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nRF5 action!

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  • alowhumA alowhum

    @toyman No. I don't understand what's going on, as I was able to flash one succesfully before. I did find [this a bit unnerving].(https://devzone.nordicsemi.com/f/nordic-q-a/19943/nrf52832-unable-to-connect-to-the-target).

    Could it be that the EByte chips need the DCDC stuff before they can be connected to? Or that the exact moment on power-on (reset) matters?

    One thing I have found is that I had installed OpenOCD on my laptop to turn a ST-Link V2 into a Black Magic Probe. That version of OpenOCD was overruling the hacked version that Sandeep Mistry had created for the NRF5.

    But even with that removed, the problem remains this:

    "TARGET: nrf52.cpu - Not halted".

    Apparently this is a sign that the chips are protected. I was able to remove that protection before (by selecting "Burn Bootloader"), but it doesn't work now.

    Nca78N Offline
    Nca78N Offline
    Nca78
    Hardware Contributor
    wrote on last edited by
    #1581

    @alowhum have you tried the menu item to write softdevice ? If I remember well it will unlock the chip and after that you will be allowed to write code to it.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • O Offline
      O Offline
      Omemanti
      wrote on last edited by Omemanti
      #1582

      Hey,

      somehow I cant change the pins on my Ebyte module. Im trying to test with MockMysensors.
      I want te TX set to pin nr. P0.06

      I changed: MyBoardNRF.h and included nrf.h

      #define PIN_SERIAL_RX (8)
      #define PIN_SERIAL_TX (6)

      but somehow the TX pin stays P0.25.

      Can someone point me in the right direction?

      The node connects to the gateway, so thats also working.

      Seems like that if you put the MyBoardNRF5 files into the example map and you change some things in that file using the Arduino IDE, it doenst get uploaded. When I changed the MyBoardNRF5 file using Brackets it working as intended.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • alowhumA Offline
        alowhumA Offline
        alowhum
        Plugin Developer
        wrote on last edited by
        #1583

        @Nca78 Thanks, but it didn't work either :-(

        Some notes from my adventures with the eByte module:

        I've been playing with OpenOCD and the ST-Link v2. The ST-Link V2 that I turned into a Black Magic Probe doesn't see the modules.

        I went into the Arduino's folder that has OpenOCD, created .cfg file, and then:

        ./openocd -d2 -f nrf52832.cfg
        

        This started the OpenOCD server. Then I opened another terminal window and did

        telnet localhost 4444
        

        Now I could manually issue some OpenOCD commands. The goal was to do a manual mass erase.

        Some OpenOCD commands and their output:

        flash probe 0                                                                 c Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
        
        > flash banks
        #0 : nrf52.flash (nrf51) at 0x00000000, size 0x00000000, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
        #1 : nrf52.uicr (nrf51) at 0x10001000, size 0x00000000, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
        
        > flash probe 1
        Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
        flash 'nrf51' found at 0x10001000
        
        > nrf51 mass_erase 0
        Target not halted
        

        This command actually resulted in OpenOCD ballooning to 8Gb in ram. Then after 5 minutes of seemingly being busy, I got the 'target not halted' command.

        > flash info 1
        Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
        #1 : nrf51 at 0x10001000, size 0x00000100, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
        	#  0: 0x00000000 (0x100 0kB) not protected
        Target not halted
        error retrieving flash info
        

        Here is says "target not protected".

        > nrf52.cpu curstate
        reset
        

        Weird: the processor says it is in reset state? Could it be that it is not so much protected, but that it is constantly being reset? But then why is this with all the chips?

        Once the OpenOCD server is running I also tried getting into the chip with

        telnet localhost 3333
        

        But then I get "Error: attempted 'gdb' connection rejected"

        The OpenOCD documentation mentions the chip protection:

        Flash Driver: nrf5
        All members of the nRF51 microcontroller families from Nordic Semiconductor include internal flash and use ARM Cortex-M0 core. Also, the nRF52832 microcontroller from Nordic Semiconductor, which include internal flash and use an ARM Cortex-M4F core.
        flash bank $_FLASHNAME nrf5 0 0x00000000 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
        Some nrf5-specific commands are defined:
        Command: nrf5 mass_erase
        Erases the contents of the code memory and user information configuration registers as well. It must be noted that this command works only for chips that do not have factory pre-programmed region 0 code.
        http://www.openocd.org/doc/html/Flash-Commands.html

        I also got out my voltmeter. Pin 21 and pin 25 have 3v on them, the rest don't.

        YveauxY T M 3 Replies Last reply
        0
        • M Offline
          M Offline
          maciekczwa
          wrote on last edited by
          #1584

          I have the same problem with brand news ebyte modeules.

