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WaRP7 - Next Generation IoT and Wearable Development Platform

Overview

The i.MX7S SoC is a Hybrid multi-core processor composed of Single Cortex A7 core and Single Cortex M4 core. Zephyr was ported to run on the M4 core. In a later release, it will also communicate with the A7 core (running Linux) via RPmsg.

WaRP7-iMX7S

Hardware

The WaRP7 Platform is composed of a CPU and IO board.

WaRP7 IO Board

  • 6-axis Accelerometer Magnetometer: NXP FXOS8700CQ (I2C4 interface)

  • 3-axis Gyroscope: NXP FXAS21002C (I2C4 interface)

  • Altimeter: NXP MPL3115A2 (I2C4 interface)

  • NXP NTAG NT3H1101 (I2C2 interface)

  • Audio Codec: NXP SGTL5000 (I2C4 and SAI1 interfaces)

  • S1 - Reset Button (POR_B signal)

  • S2 - User Defined button (ENET1_RD1/GPIO7_IO1 signal)

  • S3 - On/Off (MX7_ONOFF signal)

  • Board to board connector (34 configurable pins)

  • mikroBUS expansion connector

  • 10-pin needle JTAG Connector

  • Debug USB exposing two UARTs (UART1 for A7 and UART2 for M4)

  • MIPI DSI 1 lane Connector

  • LCD Touch Connector (I2C2 interface)

  • Audio Jack: Mic and Stereo Headphone

WaRP7 CPU Board

  • CPU i.MX7 Solo with a Single Cortex A7 (800MHz) core and Single Cortex M4 (200MHz) core

  • Memory

    • RAM -> A7: 4GB (Kingston 08EMCP04)

    • RAM -> M4: 3x32KB (TCML, TCMU, OCRAM_S), 1x128KB (OCRAM) and 1x256MB (DDR)

    • Flash -> A7: 8GB eMMC (Kingston 08EMCP04)

  • Multimedia

    • MIPI CSI 1 lane connector with 5MP OV5640 camera module (I2C2 interface)

  • Connectivity

    • Board to board connector (34 configurable pins)

    • Micro USB 2.0 OTG connector (USB_OTG1 interface)

    • Murata Type 1DX Wi-Fi IEEE 802.11b/g/n and Bluetooth 4.1 plus EDR (SD1, UART3 SAI2 interfaces)

  • Li-ion/Li-polymer Battery Charger: NXP BC3770 (I2C1 interface)

  • Power management integrated circuit (PMIC): NXP PF3000 (I2C1 interface)

For more information about the i.MX7 SoC and WaRP7, see these references:

Supported Features

The WaRP7 configuration supports the following hardware features on the Cortex M4 Core:

Interface

Controller

Driver/Component

NVIC

on-chip

nested vector interrupt controller

SYSTICK

on-chip

systick

GPIO

on-chip

gpio

I2C

on-chip

i2c

UART

on-chip

serial port-polling; serial port-interrupt

SENSOR

off-chip

fxos8700 polling; fxos8700 trigger; fxas21002 polling; fxas21002 trigger;

The default configuration can be found in the defconfig file: boards/arm/warp7_m4/warp7_m4_defconfig

Other hardware features are not currently supported by the port.

Connections and IOs

The WaRP7 board Board was tested with the following pinmux controller configuration.

Board Name

SoC Name

Usage

FT_TX2

UART2_TXD

UART Console

FT_RX2

UART2_RXD

UART Console

MKBUS_TX

UART6_TXD

UART

MKBUS_RX

UART6_RXD

UART

S2

ENET1_RD1/GPIO7_IO1

SW0

I2C4_SDA

I2C4_SDA

I2C / FXOS8700 / FXAS21002

I2C4_SCL

I2C4_SCL

I2C / FXOS8700 / FXAS21002

SENSOR_INT_B

ENET1_RD0/GPIO7_IO0

FXOS8700 INT1 / FXAS21002 INT1

System Clock

The M4 Core is configured to run at a 200 MHz clock speed.

Serial Port

The iMX7S SoC has seven UARTs. The number 2 is configured for the console and the number 6 is used in the mikroBUS connector.

Programming and Debugging

The WaRP7 doesn’t have QSPI flash for the M4 and it needs to be started by the A7 core. The A7 core is responsible to load the M4 binary application into the RAM, put the M4 in reset, set the M4 Program Counter and Stack Pointer, and get the M4 out of reset. The A7 can perform these steps at bootloader level or after the Linux system has booted.

