"Jay Maynard" <jaymaynard@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1185635965.944562.36650@g4g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
> I'm trying to select a microcontroller for an application, and having
> little luck sifting through the masses of information on the web.
>
> I need:
> 1) Two async serial ports, capable of running at 9600 BPS. I'd greatly
> prefer this to be in hardware; bit-banging is too much work, and hard
> to do in realtime with other things going on. RS-232 drivers are not
> necessary, but the ability to accept inverted CMOS (1=0V, 0=+2.6V)
> levels is.
> 2) Ethernet, with TCP/IP stack provided. A web server isn't necessary,
> but I'll use it if it's there.
> 3) Reasonably inexpensive prototype board. This is a ham radio
> project, and I intend to publish it so that other hams can use it.
> 4) The ability to develop on Mac OS X, or at least Linux. I refuse to
> run Windows unless there is absolutely no other option.
> 5) Open source development tools. I can deal with C, and assembler
> doesn't faze me; I'd rather not do BASIC.
>
> I don't need:
> 1) Bells and whistles on the prototype board. No LCD displays,
> buttons, optoisolators, or any other such.
> 2) A big, hairy realtime OS. The application's job is to monitor
> traffic going from one serial port to another, interpret it, and make
> the contents available via Ethernet, and to accept commands and insert
> them in the serial datastream going the other way. A nice, small
> kernel, OTOH, would probably be useful.
>
> I don't care about:
> 1) Architecture wars. I have no investment in any microcontroller
> architecture, so I'm free to select the best (or only) one to do the
> job.
> 2) I/O pins beyond Ethernet and async.
> 3) Programming methods, as long as I can plug it into my Mac. This
> means USB, practically speaking, although an Ethernet-bootstrappable
> prototype board will also work.
> 4) Whether programming is accomplished on the prototype board or via a
> separate programmer.
>
> Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.
> On Jul 28, 12:04 pm, Petter Gustad <newsmailco...@gustad.com> wrote:
> > I don't think the DEMO board includes the USB programmer/debug
> > interface. However, I'm a little uncertain since I only have the EVB
> > and not the DEMO. Check with your dealer or on the Freescale site for
> > more info.
>
> Hm. Wonder how you program the board's micro, then?
> I did, and it raises a question: Based on your experience with your
> sample code, am I going to get in trouble distributing the complete
> code, ready to build, if I start from your example? There was a lot
> of wrangling about it on the forum...
It's not my code (but another more experienced M5223x enthusiast also
named Petter). The issues are related to the distribution of the
Interniche code. To me it seems like you have to provide it in such a
way that whoever downloads the code has to click and agree to the
license prior to downloading.
Petter
--
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing on usenet and in e-mail?
Reply by Jim Granville●July 28, 20072007-07-28
Jay Maynard wrote:
> I'm trying to select a microcontroller for an application, and having
> little luck sifting through the masses of information on the web.
>
> I need:
> 1) Two async serial ports, capable of running at 9600 BPS. I'd greatly
> prefer this to be in hardware; bit-banging is too much work, and hard
> to do in realtime with other things going on. RS-232 drivers are not
> necessary, but the ability to accept inverted CMOS (1=0V, 0=+2.6V)
> levels is.
> 2) Ethernet, with TCP/IP stack provided. A web server isn't necessary,
> but I'll use it if it's there.
> 3) Reasonably inexpensive prototype board. This is a ham radio
> project, and I intend to publish it so that other hams can use it.
> 4) The ability to develop on Mac OS X, or at least Linux. I refuse to
> run Windows unless there is absolutely no other option.
> 5) Open source development tools. I can deal with C, and assembler
> doesn't faze me; I'd rather not do BASIC.
>
> I don't need:
> 1) Bells and whistles on the prototype board. No LCD displays,
> buttons, optoisolators, or any other such.
> 2) A big, hairy realtime OS. The application's job is to monitor
> traffic going from one serial port to another, interpret it, and make
> the contents available via Ethernet, and to accept commands and insert
> them in the serial datastream going the other way. A nice, small
> kernel, OTOH, would probably be useful.
>
> I don't care about:
> 1) Architecture wars. I have no investment in any microcontroller
> architecture, so I'm free to select the best (or only) one to do the
> job.
> 2) I/O pins beyond Ethernet and async.
> 3) Programming methods, as long as I can plug it into my Mac. This
> means USB, practically speaking, although an Ethernet-bootstrappable
> prototype board will also work.
> 4) Whether programming is accomplished on the prototype board or via a
> separate programmer.
>
> Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.
Sounds like you need a low-cost-module.
So look thru the main suppliers for their lowest price, ready to
go modules.
One thing to watch, will be if the 'Demo' SW versions have
a limit you will bump into,
Atmel have something for the AVR32,
you could also look at Rabbit.
Zilog have just released a ZDOTs module, that they claim has
Full Tcp/IP and operating system.
http://www.zilog.com/products/partdetails.asp?id=eZ80F917050SBC
Module is tiny, appx business card in area, with 0.1"
expansion headers - think of it as Jumbo DIP :)
I have not seen a price indication yet om the ZDot module.
