An Open Source, Micro Development Kit for IoT Embedded Applications
The nRF52832-MDK is a fully open-source, versatile single board development kit for Bluetooth® low energy, ANT and 2.4GHz proprietary applications using the nRF52832 SoC.
The kit gives access to 24 I/Os and interfaces via headers and has a RGB LED which is user-programmable. It also has a 2.4GHz chip antenna onboard which is quite convenient to develop IoT wireless applications.
It supports the Nordic offical SDK using GCC, Keil and IAR. Program/Debug options on the kit is DAPLink.
The nRF52832-MDK can also be used to play with multi-frameworks such as: nRF5 SDK, nRF5 SDK for Mesh, Mbed OS 5, Zephyr, Mynewt, NuttX, JerryScript, Espruino, MicroPython, Web Bluetooth, Eddystone, etc.
There are two versions of nRF52832-MDK available:
V1: with Micro USB socket and headers soldered in
V2: without headers soldered in and can be connected to PC without any cable
Just choose one that's right for you!
nRF52832-MDK provides the following hardware features:
Nordic Semiconductor nRF52832
Program/Debug options with DAPLink
Up to 24 GPIOs at headers
Reset Button
RGB LED
2.4GHz chip antenna
3.3V regulator with 1A peak current output
VBUS & VIN Power-Path Management
Breadboard-friendly
Two dimensions available:
Congratulations on getting the nRF52832-MDK. In this section we'll show you how to connect and power up your nRF52832-MDK, and what to expect when you do so. This will take about 20 minutes.
You can connect the board by performing the following steps:
Connect the nRF52832-MDK to one of your PC's USB host ports. This provides power to the board. Observe that two GREEN LEDs are on. One indicates that 3.3V power is good, and another indicates that the application is advertising.
Open a file explorer. Confirm that the nRF52832-MDK has appeared as a removable drive named DAPLINK. This allows you to program the onboard chip. You'll do this under "how to program nRF52832-MDK" below.
Terminal applications (for example PuTTY or screen) run on your host PC. They provide a window where your board can print messages.
You can connect your board to your computer over USB. This should work out of the box on Linux and macOS, but for Windows earlier than Windows 10, you will probably need to install a serial port driver:
Download the Arm Mbed Windows serial port driver.
Plug in your board over USB. It mounts as a drive.
Close all Explorer windows showing the drive.
Run the installer. This may take some time or display a few "unsigned driver" warnings.
The default setup for the USB serial port is 115200 baud, 8 bits, 1 stop bit, no parity (115200-8-N-1)
There are many terminal applications for Windows, PuTTY is recommended.
Start PuTTY and open the used COM port with the following configuration. If there is nothing printed, just press RESET button on the board.
screen should work on macOS. In Terminal, run:
$ screen /dev/cu.usbmodem1412 115200
If there is nothing printed, just press RESET button on the board.
You can type screen /dev/cu.usb
first, and then press tab. The device name will autocomplete.
To end a screen session, type Ctrl + A, and then Ctrl + K. At the bottom of the Terminal window, you should see a [y/n]
prompt. Type y.
screen should work on Linux. If for some reason it doesn't, you can try one of the following:
Here we will use screen on Ubuntu 16.04 for example. If there is nothing printed, just press RESET button on the board.
$ sudo apt-get install screen
$ sudo screen /dev/ttyACM0 115200
You can also test the application with nRF Connect by performing the following steps:
Get the nRF Connect app from App Store or Google Play.
Connect to the device from nRF Connect (the device is advertising as nRF52832-MDK).
Observe that BLUE LED is on and GREEN LED is off. This indicates that the connections is established.
Observe that the services are shown in the connected device.
Write 01
to the Nordic Blinky LED Characteristic (0x1525) and observe that RED LED is turned on.
Write 00
to the Nordic Blinky LED Characteristic (0x1525) and observe that RED LED is turned off.
You have the following two options to program your nRF52832-MDK:
Drag and drop the hex file into the DAPLINK removable drive mentioned above. The file contains firmware which will be automatically programmed onto the nRF52832 SoC. This happens immediately. The explorer window may close when programming starts. When programming is completed, the unit will be re-detected by the computer. The application will run after pressing the RESET button.
It's so easy, right?
pyOCD is an Open Source python 2.7 based library for programming and debugging ARM Cortex-M microcontrollers using CMSIS-DAP. Linux, OSX and Windows are supported.
The latest stable version of pyOCD may be done via pip as follows:
$ pip install --pre -U pyocd
Alternatively, to install the latest development version (master branch), you can do the following:
$ pip install --pre -U https://github.com/mbedmicro/pyOCD/archive/master.zip
Note that you may run into permissions issues running these commands. You have a few options here:
sudo -H
to install pyOCD and dependencies globally--user
option to install local to your userYou can verify that your board is detected by pyOCD by running:
$ pyocd-flashtool -l
and then flash the board by running:
$ pyocd-flashtool -d debug -t nrf52 -se your-hex-file.hex
nRF52832-MDK is available on the following channels (click to go directly to the product):
MIT License
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