KitProg v2 adds CMSIS-DAP too!!
What debug resources are missing in M0 compared to M3/4? They are exactly the same as far as debugging goes.
C1.1 Introduction to ARMv6-M debug
(..)The features that the Debug Extension provides are a subset of those available in the ARMv7-M profile.
It is enough to point out ARMv6-M does not implement MemManage, BusFault, UsageFault or DebugMonitor exceptions.
8 DMA channels is a nice addition, any word on the cost and availability on the EZ-BLE PRoC module?
Also I guess the programmer is a PSoC5LP as used in the 5lp prototype board which I love.
I still think the 5lp prototype kit has more potential but I'll look at the offering because of the Bluetooth support when the module is available. 128K flash is nice as well.
Is there any chance you could post a picture of the bottom of the board so we can check how had it would be to add the EZ-BLE PRoC module?
Can these boards program Spansion (FM4 and Traveo) devices? cant find any info about they could!?
It would be very nice to have one Kit board to program all Cypress devices, like ST does.
Just installed Creator and Designer looks impressive although complex, designer do not seam to support all devices..
Come back when you have choices for developing on Linux
Are the PSoC 4's still hugely gimped compared to the PSoC 5LP? Reading through the component documentation, it seems like the PSoC 4 always had a lot of limitations compared to the 3 and 5.
Don't get me wrong, I love the PSoC series! I used to be diehard TI fan, but now, if I need anything more than a simple MCU, the 5LP is my go to chip! In fact, I'm currently in the design stages of a PSoC5 based HMI LCD solution!
I guess my question is: Where do the PSoC 4 fit in, in the design spectrum?
Lower power consumption would be my guess, but I'm still reading the preliminary datasheet for the new PSoC 4 M-Series.
Edit: corrected misspelling (datasheed)
What a coincidence A few days ago I got the CY8CKIT 043 (mainly for the programmer), as well as two little "bare" PSoC 4 MCUs. You can see the Blink test here - ,
although the video is not very informative - The actual description of the project is in my Hebrew-language blog.
Here's a beginners' question though. This simplest Blink, in either Debug or Release, takes 2KB of flash and 1.4KB SRAM, which is a lot. I guess that's the cost of using the nice visual programming; but personally I'd like to go deeper and do these things manually and economically. The easy-to-access datasheets only discuss the abstractions, not the low level. Where can I find information about the low level stuff, registers etc?
KitProg v2 adds CMSIS-DAP too!!I can't find any info on v2. Is it available yet?
I'm working on a debugging tool and I'm interested in testing with as many debuggers form as many vendors as I can find, but for now I'm only interested in CMSIS-DAP interface.
PSoC Creator is the current and future tool, use that for everything.
Don't use PSoC Designer unless you're working on a PSoC 1 chip, that is a legacy tool for our 1st gen PSoCs only.
This kit can not program the ex-Spansion chips as yet, but we're working on it! You're absolutely right
about having just one low-cost universal programmer for ALL devices that Cypress sells. Stay tuned!
How do your wife ISR look like?
What a coincidence A few days ago I got the CY8CKIT 043 (mainly for the programmer), as well as two little "bare" PSoC 4 MCUs. You can see the Blink test here [...]
excellent work!
share your project with the community at www.hackster.io/cypress
thanks!
The kit features a set of on-board sensors, including an Ambient Light Sensor, a 3-Axis Accelerometer and a Temperature Sensor. The kit also has an on-board RGB LED, a user-button and a 1-Mbit Cypress F-RAM device.
Additionally, the kit has headers compatible with Raspberry Pi, Arduino Uno and Digilent Pmod hobbyist ecosystems enabling you to use a variety of 3rd party modules.
Cypress, you are holding out kits from us:
You should have also mentioned this kit:
http://www.cypress.com/documentation/development-kitsboards/cy8ckit-044-psoc-4-m-series-pioneer-kitQuoteThe kit features a set of on-board sensors, including an Ambient Light Sensor, a 3-Axis Accelerometer and a Temperature Sensor. The kit also has an on-board RGB LED, a user-button and a 1-Mbit Cypress F-RAM device.
Additionally, the kit has headers compatible with Raspberry Pi, Arduino Uno and Digilent Pmod hobbyist ecosystems enabling you to use a variety of 3rd party modules.
Cypress, you are holding out kits from us:
You should have also mentioned this kit:
http://www.cypress.com/documentation/development-kitsboards/cy8ckit-044-psoc-4-m-series-pioneer-kit
How do your wife ISR look like?
Pretty much the wife ISR is the highest priority and I will soft lock and starve any other tasks until I'm done handling that interrupt request.
I used to just set a flag on the handler so I could use decent time slices for the task but that cause segmentation faults requiring to do the full task when the wife ISR is raised and don't let any other task progress regardless on how many cores are available.
Other than that she works on Sunday so I can pull the pin high to avoid that interrupt to be triggered since it uses negative logic
Does debugger chip use a CMSIS-DAP protocol, or something proprietary?
Can these boards program Spansion (FM4 and Traveo) devices? cant find any info about they could!?
It would be very nice to have one Kit board to program all Cypress devices, like ST does.
Just installed Creator and Designer looks impressive although complex, designer do not seam to support all devices..