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- # hw definition file for processing by chibios_hwdef.py
- # for FMUv3 hardware (ie. for Pixhawk1, Pixhawk2 cube, XUAV2.1 etc)
- # This hwdef.dat file contains a lot of comments so it can act as a
- # reference for developers adding new boards.
- # The hwdef.dat file defines all the hardware peripherals and pins for
- # a port of ArduPilot to a board using the ChibiOS HAL. You should be
- # able to write the hwdef.dat file for a new board with just the
- # schematic for the board.
- # This file is processed by chibios_hwdef.py to create hwdef.h for
- # this board. You may find it useful to run chibios_hwdef.py manually
- # when building this file for a new board. The resulting hwdef.h file
- # is formatted to make it quite readable. It is strongly suggested
- # that you read the resulting hwdef.h file when porting to a new board
- # to make sure it has resulted in what you want.
- # You should read this file in conjunction with the schematic for your
- # board, the datasheet for the MCU for your board and the python
- # tables file that we have extracted from the datasheet for your
- # MCU. The python tables file is particularly important, so if you
- # haven't seen it before go and look at it now. For the STM32F427 it
- # it called STM32F427xx.py and it is in the hwdef/script/ directory
- # inside the HAL_ChibiOS directory. That file tells you what each pin
- # can do (the alternate functions table) and what DMA channels can be
- # used for each peripheral type. The alternative functions table is
- # particularly useful when doing a new hwdef.dat file as you can work
- # out peripheral numbers given a port/pin name.
- # We need to start off by saying what main CPU is on the board. There
- # are two CPU identifiers that you need to specify. The first is the
- # ChibiOS MCU type. So far we only support STM32F4xx for all STM32F4
- # board types. In the future we will add F7 and other MCU types
- # The second string needs to match the name of a config file in the
- # libraries/AP_HAL_ChibiOS/hwdef/script directory. In this case we are
- # using a F427 MCU, so we select STM32F427xx to match the
- # STM32F427xx.py file in the script directory. If you are supporting a
- # board type that doesn't have a python hardware database file yet
- # then you will need to create one. There are scripts in the scripts
- # directory to help with that by parsing the STM32 datasheets to
- # extract the required DMA and alternate function tables.
- # MCU class and specific type
- MCU STM32F4xx STM32F427xx
- # We set a specific HAL_BOARD_SUBTYPE, allowing for custom config in
- # drivers. For this to be used the subtype needs to be added to
- # AP_HAL/AP_HAL_Boards.h as well.
- define CONFIG_HAL_BOARD_SUBTYPE HAL_BOARD_SUBTYPE_CHIBIOS_FMUV3
- # Now we need to specify the APJ_BOARD_ID. This is the ID that the
- # bootloader presents to GCS software so it knows if this firmware is
- # suitable for the board. Please see
- # https://github.com/ArduPilot/Bootloader/blob/master/hw_config.h for
- # a list of current board IDs. If you add a new board type then please
- # get it added to that repository so we don't get conflicts.
- # Note that APJ is "ArduPilot JSON Firmware Format".
- # board ID for firmware load
- APJ_BOARD_ID 9
- # Now you need to say what crystal frequency you have for this
- # board. All of the clocks are scaled against this. Typical values are
- # 24000000 or 8000000.
- # crystal frequency
- OSCILLATOR_HZ 24000000
- # On some boards you will need to also set the various PLL values. See
- # the defaults in common/mcuconf.h, and use the define mechanism
- # explained later in this file to override values suitable for your
- # board. Refer to your MCU datasheet or examples from supported boards
- # in ChibiOS for the right values.
- # Now define the voltage the MCU runs at. This is needed for ChibiOS
- # to set various internal driver limits. It is in 0.01 volt units.
- # board voltage
- STM32_VDD 330U
- # This is the STM32 timer that ChibiOS will use for the low level
- # driver. This must be a 32 bit timer. We currently only support
- # timers 2, 3, 4, 5 and 21. See hal_st_lld.c in ChibiOS for details.
