command terminal. I had to employ the while(!Serial); technique to get a reliable startup of my code.
There is a 12-bit DAC onboard and there are exciting new projects that demonstrate impressing WAV audio output. Combined with the 3.3v voltages for cheap SD card interfacing, we have a simple means for adding good quality audio to our projects.
SD card success
I have just enjoyed a success with a direct SPI SD card interface...
Use a freshly formatted SD for best performance.
Type any character to start
Free RAM: 95419
Type is FAT32
File size 5MB
Buffer size 100 bytes
Starting write test. Please wait up to a minute
Write 109.39 KB/sec
Maximum latency: 345932 usec, Minimum Latency: 8 usec, Avg Latency: 912 usec
Starting read test. Please wait up to a minute
Read 975.80 KB/sec
Maximum latency: 982 usec, Minimum Latency: 7 usec, Avg Latency: 100 usec
Done
Type any character to start
This uses a beta of the SdFat library as per http://forum.arduino.cc/index.php?topic=135439.0 connecting as shown using the SPI port and a single slave select pin (on digital 10). The SD card happens to be a 4Gb Transcend micro SD in a Kingston adapter. I made the cable from a PC motherboard connector I found at the hackspace.
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"socket" made from a double-row of 90 degree male header pins
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SPI/ICSP 6-pin connection
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plenty of hot-melt
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wires
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bend on connector pins
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top row of pins just hold the card
Here's the "bench" sketch - slight modification!
/*
* This sketch is a simple binary write/read benchmark.
*/
#include <SdFat.h>
#include <SdFatUtil.h>
// SD chip select pin
const uint8_t chipSelect = 10;
#define FILE_SIZE_MB 5
#define FILE_SIZE (1000000UL*FILE_SIZE_MB)
#define BUF_SIZE 100
uint8_t buf[BUF_SIZE];
// file system
SdFat sd;
// test file
SdFile file;
// Serial output stream
ArduinoOutStream cout(Serial);
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// store error strings in flash to save RAM
#define error(s) sd.errorHalt_P(PSTR(s))
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
void setup() {
Serial.begin(9600);
while (!Serial){} // wait for Leonardo
cout << pstr("\nUse a freshly formatted SD for best performance.\n");
}
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
void loop() {
uint32_t maxLatency;
uint32_t minLatency;
uint32_t totalLatency;
// discard any input
while (Serial.read() >= 0) {}
// pstr stores strings in flash to save RAM
cout << pstr("Type any character to start\n");
while (Serial.read() <= 0) {}
delay(400); // catch Due reset problem
cout << pstr("Free RAM: ") << FreeRam() << endl;
// initialize the SD card at SPI_FULL_SPEED for best performance.
// try SPI_HALF_SPEED if bus errors occur.
if (!sd.begin(chipSelect, SPI_FULL_SPEED)) sd.initErrorHalt();
cout << pstr("Type is FAT") << int(sd.vol()->fatType()) << endl;
// open or create file - truncate existing file.
if (!file.open("BENCH.DAT", O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_RDWR)) {
error("open failed");
}
// fill buf with known data
for (uint16_t i = 0; i < (BUF_SIZE-2); i++) {
buf[i] = 'A' + (i % 26);
}
buf[BUF_SIZE-2] = '\r';
buf[BUF_SIZE-1] = '\n';
cout << pstr("File size ") << FILE_SIZE_MB << pstr("MB\n");
cout << pstr("Buffer size ") << BUF_SIZE << pstr(" bytes\n");
cout << pstr("Starting write test. Please wait up to a minute\n");
// do write test
uint32_t n = FILE_SIZE/sizeof(buf);
maxLatency = 0;
minLatency = 9999999;
totalLatency = 0;
uint32_t t = millis();
for (uint32_t i = 0; i < n; i++) {
uint32_t m = micros();
if (file.write(buf, sizeof(buf)) != sizeof(buf)) {
