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Term 8 Electrical and Computer Engineering Project Course January 2002

Term 8 Electrical and Computer Engineering Project Course January 2002. PIC Development, The Easy Way. Mark Simms Steven Taylor. Overview. Basic PIC Circuits Development in C using CCS Typical Tasks (A/D, PWM, timing) How to Layout a Program Debugging Tips The Pumpkin protoboard.

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Term 8 Electrical and Computer Engineering Project Course January 2002

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  1. Term 8 Electrical and Computer Engineering Project CourseJanuary 2002 PIC Development, The Easy Way Mark Simms Steven Taylor

  2. Overview • Basic PIC Circuits • Development in C using CCS • Typical Tasks (A/D, PWM, timing) • How to Layout a Program • Debugging Tips • The Pumpkin protoboard

  3. Basic PIC Circuits • All designs are based around the PIC16F877, a mid-range microcontroller that supports: • 8kB of flash program memory • Interrupts • In-circuit programming • Hardware timers • Capture/Compare/PWM modules • 10-bit A/D conversion (up to 8 channels) • Built-in USART for serial communication • Lots of Digital I/O

  4. Basic PIC Circuits • The most basic circuit consists of: • The microcontroller • Power and GND (+5V) • Oscillator with Caps • Typical development circuit adds: • RS232 interface (typically with a MAX2.. Chip) • LED’s / switches / etc • Schematics available on INCA web site (resources at end)

  5. Programming in C • Programming the PIC in C offers several advantages: • Higher level language – developer is insulated from details of the chip • Library support for common tasks (string manipulation, serial communication) • We use the CCS compiler (http://www.ccsinfo.com/) which don’t suck. All examples will use CCS code

  6. PIC – Common Tasks with CCS • Program Template. Starting point for just about everything #define <16F877.h> // Define the type of chip you’re using. // Makes it easier to switch chips #use delay(clock=20000000) // 20Mhz oscillator void main() { /* Initialization Code goes here */ while (TRUE) { /* Program Code goes here */ } }

  7. PIC – Common Tasks with CCS • Digital I/O • Standard I/O vs. Fast I/O • Using (standard I/O): // Output a high on PIN_D1, low on PIN_D2 // Wait 50 us and invert output_high(PIN_D1); output_low(PIN_D2); delay_us(50); output_low(PIN_D1); output_high(PIN_D2);

  8. PIC – Common Tasks with CCS • Analog Input • Initialization: setup_adc_ports(ALL_ANALOG); setup_adc(ADC_CLOCK_DIV_2); • Picking a channel: set_adc_channel(0); // Note: must wait between changing // input channels (~ 10us) • Inputting Data: unsigned int16 data; // Declare a 16-bit integer data = read_adc(); // Read a 10-bit value from the // selected channel

  9. PIC – Common Tasks with CCS • Using PWM • Initialization: setup_timer_2(T2_DIV_BY_1,249,1); // Setup the PWM period setup_ccp1(CCP_PWM); // Set CCP1 for PWM • Setting the Duty Cycle: set_pwm1_duty(500); // See the CCS examples for the formula // for setting the PWM period and duty // cycle

  10. PIC – Tips for Software Design • Design the program as a state machine • A main() loop, with: • A switch() statement that jumps to a function() which represents the actions that occur in that state • Each state function() has an output section and a transition section (which can change the current state variable) • Interrupts are very useful (for example: interrupt when data received on serial port), but can cause problems. • I.e. if you change state during an interrupt (such as an E-stop), return from the interrupt service routine, then change the state variable again (during the transition section) the interrupt change is lost. • Design with tuning and debugging in mind • Programmer time is more important than machine time – the PIC16F877 is plenty fast

  11. PIC – Tips for Debugging • Use a protoboard with RS232 support and lots of print statements. Example: • program waits for a switch press • reads an analog voltage • changes the PWM cycle accordingly

  12. PIC – Tips for Debugging Some_function() { int1 pushed = FALSE, last_pushed = FALSE; int16 analog_value; float volts; pushed = input(PIN_D3); if (pushed && !last_pushed) { puts(“Button Pushed!”); analog_value = read_adc(); /* 10-bit analog input value is * between 0-1023 0-5V range */ volts = 5.0 * (analog_value / 1024.0); printf(“Button pushed! Analog value is %f volts, PWM to %i\n, volts, analog_value); set_pwm1_duty(analog_value); /* We’ve pre-configured PWM channel 1 – the set_pwm1_duty cycle function accepts a 10-bit number and adjusts the cycle accordingly */ }

  13. PIC – Tips for Debugging Can also use conditionals to print out different types of debugging messages. Say we have a type of message, INFO that we only want to be displayed when testing certain things. We could define a MACRO: #ifdef SHOW_INFO #define INFO(A) puts(A); #else #define INFO(A) /* A */ #endif Then, at an appropriate point in the code: INFO(“Button Pushed”);