- # ChibiOS system timer
- STM32_ST_USE_TIMER 5
- # Now the size of flash in kilobytes, for creating the ld.script.
- # flash size
- FLASH_SIZE_KB 2048
- # Now define which UART is used for printf(). We rarely use printf()
- # in ChibiOS, so this is really only for debugging very early startup
- # in drivers.
- # Serial port for stdout. This is optional. If you leave it out then
- # output from printf() lines will go to the ArduPilot console, which is the
- # first UART in the UART_ORDER list. But note that some startup code
- # runs before USB is set up.
- # The value for STDOUT_SERIAL is a serial device name, and must be for a
- # serial device for which pins are defined in this file. For example, SD7
- # is for UART7 (SD7 == "serial device 7" in ChibiOS).
- #STDOUT_SERIAL SD7
- #STDOUT_BAUDRATE 57600
- # Now the USB setup, if you have USB. All of these settings are
- # option, and the ones below are the defaults. It ends up creating a
- # USB ID on Linux like this:
- # /dev/serial/by-id/usb-ArduPilot_fmuv3_3E0031000B51353233343932-if00
- # If creating a board for a RTF vehicle you may wish to customise these.
- # USB setup
- USB_VENDOR 0x0483 # ST
- USB_PRODUCT 0x5740
- USB_STRING_MANUFACTURER "ArduPilot"
- USB_STRING_PRODUCT "%BOARD%"
- USB_STRING_SERIAL "%SERIAL%"
- # Now define the order that I2C buses are presented in the hal.i2c API
- # in ArduPilot. For historical reasons inherited from HAL_PX4 the
- # 'external' I2C bus should be bus 1 in hal.i2c, and internal I2C bus
- # should be bus 0. On fmuv3 the STM32 I2C1 is our external bus and
- # I2C2 is our internal bus, so we need to setup the order as I2C2
- # followed by I2C1 in order to achieve the conventional order that
- # drivers expect.
- # order of I2C buses
- I2C_ORDER I2C2 I2C1
- # Now the UART order. These map to the hal.uartA to hal.uartF
- # objects. If you use a shorter list then HAL_Empty::UARTDriver
- # objects are substituted for later UARTs, or you can leave a gap by
- # listing one or more of the uarts as EMPTY.
- # The normal usage of this ordering is:
- # 1) SERIAL0: console (primary mavlink, usually USB)
- # 2) SERIAL3: primary GPS
- # 3) SERIAL1: telem1
- # 4) SERIAL2: telem2
- # 5) SERIAL4: GPS2
- # 6) SERIAL5: extra UART (usually RTOS debug console)
- # order of UARTs (and USB)
- UART_ORDER OTG1 UART4 USART2 USART3 UART8 UART7
- # If the board has an IOMCU connected via a UART then this defines the
- # UART to talk to that MCU. Leave it out for boards with no IOMCU.
- # UART for IOMCU
- IOMCU_UART USART6
- # Now we start on the pin definitions. Every pin used by ArduPilot
- # needs to be in this file. The pins in this file can be defined in any order.
- # The format is P+port+pin. So PC4 is portC pin4.
- # For every pin the second column is the label. If this is a
- # peripheral that has an alternate function defined in the STM32
- # datasheet then the label must be the name of that alternative
- # function. The names are looked up in the python database for this
- # MCU. Please see STM32F427xx.py for the F427 database. That database
- # is used to automatically fill in the alternative function (and later
- # for the DMA channels).
- # The third column is the peripheral type. This must be one of the
- # following: UARTn, USARTn, OTGn, SPIn, I2Cn, ADCn, TIMn, SWD, SDIO,
- # INPUT, OUTPUT, CS.