error("write failed");
}
m = micros() - m;
if (maxLatency < m) maxLatency = m;
if (minLatency > m) minLatency = m;
totalLatency += m;
}
file.sync();
t = millis() - t;
double s = file.fileSize();
cout << pstr("Write ") << s/t << pstr(" KB/sec\n");
cout << pstr("Maximum latency: ") << maxLatency;
cout << pstr(" usec, Minimum Latency: ") << minLatency;
cout << pstr(" usec, Avg Latency: ") << totalLatency/n << pstr(" usec\n\n");
cout << pstr("Starting read test. Please wait up to a minute\n");
// do read test
file.rewind();
maxLatency = 0;
minLatency = 9999999;
totalLatency = 0;
t = millis();
for (uint32_t i = 0; i < n; i++) {
buf[BUF_SIZE-1] = 0;
uint32_t m = micros();
if (file.read(buf, sizeof(buf)) != sizeof(buf)) {
error("read failed");
}
m = micros() - m;
if (maxLatency < m) maxLatency = m;
if (minLatency > m) minLatency = m;
totalLatency += m;
if (buf[BUF_SIZE-1] != '\n') {
error("data check");
}
}
t = millis() - t;
cout << pstr("Read ") << s/t << pstr(" KB/sec\n");
cout << pstr("Maximum latency: ") << maxLatency;
cout << pstr(" usec, Minimum Latency: ") << minLatency;
cout << pstr(" usec, Avg Latency: ") << totalLatency/n << pstr(" usec\n\n");
cout << pstr("Done\n\n");
file.close();
}
Next: port http://arduino.cc/en/Tutorial/SimpleAudioPlayer to use SdFat beta
High Speed Timer - Coretex SysTick
// SysTick example by stimmer
// Slightly modified by msemtd
void setup() {
Serial.begin(115200);
}
void loop() {
int r=random(200);
int v=SysTick->VAL;
int a;
delayMicroseconds(r);
v=v-SysTick->VAL;
if(v<0)v+=84000;
Serial.print("delayMicroseconds(");
Serial.print(r);
Serial.print(") took ");
Serial.print(v);
Serial.print(" clock ticks, which when divided by 84 equals ");
a = v/84;
Serial.print(a);
if(a != r){
Serial.println(" -- FAILED!!!!!!!!!!!!");
} else {
Serial.println(" -- ok");
}
delay(500);
}
Audio play ported to SDfat beta
OK, I ported to SdFat but I think I have issues with the DAC - terrible slow sound but on wrong DAC channel!
#include <SdFat.h>
#include <SdFatUtil.h>
#include <Audio.h>
// SD chip select pin
const uint8_t chipSelect = 10;
// file system
SdFat sd;
// test file
SdFile file;
// Serial output stream
ArduinoOutStream cout(Serial);
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// store error strings in flash to save RAM
#define error(s) sd.errorHalt_P(PSTR(s))
void setup()
{
Serial.begin(115200);
while (!Serial){} // wait for Leonardo/Due
cout << pstr("\nHello there!\n due_audio test 1 \n");
}
void loop() {
while (Serial.read() >= 0) {}
cout << pstr("Type any character to start\n");
while (Serial.read() <= 0) {}
delay(400); // catch Due reset problem
cout << pstr("Free RAM: ") << FreeRam() << endl;
// initialize the SD card at SPI_FULL_SPEED for best performance.
// try SPI_HALF_SPEED if bus errors occur.
if (!sd.begin(chipSelect, SPI_FULL_SPEED)) sd.initErrorHalt();
cout << pstr("Type is FAT") << int(sd.vol()->fatType()) << endl;
// open or create file - truncate existing file.
if (!file.open("TEST.WAV", O_RDONLY)) {
error("open failed");
}
// 44100Khz stereo => 88200 sample rate
// 100 mSec of prebuffering.
Audio.begin(88200, 100);
int count=0;
cout << pstr("Playing...") << endl;
const int S=1024; // Number of samples to read in block
short buffer[S];
int c;
while(1){
c = file.read(buffer, S);
if(c==-1) {
error("read failed");
}
// Prepare samples
int volume = 1024;
Audio.prepare(buffer, S, volume);
// Feed samples to audio
Audio.write(buffer, S);
// Every 100 block print a '.'
count++;
if (count == 100) {
cout << pstr(".");
count = 0;
}
if(c < S)
break;
}
file.close();
cout << endl << pstr("End of file. Thank you for listening!") << endl;
}
I need to try some other things - rewind a bit and try from 1st principles... http://hackerspace-ffm.de/wiki/index.php?title=SimpleSDAudio#Audio_output_connection