pico-examples
ch32v307
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pico-examples | ch32v307 | |
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62 | 8 | |
2,531 | 342 | |
3.9% | - | |
4.1 | 4.0 | |
2 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
C | C | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | - |
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pico-examples
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Raspberry Pico C: Remote Sensor
Navigate to the Pico Examples repository.
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TCP Server Example - How to use WPA3 device
I'm experimenting with the "pico/wifi/tcp_server/". It works as expected with a WPA2 secured network, however I can't figure out how to access a WP3 secured network. According to the Pico W datasheet the device supports WPA3. However the function cyw43_arch_wifi_connect_async doesn't seem to have the option to select WPA3. The supported options are CYW43_AUTH_WPA_TKIP_PSK, CYW43_AUTH_WPA2_AES_PSK, or CYW43_AUTH_WPA2_MIXED_PSK.
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Pico and MPU6050 only outputs 0's
I connected the MPU6050 and Pico as shown in the wiring guide for the example code here and have also tried using a level shifter with this wiring setup.
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Show HN: MicroLua – Lua for the RP2040 Microcontroller
https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-sdk/ links to a PDF about connecting to the interwebs with a pi pico.
micropython/micropython//ports/rp2/boards/RPI_PICO_W: https://github.com/micropython/micropython/tree/master/ports...
raspberrypi/pico-sdk /lib: btstack, cyw43-driver, lwip, mbedtls, tinyusb https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-sdk/tree/master/lib
raspberrypi/pico-examples//pico_w/wifi/access_point/picow_access_point.c:
https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-examples/blob/master/pic...
There's an iperf opkg pkg, or is it just netperf (which works with fluent)?
raspberrypi/pico-examples//pico_w/wifi/iperf/picow_iperf.c:
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Trouble Getting NeoPixel Libraries to Compile in C
Okay I abandoned both of those libraries and tried the simpler WS2812 example in the Pico SDK and I did get it working....finally.
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Beginner question
For C++, you could look at the pico-examples on Github https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-examples
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I've looked everywhere online, and I wasn't able to find something like this, does anyone have any advice?
I don't know what you mean. There are dozens of tutorials on the frontpage of google. And just straight up a bt folder of projects for the pico w in the rpi github at https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-examples/tree/master/pico_w/bt. have you tried that? If you haven't, then you need to work on learning how to use google because people aren't here to do work for you. If you have tried this and it didn't work then reread my previous post and ask better questions.
- So I started porting braids to the PI PICO and ended with a generative drum machine
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Pi Pico driving an SPI display SSD1351 driver - corrupted image?
I'm sorry I don't use the pico-sdk so I'm not 100% sure of which method it'd be. A short lookup in the pico-examples repository brought me to this.
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Turn on Pico W LED pin in C
The LED is controlled by a GPIO pin on the radio, not the RP2040. See https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-examples/blob/master/pico_w/wifi/blink/picow_blink.c.
ch32v307
- My alpha Pico-based CH32V003 debug tool is ready for a few testers
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Hardware/software to run RISC-V ASM?
VCC-GND Studio is about to launch similar boards based on CH32V307.
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EPS32 but for wired Ethernet instead?
But if you're looking for RISC-V + integrated PHY, take a look at WCH's CH32V307 - just add magnetics, termination and an RJ45 jack and you've got 10BaseT.
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MCU dev board with 5 UARTs?
Yes, English datasheets can be found - along with code examples, board schematics etc - at the openwch/ch32v307 Github repo.
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Useful Tools and Resources for RISC-V development
More realistically, I DO think there's value for a terminal server that's just an ethernet connection (even one that's ancient) with some amount of programmability that's connected to 80 GPIO pins, some of which may be serial ports. I could imagine testing 1-2 Raspberry Pi-class with a bed of nails style test jig that confirms that all the GPIO, JTAG, and such are at least toggleable by sending synchronized signals to the BeagleBone/VisionFive/ESP32-C3/ whatever to confirm that all the I/O pins survived the fine wires from the wafer to the package plus all intervening PCB vias and soldering and so on. (Maybe you can't test board X with another board X because there's a different number of inputs and outputs.)
- The RISC-V MCU CH32V307 is a bad boy
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New $10 Risc-V development board
looks to be IMAFC from the PDF on their github (https://github.com/openwch/ch32v307/blob/main/Datasheet/CH32V20x_30xDS0.PDF)
What are some alternatives?
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families
ch32-rs - Embedded Rust device crates for WCH's RISC-V and Cortex-M microcontrollers
pico-sdk
Energia - Fork of Arduino for the Texas Instruments LaunchPad's
pico-playground
freedom-tools - Tools for SiFive's Freedom Platform
Pico-Game-Controller - Raspberry Pi Pico Firmware for a SDVX or IIDX controller setup. Supports 11 buttons, 10 LEDs, 1 WS2812B strip, and 2 encoders.
riscv-openocd-wch - This is the OpenOCD source code modified to support WCHlink and CH32Vxxx MCUs, received from MounRiver after my GPL request, and published here as a service for everyone interested, BTW: 8bitgeek is putting in a lot of effort to make it workable on Linux, check their fork! I claim no copyright on any of it, and I'm only exercising the rights granted by the GPL.
qmk_firmware - See the "forkreadme" branch or the following link for a description of branches maintained in this fork.
RISC-V-Guide - RISC-V Guide. Learn all about the RISC-V computer architecture along with the Development Tools and Operating Systems to develop on RISC-V hardware.
picodvi - [Moved to: https://github.com/Wren6991/PicoDVI]
picorvd - GDB-compatible RISC-V Debugger for CH32V003 that runs on a Raspberry Pi Pico