- # The fourth and later columns are for modifiers on the pin. The
- # possible modifiers are:
- # pin speed: SPEED_VERYLOW, SPEED_LOW, SPEED_MEDIUM, SPEED_HIGH
- # pullup: PULLUP, PULLDOWN, FLOATING
- # out type: OPENDRAIN, PUSHPULL
- # default value: LOW, HIGH
- # Additionally, each class of pin peripheral can have extra modifiers
- # suitable for that pin type. For example, for an OUTPUT you can map
- # it to a GPIO number in hal.gpio using the GPIO(n) modifier. For ADC
- # inputs you can apply a scaling factor (to bring it to unit volts)
- # using the SCALE(x) modifier. See the examples below for more
- # modifiers, or read the python code in chibios_hwdef.py.
- # Now we define UART4 which is for the GPS. Be careful
- # of the difference between USART and UART. Check the STM32F427xx.py
- # if unsure which it is. For a UART we need to specify at least TX and
- # RX pins.
- # UART4 serial GPS
- PA0 UART4_TX UART4
- PA1 UART4_RX UART4
- # Now define the primary battery connectors. The labels we choose here
- # are used to create defines for pins in the various drivers, so
- # choose names that match existing board setups where possible. Here
- # we define two pins PA2 and PA3 for voltage and current sensing, with
- # a scale factor of 1.0 and connected on ADC1. The pin number this
- # maps to in hal.adc is automatically determined using the datasheet
- # tables in STM32F427xx.py.
- PA2 BATT_VOLTAGE_SENS ADC1 SCALE(1)
- PA3 BATT_CURRENT_SENS ADC1 SCALE(1)
- # Now the VDD sense pin. This is used to sense primary board voltage.
- PA4 VDD_5V_SENS ADC1 SCALE(2)
- # Now the first SPI bus. At minimum you need SCK, MISO and MOSI pin
- definitions. You can add speed modifiers if you want them, otherwise
- the defaults for the peripheral class are used.
- PA5 SPI1_SCK SPI1
- PA6 SPI1_MISO SPI1
- PA7 SPI1_MOSI SPI1
- # This defines an output pin which will default to output LOW. It is a
- # pin that enables peripheral power on this board.
- PA8 VDD_5V_PERIPH_EN OUTPUT LOW
- # This is the pin that senses USB being connected. It is an input pin
- # setup as OPENDRAIN.
- PA9 VBUS INPUT OPENDRAIN
- # This is a commented out pin for talking to the debug UART on the
- # IOMCU, not used yet, but left as a comment (with a '#' in front) for
- # future reference
- # PA10 IO-debug-console
- # Now we define the pins that USB is connected on.
- PA11 OTG_FS_DM OTG1
- PA12 OTG_FS_DP OTG1
- # These are the pins for SWD debugging with a STlinkv2 or black-magic probe.
- PA13 JTMS-SWDIO SWD
- PA14 JTCK-SWCLK SWD
- # This defines the PWM pin for the buzzer (if there is one). It is
- # also mapped to a GPIO output so you can play with the buzzer via
- # MAVLink relay commands if you want to.
- # PWM output for buzzer
- PA15 TIM2_CH1 TIM2 GPIO(77) ALARM
- # This defines a couple of general purpose outputs, mapped to GPIO
- # numbers 1 and 2 for users.
- PB0 EXTERN_GPIO1 OUTPUT GPIO(1)
- PB1 EXTERN_GPIO2 OUTPUT GPIO(2)
- # This defines some input pins, currently unused.
- PB2 BOOT1 INPUT
- PB3 FMU_SW0 INPUT
- # This defines the pins for the 2nd CAN interface, if available.
- PB6 CAN2_TX CAN2
- PB12 CAN2_RX CAN2
- # Now the first I2C bus. The pin speeds are automatically setup
- # correctly, but can be overridden here if needed.
- PB8 I2C1_SCL I2C1
- PB9 I2C1_SDA I2C1
- # the 2nd I2C bus
- PB10 I2C2_SCL I2C2
- PB11 I2C2_SDA I2C2
- # the 2nd SPI bus
- PB13 SPI2_SCK SPI2
- PB14 SPI2_MISO SPI2
- PB15 SPI2_MOSI SPI2
- # This input pin is used to detect that power is valid on USB.
