occheung beb7e6f994 | ||
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examples | ||
src | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
demo.json | ||
flake.lock | ||
flake.nix | ||
kasli-soc-master.json | ||
kasli-soc-satellite.json | ||
local_run.sh | ||
remote_run.sh |
README.md
ARTIQ on Zynq
How to use
- Install ARTIQ. Get the corresponding version to the
artiq-zynq
version you are targeting. - To obtain firmware binaries, use AFWS or build your own; see the ARTIQ manual for detailed instructions or skip to "Development" below. ZC706 variants only can also be downloaded from latest successful build on Hydra.
- Place
boot.bin
file at the root/
of a FAT-formatted SD card. - Optionally, create a
config.txt
configuration file containingkey=value
pairs on each line and place it at the root of the SD card. See below for valid keys. Theip
,ip6
andmac
keys can be used to set networking information. If these keys are not found, the firmware will use default values which may or may not be compatible with your network. - Insert the SD card into the board and set the board to boot from the SD card. For ZC706, this is achieved by placing the large DIP switch SW11 into the 00110 position. On Kasli-SoC, place the BOOT MODE switches to SD.
- Power up the board. After successful boot the firmware should respond to ping at its IP addresses. Boot output can be observed from UART at 115200bps 8-N-1.
- Create and use an ARTIQ device database as usual.
Configuration
Configuring the device is done using the config.txt
text file at the root of the SD card plus optionally a config
folder. When searching for a configuration key, the firmware first looks for a file named /config/[key].bin
and, if it exists, returns the contents of that file. If not, it looks into /config.txt
, which should contain a list of key=value
pairs, one per line. config.txt
should be used for most keys but the config
folder allows for setting configuration values which consist of binary data, such as the startup kernel.
The following configuration keys are available among others:
mac
: Ethernet MAC address.ip
: IPv4 address.ip6
: IPv6 address.idle_kernel
: idle kernel in ELF format (as produced byartiq_compile
).startup_kernel
: startup kernel in ELF format (as produced byartiq_compile
).rtio_clock
: source of RTIO clock; valid values areext0_bypass
andint_125
.
See ARTIQ manual for full list. Configurations can be read/written/removed with artiq_coremgmt
. Config erase is not implemented, as it isn't particularly useful.
For convenience, the boot
key can be used with artiq_coremgmt
and a boot.bin
file to replace firmware/gateware in a running system. This key is read-only. When loading boot.bin
onto the SD card directly, place it at the root and not in the config
folder.
Development instructions
ARTIQ on Zynq is packaged using Nix Flakes. Install Nix 2.8+ and enable flakes by adding experimental-features = nix-command flakes
to nix.conf
(e.g. ~/.config/nix/nix.conf
).
Pure build with Nix:
nix build .#zc706-nist_clock-jtag # or zc706-nist_qc2-jtag or zc706-nist_clock-sd or etc
Run nix flake show
to see all valid build targets. Targets suffixed with -jtag
produce separate firmware and gateware files, intended for use in booting via JTAG server/Ethernet, e.g. ./remote_run.sh -i
with a remote JTAG server. Targets suffixed with -sd
will produce boot.bin
file suitable for SD card boot. -firmware
and -gateware
respectively build firmware and gateware only.
The Kasli-SoC target requires a system description file as input. See ARTIQ manual for exact instructions or use incremental build.
Impure incremental build:
For boards with fixed variants, i.e. ZC706, etc. :
nix develop
cd src
gateware/<board>.py -g ../build/gateware -V <variant> # gateware
make GWARGS="-V <variant>" <runtime/satman> # firmware
For boards with system descriptions, i.e. Kasli-SoC, etc. :
nix develop
cd src
gateware/<board>.py -g ../build/gateware <description.json> # gateware
make TARGET=<board> GWARGS="path/to/description.json" <runtime/satman> # firmware
szl.elf
can be obtained with:
nix build git+https://git.m-labs.hk/m-labs/zynq-rs#<board>-szl
To generate boot.bin
use mkbootimage
, e.g.:
echo "the_ROM_image:
{
[bootloader]result/szl.elf
gateware/top.bit
firmware/armv7-none-eabihf/release/<runtime/satman>
}
EOF" >> boot.bif
mkbootimage boot.bif boot.bin
Notes:
- The impure build process is also compatible with non-Nix systems.
- Firmware type must be either
runtime
for DRTIO-less or DRTIO master variants, orsatman
for DRTIO satellite. - If the board is connected to the local machine by JTAG, use the
local_run.sh
script. - A known Xilinx hardware bug prevents repeatedly loading the bootloader over JTAG without a POR reset. If booting over JTAG, install a jumper on
PS_POR_B
and use the POR reset script here.
Pre-Commit Hooks
You are strongly recommended to use the provided pre-commit hooks to automatically reformat files and check for non-optimal Rust/C/C++ practices. Run pre-commit install
to install the hook and pre-commit
will automatically run cargo fmt
, cargo clippy
, and clang-format
for you.
Several things to note:
- If
cargo fmt
,cargo clippy
, orclang-format
returns an error, the pre-commit hook will fail. You should fix all errors before trying to commit again. - If
cargo fmt
orclang-format
reformats some files, the pre-commit hook will also fail. You should review the changes and, if satisfied, try to commit again.
License
Copyright (C) 2019-2024 M-Labs Limited.
ARTIQ is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
ARTIQ is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with ARTIQ. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.