Their Z80 series have a LOT of legacy Sw, and will be known
by your audience. So I'd favour "mature and proven" over
"new kid on the block".
-jg
Reply by Frank-Christian Kruegel●July 28, 20072007-07-28
On Sat, 28 Jul 2007 08:19:25 -0700, Jay Maynard <jaymaynard@gmail.com>
wrote:
>I'm trying to select a microcontroller for an application, and having
>little luck sifting through the masses of information on the web.
> I'm trying to select a microcontroller for an application, and having
> little luck sifting through the masses of information on the web.
>
> I need:
> 1) Two async serial ports, capable of running at 9600 BPS. I'd greatly
> prefer this to be in hardware; bit-banging is too much work, and hard
> to do in realtime with other things going on. RS-232 drivers are not
> necessary, but the ability to accept inverted CMOS (1=0V, 0=+2.6V)
> levels is.
> 2) Ethernet, with TCP/IP stack provided. A web server isn't necessary,
> but I'll use it if it's there.
> 3) Reasonably inexpensive prototype board. This is a ham radio
> project, and I intend to publish it so that other hams can use it.
> 4) The ability to develop on Mac OS X, or at least Linux. I refuse to
> run Windows unless there is absolutely no other option.
> 5) Open source development tools. I can deal with C, and assembler
> doesn't faze me; I'd rather not do BASIC.
>
[CUT]
Have a look at at Zilog's F91. Has most of the stuff you have mentioned.
Although dev tools are Win only, but I've run them under linux with Win
emulator.
Maciek.
Reply by GMM50●July 28, 20072007-07-28
On Jul 28, 11:19 am, Jay Maynard <jaymayn...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm trying to select a microcontroller for an application, and having
> little luck sifting through the masses of information on the web.
>
> I need:
> 1) Two async serial ports, capable of running at 9600 BPS. I'd greatly
> prefer this to be in hardware; bit-banging is too much work, and hard
> to do in realtime with other things going on. RS-232 drivers are not
> necessary, but the ability to accept inverted CMOS (1=0V, 0=+2.6V)
> levels is.
> 2) Ethernet, with TCP/IP stack provided. A web server isn't necessary,
> but I'll use it if it's there.
> 3) Reasonably inexpensive prototype board. This is a ham radio
> project, and I intend to publish it so that other hams can use it.
> 4) The ability to develop on Mac OS X, or at least Linux. I refuse to
> run Windows unless there is absolutely no other option.
> 5) Open source development tools. I can deal with C, and assembler
> doesn't faze me; I'd rather not do BASIC.
>
> I don't need:
> 1) Bells and whistles on the prototype board. No LCD displays,
> buttons, optoisolators, or any other such.
> 2) A big, hairy realtime OS. The application's job is to monitor
> traffic going from one serial port to another, interpret it, and make
> the contents available via Ethernet, and to accept commands and insert
> them in the serial datastream going the other way. A nice, small
> kernel, OTOH, would probably be useful.
>
> I don't care about:
> 1) Architecture wars. I have no investment in any microcontroller
> architecture, so I'm free to select the best (or only) one to do the
> job.
> 2) I/O pins beyond Ethernet and async.
> 3) Programming methods, as long as I can plug it into my Mac. This
> means USB, practically speaking, although an Ethernet-bootstrappable
> prototype board will also work.
> 4) Whether programming is accomplished on the prototype board or via a
> separate programmer.
>
> Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.
Look at Netburner. THey've got some $99 systems that should fit the
bill.
gm
Reply by Jay Maynard●July 28, 20072007-07-28
On Jul 28, 1:51 pm, rickman <gnu...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Another choice would be the Luminary Micro Cortex M3 version of the
> ARM processor. They have an LM3S6xxx line that includes Ethernet with
> an eval board which is only $80 including eval tools code size limited
> to 32 kB. It comes with sample code, but otherwise I don't think
> there is a large base of software available yet. One of the real time
> OS is available for it though. The eval board is nice and small, but
> I think it will also require that piece of tape to cover the OLED
> display.
The LM3S6965 board looks nice, and for $80, I can't complain. My
aversion to the built-in displays was that they tend to drive up the
price, but all I'm aiming for is less than $100. If it's there and
doesn't drive up the cost, I'll happily use it.
All of the ARM systems seem to use the same JTAG interface. Is there a
JTAG adapter that can be used from Linux and doesn't require a
parallel port? If I'm going to use Linux (which seems likely; nobody
does OS X or provides fully open-source versions of ther software that
can be ported, it appears), it'll be from a virtual machine on my Mac,
and while I can connect USB devices to it, I can't do that with
parallel-port devices.
I'm also impressed enough with FreeRTOS that I'll probably use that.
It seems to be able to deal with interrupt-driven I/O on the LM3S6965
for both Ethernet and serial, and that will make programming a lot
easier. It also seems to be completely redistributable, unlike the
Freescale stuff.
Reply by rickman●July 28, 20072007-07-28
On Jul 28, 11:19 am, Jay Maynard <jaymayn...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm trying to select a microcontroller for an application, and having
> little luck sifting through the masses of information on the web.