- PC0 VBUS_VALID INPUT
- # This defines the CS pin for the magnetometer and first IMU. Note
- # that CS pins are software controlled, and are not tied to a particular
- # SPI bus.
- PC1 MAG_CS CS
- PC2 MPU_CS CS
- # This defines more ADC inputs.
- PC3 AUX_POWER ADC1 SCALE(1)
- PC4 AUX_ADC2 ADC1 SCALE(1)
- # And the analog input for airspeed (rarely used these days).
- PC5 PRESSURE_SENS ADC1 SCALE(2)
- # This sets up the UART for talking to the IOMCU. Note that it is
- # vital that this UART has DMA available. See the DMA settings below
- # for more information.
- # USART6 to IO
- PC6 USART6_TX USART6
- PC7 USART6_RX USART6
- # Now setup the pins for the microSD card, if available.
- PC8 SDIO_D0 SDIO
- PC9 SDIO_D1 SDIO
- PC10 SDIO_D2 SDIO
- PC11 SDIO_D3 SDIO
- PC12 SDIO_CK SDIO
- PD2 SDIO_CMD SDIO
- # More CS pins for more sensors. The labels for all CS pins need to
- # match the SPI device table later in this file.
- PC13 GYRO_EXT_CS CS
- PC14 BARO_EXT_CS CS
- PC15 ACCEL_EXT_CS CS
- PD7 BARO_CS CS
- PE4 MPU_EXT_CS CS
- # the first CAN bus
- PD0 CAN1_RX CAN1
- PD1 CAN1_TX CAN1
- # Another USART, this one for telem1. This one has RTS and CTS lines.
- # USART2 serial2 telem1
- PD3 USART2_CTS USART2
- PD4 USART2_RTS USART2
- PD5 USART2_TX USART2
- PD6 USART2_RX USART2
- # The telem2 USART, also with RTS/CTS available.
- # USART3 serial3 telem2
- PD8 USART3_TX USART3
- PD9 USART3_RX USART3
- PD11 USART3_CTS USART3
- PD12 USART3_RTS USART3
- # The CS pin for FRAM (ramtron). This one is marked as using
- # SPEED_VERYLOW, which matches the HAL_PX4 setup.
- PD10 FRAM_CS CS SPEED_VERYLOW
- # Now we start defining some PWM pins. We also map these pins to GPIO
- # values, so users can set BRD_PWM_COUNT to choose how many of the PWM
- # outputs on the primary MCU are setup as PWM and how many as
- # GPIOs. To match HAL_PX4 we number the GPIOs for the PWM outputs
- # starting at 50.
- PE14 TIM1_CH4 TIM1 PWM(1) GPIO(50)
- PE13 TIM1_CH3 TIM1 PWM(2) GPIO(51)
- PE11 TIM1_CH2 TIM1 PWM(3) GPIO(52)
- PE9 TIM1_CH1 TIM1 PWM(4) GPIO(53)
- PD13 TIM4_CH2 TIM4 PWM(5) GPIO(54)
- PD14 TIM4_CH3 TIM4 PWM(6) GPIO(55)
- define BOARD_PWM_COUNT_DEFAULT 4
- # Relays default to use GPIO pins 54 and 55.
- define RELAY1_PIN_DEFAULT 54
- define RELAY2_PIN_DEFAULT 55
- # This is the invensense data-ready pin. We don't use it in the
- # default driver.
- PD15 MPU_DRDY INPUT
- # the 2nd GPS UART
- # UART8 serial4 GPS2
- PE0 UART8_RX UART8
- PE1 UART8_TX UART8
- # Now setup SPI bus4.
- PE2 SPI4_SCK SPI4
- PE5 SPI4_MISO SPI4
- PE6 SPI4_MOSI SPI4
- # This is the pin to enable the sensors rail. It can be used to power
- # cycle sensors to recover them in case there are problems with power on
- # timing affecting sensor stability. We pull it high by default.
