You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
This repo is archived. You can view files and clone it, but cannot push or open issues/pull-requests.

instructions.md 3.6KB

12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546474849505152535455565758596061626364
  1. # Teensy LC, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2 support
  2. These ARM Teensies are now supported through [chibios](http://chibios.org).
  3. You'll need to install an ARM toolchain, for instance from [gcc ARM embedded](https://launchpad.net/gcc-arm-embedded) website, or using your favourite package manager. After installing, you should be able to run `arm-none-eabi-gcc -v` in the command prompt and get sensible output. This toolchain is used instead of `avr-gcc`, which is only for AVR chips. Naturally you'll also need the usual development tools (e.g. `make`), just as in the AVR setting.
  4. Next, you'll need ChibiOS. The current release (3.0.2) does not have sufficient Kinetis support, so you'll need to get a patched version from [my fork](https://github.com/flabbergast/ChibiOS/tree/kinetis): you can download a current tree zipped from [here](https://github.com/flabbergast/ChibiOS/archive/kinetis.zip). Unpack the zip, rename the newly created `ChibiOS-kinetis` to `chibios`, and move it to `tmk/tool/chibios/` (so that the ChibiOS files reside in `tmk/tool/chibios/chibios`).
  5. This should be it. Running `make` in `keyboard/teensy_lc_onekey` should create a working firmware in `build/`, called `ch.hex`.
  6. For more notes about the ChibiOS backend in TMK, see `tmk_core/protocol/chibios/README.md`.
  7. ## About this onekey example
  8. It's set up for Teensy LC. To use 3.x, you'll need to edit the `Makefile` (and comment out one line in `mcuconf.h`). A sample makefile for Teensy 3.0 is provided as `Makefile.3.0`, can be used without renaming with `make -f Makefile.3.0`.
  9. ## Credits
  10. TMK itself is written by hasu, original sources [here](https://github.com/tmk/tmk_keyboard).
  11. The USB support for Kinetis MCUs is due to RedoX. His ChibiOS fork is also [on github](https://github.com/RedoXyde/ChibiOS); but it doesn't include Teensy LC definitions.
  12. ## Features that are not implemented yet
  13. Currently only the more fancy suspend features are not there (i.e. "breathing" LED during suspend, power saving during suspend, sending a wakeup packet). The rest should work fine (reports either way are welcome).
  14. # Matrix programming notes
  15. The notes below explain what commands can be used to examine and set the status of Teensy pins.
  16. ## ChibiOS pin manipulation basics
  17. ### Pins
  18. Each pin sits on a "port", each of which comprises at most 32 individual pins.
  19. So for instance "PTC5" from Kinetis manual/datasheet refers to port C (or GPIOA), pin 5. Most functions dealing with pins take 2 parameters which specify the pin -- the first being the port, the second being the pin number.
  20. Within ChibiOS, there are definitions which simplify this a bit for the Teensies. `TEENSY_PINn_IOPORT` represents the port of the MCU's pin connected Teensy's PIN `n`, and `TEENSY_PINn` represents its MCU's pin number.
  21. ### Mode
  22. A MCU pin can be in several modes. The basic command to set a pin mode is
  23. palSetPadMode(TEENSY_PINn_IOPORT, TEENSY_PINn, PAL_MODE_INPUT_PULLUP);
  24. The last parameter is the mode. For keyboards, the usual ones that are used are `PAL_MODE_INPUT_PULLUP` (input with a pullup), `PAL_MODE_INPUT_PULLDOWN` (input with a pulldown), `PAL_MODE_INPUT` (input floating, a.k.a. Hi-Z), `PAL_MODE_OUTPUT_PUSHPULL` (output in the Arduino sense -- can be then set HIGH or LOW).
  25. ### Setting
  26. Pins are set HIGH (after they've been put into `OUTPUT_PUSHPULL` mode) by
  27. palSetPad(TEENSY_PINn_IOPORT, TEENSY_PINn);
  28. or set LOW by
  29. palClearPad(TEENSY_PINn_IOPORT, TEENSY_PINn);
  30. ### Reading
  31. Reading pin status is done with
  32. palReadPad(TEENSY_PINn_IOPORT, TEENSY_PINn);
  33. The function returns either `PAL_HIGH` (actually `1`) or `PAL_LOW` (actually `0`).