6f19b9c08d
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org> |
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.. | ||
bdev.c | ||
bluetooth_init_cc2564C_1.5.c | ||
board_init.c | ||
cc2564.c | ||
hub_display.c | ||
hub_display.h | ||
mboot_memory.ld | ||
mpconfigboard.h | ||
mpconfigboard.mk | ||
pins.csv | ||
README.md | ||
stm32f4xx_hal_conf.h | ||
stm32f413xg.ld |
LEGO Hub No.6
This board definition is for the LEGO Hub No. 6, a LEGO control unit with a 5x5 LED display, 6 Powered Up ports, speaker, 6-DOF sensor, Bluetooth, external SPI flash storage, and a rechargeable battery. The Hub can work without the battery if it is plugged in to, and powered by, its USB port. But without the battery the LEDs and power on the Powered Up ports will not function.
Features that are currently supported:
- standard MicroPython
- machine and bluetooth modules
- filesystem
- USB VCP, MSC and HID
The Hub has a bootloader preinstalled at 0x08000000 (which is 32kiB in size) which cannot be erased. This bootloader is entered by holding down the Bluetooth button, plugging in USB to power it up, then releasing the Bluetooth button after 5 seconds, at which point the USB DFU device appears. If the battery is installed then the Bluetooth button's RGB LED will cycle colours. When this bootloader is active, the flash from 0x08008000 and up can be erased and programmed via USB DFU.
The built-in bootloader has some drawbacks: it cannot be entered programmatically, and it does not keep the Hub powered up when running from battery (which requires keeping BAT_PWR_EN high). As such, this board is configured to work with mboot as a secondary bootloader: mboot is placed at 0x08008000 and the main application firmware at 0x08010000. When mboot is installed it can be entered programatically via machine.bootloader(), or by holding down the left arrow button when powering on the Hub and waiting until the display says "B" before releasing the button.
Backing up original Hub firmware
Before install MicroPython it is advised to backup the original LEGO firmware that the Hub comes installed with. To do this, enter the built-in bootloader by holding down the Bluetooth button for 5 seconds while powering up the Hub via USB. Then run the following command from the root of this repository:
$ cd ports/stm32
$ make BOARD=LEGO_HUB_NO6 backup-hub-firmware
This will create a file called lego_hub_firmware.dfu
. Put this file in a safe
location. To restore it, enter the built-in bootloader again and run:
$ make BOARD=LEGO_HUB_NO6 restore-hub-firmware
This will restore the original firmware but not the filesystem. To recreate the original filesystem the Hub must be updated using the appropriate LEGO PC application.
Installing MicroPython
You first need to build and install mboot, which only needs to be done once. From the root of this repository run:
$ cd ports/stm32/mboot
$ make BOARD=LEGO_HUB_NO6
Now enter the built-in bootloader by holding down the Bluetooth button for 5 seconds while powering up the Hub via USB. Then run:
$ make BOARD=LEGO_HUB_NO6 deploy
mboot should now be installed. Enter mboot by holding down the left arrow button when powering up the Hub. The display will cycle the letters: N, S, F, B. When it gets to "B" release the left arrow and it will start mboot. The Hub then blinks the centre button red once per second, and appears as a USB DFU device.
Now build MicroPython (start at the root of this repository):
$ cd mpy-cross
$ make
$ cd ../ports/stm32
$ make submodules
$ make BOARD=LEGO_HUB_NO6
And deploy to the Hub (making sure mboot is active, the centre button is blinking red):
$ make BOARD=LEGO_HUB_NO6 deploy
If successful, the Hub should now appear as a USB serial and mass storage device.
Using MicroPython on the Hub
Access the MicroPython REPL using mpremote (pip install mpremote), or with any serial terminal program.
To scan for BLE devices:
>>> import bluetooth
>>> ble = bluetooth.BLE()
>>> ble.irq(lambda *x: print(*x))
>>> ble.active(1)
>>> ble.gap_scan(2000, 625, 625)
Use help("modules") to see available built-in modules.