- PE3 VDD_3V3_SENSORS_EN OUTPUT HIGH
- # UART7 maps to uartF in the HAL (serial5 in SERIALn_ parameters).
- PE7 UART7_RX UART7
- PE8 UART7_TX UART7
- # Define a LED, mapping it to GPIO(0). LOW will illuminate the LED
- PE12 FMU_LED_AMBER OUTPUT HIGH OPENDRAIN GPIO(0)
- # Power flag pins: these tell the MCU the status of the various power
- # supplies that are available. The pin names need to exactly match the
- # names used in AnalogIn.cpp.
- PB5 VDD_BRICK_VALID INPUT PULLUP
- PB7 VDD_SERVO_VALID INPUT PULLUP
- PE10 VDD_5V_HIPOWER_OC INPUT PULLUP
- PE15 VDD_5V_PERIPH_OC INPUT PULLUP
- # Now the SPI device table. This table creates all accessible SPI
- # devices, giving the name of the device (which is used by device
- # drivers to open the device), plus which SPI bus it it on, what
- # device ID will be used (which controls the IDs used in parameters
- # such as COMPASS_DEV_ID, so we can detect when the list of devices
- # changes between reboots for calibration purposes), the SPI mode to
- # use, and the low and high speed settings for the device.
- # You can define more SPI devices than you actually have, to allow for
- # flexibility in board setup, and the driver code can probe to see
- # which are responding.
- # The DEVID values and device names are chosen to match the PX4 port
- # of ArduPilot so users don't need to re-do their accel and compass
- # calibrations when moving to ChibiOS.
- SPIDEV ms5611 SPI1 DEVID3 BARO_CS MODE3 20*MHZ 20*MHZ
- SPIDEV ms5611_ext SPI4 DEVID2 BARO_EXT_CS MODE3 20*MHZ 20*MHZ
- SPIDEV mpu6000 SPI1 DEVID4 MPU_CS MODE3 2*MHZ 8*MHZ
- SPIDEV icm20608-am SPI1 DEVID2 ACCEL_EXT_CS MODE3 4*MHZ 8*MHZ
- SPIDEV mpu9250 SPI1 DEVID4 MPU_CS MODE3 4*MHZ 8*MHZ
- SPIDEV mpu9250_ext SPI4 DEVID1 MPU_EXT_CS MODE3 4*MHZ 8*MHZ
- SPIDEV icm20948 SPI1 DEVID4 MPU_CS MODE3 4*MHZ 8*MHZ
- SPIDEV icm20948_ext SPI4 DEVID1 MPU_EXT_CS MODE3 4*MHZ 8*MHZ
- SPIDEV hmc5843 SPI1 DEVID5 MAG_CS MODE3 11*MHZ 11*MHZ
- SPIDEV lsm9ds0_g SPI1 DEVID1 GYRO_EXT_CS MODE3 11*MHZ 11*MHZ
- SPIDEV lsm9ds0_am SPI1 DEVID2 ACCEL_EXT_CS MODE3 11*MHZ 11*MHZ
- SPIDEV lsm9ds0_ext_g SPI4 DEVID4 GYRO_EXT_CS MODE3 11*MHZ 11*MHZ
- SPIDEV lsm9ds0_ext_am SPI4 DEVID3 ACCEL_EXT_CS MODE3 11*MHZ 11*MHZ
- SPIDEV icm20602_ext SPI4 DEVID4 GYRO_EXT_CS MODE3 4*MHZ 8*MHZ
- SPIDEV ramtron SPI2 DEVID10 FRAM_CS MODE3 8*MHZ 8*MHZ
- SPIDEV external0m0 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE0 2*MHZ 2*MHZ
- SPIDEV external0m1 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE1 2*MHZ 2*MHZ
- SPIDEV external0m2 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE2 2*MHZ 2*MHZ
- SPIDEV external0m3 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE3 2*MHZ 2*MHZ
- SPIDEV pixartPC15 SPI4 DEVID13 ACCEL_EXT_CS MODE3 2*MHZ 2*MHZ
- # Now some commented out SPI device names which can be used by
- # developers to test that the clock calculations are right for a
- # bus. This is used in conjunction with the mavproxy devop module.