          Here are my openocd logs:

          Open On-Chip Debugger 0.10.0-dev-gdc53227 (2016-04-09-13:45)
          Licensed under GNU GPL v2
          For bug reports, read
          http://openocd.org/doc/doxygen/bugs.html
          debug_level: 2
          0x4000
          Info : The selected transport took over low-level target control. The results might differ compared to plain JTAG/SWD
          adapter speed: 10000 kHz
          Info : Unable to match requested speed 10000 kHz, using 4000 kHz
          Info : Unable to match requested speed 10000 kHz, using 4000 kHz
          Info : clock speed 4000 kHz
          Info : STLINK v2 JTAG v17 API v2 SWIM v4 VID 0x0483 PID 0x3748
          Info : using stlink api v2
          Info : Target voltage: 3.241270
          Info : nrf52.cpu: hardware has 0 breakpoints, 2 watchpoints
          Error: timed out while waiting for target halted
          TARGET: nrf52.cpu - Not halted
          in procedure 'program'
          in procedure 'reset' called at file "embedded:startup.tcl", line 478
          in procedure 'ocd_bouncer'

          embedded:startup.tcl:454: Error: ** Unable to reset target **
          in procedure 'program'
          in procedure 'program_error' called at file "embedded:startup.tcl", line 479
          at file "embedded:startup.tcl", line 454
          wybrany port szeregowy at file "embedded:startup.tcl", line 454
          nie istnieje albo Twoja płytka nie jest podłączona

          O 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • alowhumA alowhum

            @Nca78 Thanks, but it didn't work either :-(

            Some notes from my adventures with the eByte module:

            I've been playing with OpenOCD and the ST-Link v2. The ST-Link V2 that I turned into a Black Magic Probe doesn't see the modules.

            I went into the Arduino's folder that has OpenOCD, created .cfg file, and then:

            ./openocd -d2 -f nrf52832.cfg
            

            This started the OpenOCD server. Then I opened another terminal window and did

            telnet localhost 4444
            

            Now I could manually issue some OpenOCD commands. The goal was to do a manual mass erase.

            Some OpenOCD commands and their output:

            flash probe 0                                                                 c Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
            
            > flash banks
            #0 : nrf52.flash (nrf51) at 0x00000000, size 0x00000000, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
            #1 : nrf52.uicr (nrf51) at 0x10001000, size 0x00000000, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
            
            > flash probe 1
            Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
            flash 'nrf51' found at 0x10001000
            
            > nrf51 mass_erase 0
            Target not halted
            

            This command actually resulted in OpenOCD ballooning to 8Gb in ram. Then after 5 minutes of seemingly being busy, I got the 'target not halted' command.

            > flash info 1
            Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
            #1 : nrf51 at 0x10001000, size 0x00000100, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
            	#  0: 0x00000000 (0x100 0kB) not protected
            Target not halted
            error retrieving flash info
            

            Here is says "target not protected".

            > nrf52.cpu curstate
            reset
            

            Weird: the processor says it is in reset state? Could it be that it is not so much protected, but that it is constantly being reset? But then why is this with all the chips?

            Once the OpenOCD server is running I also tried getting into the chip with

            telnet localhost 3333
            

            But then I get "Error: attempted 'gdb' connection rejected"

            The OpenOCD documentation mentions the chip protection:

            Flash Driver: nrf5
            All members of the nRF51 microcontroller families from Nordic Semiconductor include internal flash and use ARM Cortex-M0 core. Also, the nRF52832 microcontroller from Nordic Semiconductor, which include internal flash and use an ARM Cortex-M4F core.
            flash bank $_FLASHNAME nrf5 0 0x00000000 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
            Some nrf5-specific commands are defined:
            Command: nrf5 mass_erase
            Erases the contents of the code memory and user information configuration registers as well. It must be noted that this command works only for chips that do not have factory pre-programmed region 0 code.
            http://www.openocd.org/doc/html/Flash-Commands.html

            I also got out my voltmeter. Pin 21 and pin 25 have 3v on them, the rest don't.

            YveauxY Offline
            YveauxY Offline
            Yveaux
            Mod
            wrote on last edited by
            #1585

            @alowhum I'm not in sync with the whole thread , but I had similar issues when I had an FTDI adapter connected with @NeverDie 's breakout.
            As soon as I disconnected the DTR (reset) line the thing started to work!

            Not sure if this is related to your issue, but it's worth a try.

            http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • alowhumA alowhum

              @Nca78 Thanks, but it didn't work either :-(

              Some notes from my adventures with the eByte module:

              I've been playing with OpenOCD and the ST-Link v2. The ST-Link V2 that I turned into a Black Magic Probe doesn't see the modules.