The M4 can use up to 5 different RAMs. These are the memory mapping for A7 and M4:

Region

Cortex-A7

Cortex-M4 (System Bus)

Cortex-M4 (Code Bus)

Size

DDR

0x80000000-0xFFFFFFFF

0x80000000-0xDFFFFFFF

0x10000000-0x1FFEFFFF

2048MB (less for M4)

OCRAM

0x00900000-0x0091FFFF

0x20200000-0x2021FFFF

0x00900000-0x0091FFFF

128KB

TCMU

0x00800000-0x00807FFF

0x20000000-0x20007FFF

32KB

TCML

0x007F8000-0x007FFFFF

0x1FFF8000-0x1FFFFFFF

32KB

OCRAM_S

0x00180000-0x00187FFF

0x20180000-0x20187FFF

0x00000000-0x00007FFF

32KB

QSPI Flash

0x08000000-0x0BFFFFFF

64MB

References

At compilation time you have to choose which RAM will be used. This configuration is done in the file boards/arm/warp7_m4/warp7_m4.dts with “zephyr,flash” (when CONFIG_XIP=y) and “zephyr,sram” properties. The available configurations are:

"zephyr,flash"
- &ddr_code
- &tcml_code
- &ocram_code
- &ocram_s_code
- &ocram_pxp_code
- &ocram_epdc_code

"zephyr,sram"
- &ddr_sys
- &tcmu_sys
- &ocram_sys
- &ocram_s_sys
- &ocram_pxp_sys
- &ocram_epdc_sys

Below you will find the instructions to load and run Zephyr on M4 from A7 using u-boot.

Connect both micro USB interfaces into the PC. In one USB interface you will have 2 USB serial ports, the first one is the A7 console and the second is the M4 console for Zephyr with both configured to work at 115200 8N1. The other USB interface is used to power the CPU and IO boards and is connected to the USB OTG interface of the i.MX7S.

After powering up the platform stop the u-boot execution on the A7 core and expose the eMMC as mass storage with the following command in the u-boot prompt: ums 0 mmc 0. Copy the compiled zephyr.bin to the first FAT partition and remove the mounted device on the PC by issuing a “Ctrl+C” in the u-boot prompt. Set the u-boot environment variables and run the zephyr.bin from the appropriated memory configured in the Zephyr compilation:

setenv bootm4 'fatload mmc 0:1 $m4addr $m4fw && dcache flush && bootaux $m4addr'
# TCML
setenv m4tcml 'setenv m4fw zephyr.bin; setenv m4addr 0x007F8000'
setenv bootm4tcml 'run m4tcml && run bootm4'
run bootm4tcml
# TCMU
setenv m4tcmu 'setenv m4fw zephyr.bin; setenv m4addr 0x00800000'
setenv bootm4tcmu 'run m4tcmu && run bootm4'
run bootm4tcmu
# OCRAM
setenv m4ocram 'setenv m4fw zephyr.bin; setenv m4addr 0x00900000'
setenv bootm4ocram 'run m4ocram && run bootm4'
run bootm4ocram
# OCRAM_S
setenv m4ocrams 'setenv m4fw zephyr.bin; setenv m4addr 0x00180000'
setenv bootm4ocrams 'run m4ocrams && run bootm4'
run bootm4ocrams
# DDR
setenv m4ddr 'setenv m4fw zephyr.bin; setenv m4addr 0x80000000'
setenv bootm4ddr 'run m4ddr && run bootm4'
run bootm4ddr

Debugging

Download and install J-Link Tools and NXP iMX7D Connect CortexM4.JLinkScript.

To run Zephyr Binary using J-Link, create the following script to get the Program Counter and Stack Pointer from zephyr.bin.

get-pc-sp.sh: .. code-block:: console

#!/bin/sh

firmware=$1

pc=$(od -An -N 8 -t x4 $firmware | awk ‘{print $2;}’) sp=$(od -An -N 8 -t x4 $firmware | awk ‘{print $1;}’)

echo pc=$pc echo sp=$sp

Get the SP and PC from firmware binary: ./get-pc-sp.sh zephyr.bin .. code-block:: console

pc=00900f01 sp=00905020

Plug in the J-Link into the board and PC and run the J-Link command line tool:

/usr/bin/JLinkExe -device Cortex-M4 -if JTAG \
   -speed 4000 -autoconnect 1 -jtagconf -1,-1 \
   -jlinkscriptfile iMX7D_Connect_CortexM4.JLinkScript

The following steps are necessary to run the zephyr.bin:

  1. Put the M4 core in reset

  2. Load the binary in the appropriate addr (TMCL, TCMU, OCRAM, OCRAM_S or DDR)

  3. Set PC (Program Counter)

  4. Set SP (Stack Pointer)

  5. Get the M4 core out of reset

Issue the following commands inside J-Link commander:

w4 0x3039000C 0xAC
loadfile zephyr.bin,0x00900000
w4 0x00180000 00900f01
w4 0x00180004 00905020
w4 0x3039000C 0xAA

With these mechanisms, applications for the warp7_m4 board configuration can be built and debugged in the usual way (see Building an Application and Run an Application for more details).