  14. PIC – In-Circuit Programming • The PIC16F877 has on-board FLASH memory • No burner needed to reprogram the PIC • No need to remove PIC from circuit • Using a bootloader on the PIC, and a bootload utility on the PC the PIC can be reprogrammed in seconds over a serial link. • Burn the bootloader code onto the PIC • When writing your program in C tell the compiler not to use the top 255 bytes of flash memory • Connect the PIC circuit to the PC via a serial link. Run the bootloader code from the PC and download your code to the circuit in seconds • This technique is VITAL to preserving sanity

  15. PIC – In-Circuit Programming • The PIC16F877 has on-board FLASH memory • No burner needed to reprogram the PIC • No need to remove PIC from circuit • Using a bootloader on the PIC, and a bootload utility on the PC the PIC can be reprogrammed in seconds over a serial link. • Burn the bootloader code onto the PIC • When writing your program in C tell the compiler not to use the top 255 bytes of flash memory • Connect the PIC circuit to the PC via a serial link. Run the bootloader code from the PC and download your code to the circuit in seconds • This technique is VITAL to preserving sanity

  16. PIC – Mad2/Pumpkin • PIC16F877-based Prototyping Board • PIC16F877 microcontroller with PWR/GND connected, 20Mhz oscillator • 8 digital I/O points • 8 LED’s (switchable to DI/O) • 8 Analog Input ports (also usable as DI/O) • 2 PWM channels • RS232 interface

  17. Sample Application – Analog Sampling • PC Application will do the following: • Present a graphical front end to the user • Have a “sample” button that will send a character to the PIC over the serial port • Will read back a number in hex format, reformat into decimal and display on the screen • PIC Application will do the following: • Poll the serial port • If a character is received, sample analog channel 0 (A0), and print the value to the serial port as a hex number, followed by a newline/return (\r\n) • Use the value read from the analog input channel as the PWM duty cycle on channel 1

  18. Mplab – Setting up for CCS • Project->New (call it main.prj) • Development Mode: Editor/16F877 • Language Tool Suite: CCS • Click on main.hex, Node Properties • Click on PCM • File->New • File->Save As, main.c • Add Node, main.c • Ready to start building the application

  19. Step 1: Basic Template • Basic Template Code is: • Include the header file for the appropriate PIC • Note: I typically use a custom 16F877.H header file with 10-bit data acquisition turned on • Set the clock speed • Set the fuses • Set up serial communication • Reserve memory for the bootloader • Main function and debug/status message

  20. Step 2: Initialize the PIC functions • Need to initialize (if using): • Analog to Digital Conversion • Counters and Timers • PWM output / capture • Interrupts • Serial • Timer • Global • Etc • I’ve included an LED test to show the card has reset

  21. Step 2: Initialize the PIC functions • Need to initialize (if using): • Analog to Digital Conversion • Counters and Timers • PWM output / capture • Interrupts • Serial • Timer • Global • Etc • I’ve included an LED test to show the card has reset

  22. Step 3: State Machine and Interrupts • Set up the state machine • Define the allowable states with enum’s • Define the state variables ALWAYS INITIALIZE EVERY VARIABLE • Enter the infinite loop and check for state • Set up the interrupt handler • Serial #INT_RDA • Timer #INT_TIMER1

  23. Step 3: State Machine and Interrupts • Three States • IDLE – do nothing • RECV_DATA • Enter: when serial interrupt received • Exit: when serial data handled • READ_ANALOG • Enter: when timer1 overflows (every 100 ms) • Exit: when analog data is read and PWM updated

  24. Step 3: State Machine and Interrupts • The first state machine is composed with this master “on/off” state machine. • STOP: user sends a “stop” command • START: user sends a “start” command

  25. Step 4: Handle ANALOG_DATA state • Declare variables to store analog input and PWM output • In the state handler: • Read in the analog voltage (remember it’s a 10-bit number, so we’ll need a 16-bit integer) • Convert to PWM rate (divide by 2, ceil to 500) • Convert to actual voltage (0-5V) • Print on the serial port • Return to IDLE state

  26. Step 5: Handle Serial Input • Declare variables to store string data from the user • Copy in the get_string() function from input.c • In the state handler: • Disable interrupts • Read in a string • Check to see if it matches “start” or “stop” • Change state if necessary • Re-enable interrupts • Change state to IDLE

  27. References and Links • Presentation, Notes and Code Archive • http://www.engr.mun.ca/~msimms/pic/ • CCS PIC C Compiler • http://www.ccsinfo.com/ • CCS PIC C Compiler Manual • http://www.ccsinfo.com/piccmanual3.zip • WorkingTex Web Site (lots of examples!) • http://www.workingtex.com/htpic/ • Bootloader Code (that resides on the PIC) • http://www.workingtex.com/htpic/PIC16F87x_and_PIC16F7x_bootloader_v7-40.zip • Bootloader Program (that resides on the PC) • http://www.ehl.cz/pic/

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