- # for SPI clock testing
- #SPIDEV clock500 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE0 500*KHZ 500*KHZ # gives 329KHz
- #SPIDEV clock1 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE0 1*MHZ 1*MHZ # gives 657kHz
- #SPIDEV clock2 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE0 2*MHZ 2*MHZ # gives 1.3MHz
- #SPIDEV clock4 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE0 4*MHZ 4*MHZ # gives 2.6MHz
- #SPIDEV clock8 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE0 8*MHZ 8*MHZ # gives 5.5MHz
- #SPIDEV clock16 SPI4 DEVID5 MPU_EXT_CS MODE0 16*MHZ 16*MHZ # gives 10.6MHz
- # This adds a C define which sets up the ArduPilot architecture
- # define. Any line starting with 'define' is copied literally as
- # a #define in the hwdef.h header.
- define HAL_CHIBIOS_ARCH_FMUV3 1
- # Nnow some defines for logging and terrain data files.
- define HAL_BOARD_LOG_DIRECTORY "/APM/LOGS"
- define HAL_BOARD_TERRAIN_DIRECTORY "/APM/TERRAIN"
- # We need to tell HAL_ChibiOS/Storage.cpp how much storage is
- # available (in bytes).
- define HAL_STORAGE_SIZE 16384
- # Now define fallback storage location is flash if no FRAM
- # fitted. This needs to be carefully chosen to align with your
- # bootloader. The flash storage system needs two sectors, and the
- # sectors must be at least 20% larger than HAL_STORAGE_SIZE.
- define STORAGE_FLASH_PAGE 22
- # allow to have have a dedicated safety switch pin
- define HAL_HAVE_SAFETY_SWITCH 1
- # This enables the use of a ramtron device for storage, if one is
- # found on SPI. You must have a ramtron entry in the SPI device table.
- # Enable RAMTROM parameter storage.
- define HAL_WITH_RAMTRON 1
- # Setup for the possibility of an IMU heater since the pixhawk2 cube has
- # an IMU heater.
- define HAL_HAVE_IMU_HEATER 1
- # Enable FAT filesystem support (needs a microSD defined via SDIO).
- define HAL_OS_FATFS_IO 1
- # Enable RTSCTS support. You should define this if you have any UARTs
- with RTS/CTS pins.
- define AP_FEATURE_RTSCTS 1
- # Enable SBUS_OUT on IOMCU (if you have an IOMCU).
- define AP_FEATURE_SBUS_OUT 1
- # Now setup the default battery pins driver analog pins and default
- # scaling for the power brick.
- define HAL_BATT_VOLT_PIN 2
- define HAL_BATT_CURR_PIN 3
- define HAL_BATT_VOLT_SCALE 10.1
- define HAL_BATT_CURR_SCALE 17.0
- # This defines the default maximum clock on I2C devices.
- define HAL_I2C_MAX_CLOCK 100000
- # Uncomment the lines below to enable strict API
- # checking in ChibiOS.
- # define CH_DBG_ENABLE_ASSERTS TRUE
- # define CH_DBG_ENABLE_CHECKS TRUE
- # define CH_DBG_SYSTEM_STATE_CHECK TRUE
- # define CH_DBG_ENABLE_STACK_CHECK TRUE
- # We can't share the IO UART (USART6).
- DMA_NOSHARE USART6_TX USART6_RX ADC1
- DMA_PRIORITY USART6*
- # List of files to put in ROMFS. For fmuv3 we need an IO firmware so
- # we can automatically update the IOMCU firmware on boot. The format
- # is "ROMFS ROMFS-filename source-filename". Paths are relative to the
- # ardupilot root.
- ROMFS io_firmware.bin Tools/IO_Firmware/iofirmware_lowpolh.bin
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