I would suggest that you consider the Atmel ARM CPU, AT91SAM7X256
or ...X512. I believe it suits all of your requirements and they
offer a development board with little in the way of "bells and
whistles". There are also many others with similar development
boards, some for less money such as from Olimex...
http://olimex.com/dev/index.html
Their SAM7X256 board does come with a tiny color LCD, but it costs
about half what the Atmel module does so could you just cover the LCD
with tape and ignore it?
For software you can find excellent open source tools from www.gnuarm.com.
The code to drive the Ethernet port can be found at a number of
sources such as RTOS or other real time OS. Or you should be able to
use the code available on the Ethernut project which was set up for
needs just like yours. Perhaps you should check them out since there
is also hardware available.
Another choice would be the Luminary Micro Cortex M3 version of the
ARM processor. They have an LM3S6xxx line that includes Ethernet with
an eval board which is only $80 including eval tools code size limited
to 32 kB. It comes with sample code, but otherwise I don't think
there is a large base of software available yet. One of the real time
OS is available for it though. The eval board is nice and small, but
I think it will also require that piece of tape to cover the OLED
display.
While checking out the Luminary CM3 I found that contrary to what one
of the frequent posters here will tell you, Luminary *does* have in
their road map a device with *both* CAN and Ethernet. Right now you
can get either CAN (LM3S92xx) or Ethernet (LM3S96xx) periperhals. The
LM3S98xx will have *both* usable at the same time! Not that this is
relevant to your needs, but I just found that I was being misled.
> I need:
> 1) Two async serial ports, capable of running at 9600 BPS. I'd greatly
> prefer this to be in hardware; bit-banging is too much work, and hard
> to do in realtime with other things going on. RS-232 drivers are not
> necessary, but the ability to accept inverted CMOS (1=0V, 0=+2.6V)
> levels is.
> 2) Ethernet, with TCP/IP stack provided. A web server isn't necessary,
> but I'll use it if it's there.
> 3) Reasonably inexpensive prototype board. This is a ham radio
> project, and I intend to publish it so that other hams can use it.
> 4) The ability to develop on Mac OS X, or at least Linux. I refuse to
> run Windows unless there is absolutely no other option.
> 5) Open source development tools. I can deal with C, and assembler
> doesn't faze me; I'd rather not do BASIC.
>
> I don't need:
> 1) Bells and whistles on the prototype board. No LCD displays,
> buttons, optoisolators, or any other such.
> 2) A big, hairy realtime OS. The application's job is to monitor
> traffic going from one serial port to another, interpret it, and make
> the contents available via Ethernet, and to accept commands and insert
> them in the serial datastream going the other way. A nice, small
> kernel, OTOH, would probably be useful.
>
> I don't care about:
> 1) Architecture wars. I have no investment in any microcontroller
> architecture, so I'm free to select the best (or only) one to do the
> job.
> 2) I/O pins beyond Ethernet and async.
> 3) Programming methods, as long as I can plug it into my Mac. This
> means USB, practically speaking, although an Ethernet-bootstrappable
> prototype board will also work.
> 4) Whether programming is accomplished on the prototype board or via a
> separate programmer.
>
> Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.
Reply by Jay Maynard●July 28, 20072007-07-28
On Jul 28, 12:04 pm, Petter Gustad <newsmailco...@gustad.com> wrote:
> I don't think the DEMO board includes the USB programmer/debug
> interface. However, I'm a little uncertain since I only have the EVB
> and not the DEMO. Check with your dealer or on the Freescale site for
> more info.
Hm. Wonder how you program the board's micro, then?
I did, and it raises a question: Based on your experience with your
sample code, am I going to get in trouble distributing the complete
code, ready to build, if I start from your example? There was a lot of
wrangling about it on the forum...
Reply by Rich Webb●July 28, 20072007-07-28
On Sat, 28 Jul 2007 08:19:25 -0700, Jay Maynard
<jaymaynard@gmail.com> wrote:
>I'm trying to select a microcontroller for an application, and having
>little luck sifting through the masses of information on the web.
>
>I need:
>1) Two async serial ports, capable of running at 9600 BPS. I'd greatly
>prefer this to be in hardware; bit-banging is too much work, and hard
>to do in realtime with other things going on. RS-232 drivers are not
>necessary, but the ability to accept inverted CMOS (1=0V, 0=+2.6V)
>levels is.
>2) Ethernet, with TCP/IP stack provided. A web server isn't necessary,
>but I'll use it if it's there.
>3) Reasonably inexpensive prototype board. This is a ham radio
>project, and I intend to publish it so that other hams can use it.
>4) The ability to develop on Mac OS X, or at least Linux. I refuse to
>run Windows unless there is absolutely no other option.
>5) Open source development tools. I can deal with C, and assembler
>doesn't faze me; I'd rather not do BASIC.
http://www.sparkfun.com/commerce/product_info.php?products_id=273 is a
possibility. Follow the links at the bottom of the page for info on
GCC ports, and example projects using FreeRTOS and the (also free)
uIP TCP/IP stack.
Got a couple of buttons on it, tho. '-)