              I went into the Arduino's folder that has OpenOCD, created .cfg file, and then:

              ./openocd -d2 -f nrf52832.cfg
              

              This started the OpenOCD server. Then I opened another terminal window and did

              telnet localhost 4444
              

              Now I could manually issue some OpenOCD commands. The goal was to do a manual mass erase.

              Some OpenOCD commands and their output:

              flash probe 0                                                                 c Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
              
              > flash banks
              #0 : nrf52.flash (nrf51) at 0x00000000, size 0x00000000, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
              #1 : nrf52.uicr (nrf51) at 0x10001000, size 0x00000000, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
              
              > flash probe 1
              Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
              flash 'nrf51' found at 0x10001000
              
              > nrf51 mass_erase 0
              Target not halted
              

              This command actually resulted in OpenOCD ballooning to 8Gb in ram. Then after 5 minutes of seemingly being busy, I got the 'target not halted' command.

              > flash info 1
              Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
              #1 : nrf51 at 0x10001000, size 0x00000100, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
              	#  0: 0x00000000 (0x100 0kB) not protected
              Target not halted
              error retrieving flash info
              

              Here is says "target not protected".

              > nrf52.cpu curstate
              reset
              

              Weird: the processor says it is in reset state? Could it be that it is not so much protected, but that it is constantly being reset? But then why is this with all the chips?

              Once the OpenOCD server is running I also tried getting into the chip with

              telnet localhost 3333
              

              But then I get "Error: attempted 'gdb' connection rejected"

              The OpenOCD documentation mentions the chip protection:

              Flash Driver: nrf5
              All members of the nRF51 microcontroller families from Nordic Semiconductor include internal flash and use ARM Cortex-M0 core. Also, the nRF52832 microcontroller from Nordic Semiconductor, which include internal flash and use an ARM Cortex-M4F core.
              flash bank $_FLASHNAME nrf5 0 0x00000000 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
              Some nrf5-specific commands are defined:
              Command: nrf5 mass_erase
              Erases the contents of the code memory and user information configuration registers as well. It must be noted that this command works only for chips that do not have factory pre-programmed region 0 code.
              http://www.openocd.org/doc/html/Flash-Commands.html

              I also got out my voltmeter. Pin 21 and pin 25 have 3v on them, the rest don't.

              T Offline
              T Offline
              Toyman
              wrote on last edited by Toyman
              #1586

              @alowhum I intentionally asked you because I know the problem exists.
              You need to erase the chip via Jlink Commander. Neither nrfjprog nor anything alse will work (AFAIK)
              Actually, it was @NeverDie who found it in the beginning of his quest with nrf52. "The thing that started it all" (c)

              Mars WarriorM 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • T Offline
                T Offline
                Toyman
                wrote on last edited by Toyman
                #1587

                another method (although I haven't tried it with Ebyte) is to use BMP with GDB and issue a "erase mass" command

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • O Offline
                  O Offline
                  Omemanti
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #1588

                  Is there a way to enhance the sending performance of the Ebyte units?

                  I got a gateway that's sitting upstairs when I connect an Ebyte module I must be right underneath the gateway to let it receive packages.
                  When I do exactly the same same thing with an NRF52832-DK It doesn't matter where I'm standing, every message is received by the gateway.

                  NeverDieN 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • O Omemanti

                    Is there a way to enhance the sending performance of the Ebyte units?

                    I got a gateway that's sitting upstairs when I connect an Ebyte module I must be right underneath the gateway to let it receive packages.
                    When I do exactly the same same thing with an NRF52832-DK It doesn't matter where I'm standing, every message is received by the gateway.

                    NeverDieN Offline
                    NeverDieN Offline
                    NeverDie
                    Hero Member
                    wrote on last edited by NeverDie
                    #1589

                    @omemanti said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                    Is there a way to enhance the sending performance of the Ebyte units?

                    @omemanti Maybe by using a properly tuned external antenna? At least for the built-in antenna's, the Fanstel modules seem to have more effective Tx reach than the Ebyte modules do. That's a major reason for my switch from the Ebyte's to the Fanstel's.

                    O 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • NeverDieN NeverDie

                      @omemanti said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                      Is there a way to enhance the sending performance of the Ebyte units?

                      @omemanti Maybe by using a properly tuned external antenna? At least for the built-in antenna's, the Fanstel modules seem to have more effective Tx reach than the Ebyte modules do. That's a major reason for my switch from the Ebyte's to the Fanstel's.

                      O Offline
                      O Offline
                      Omemanti
                      wrote on last edited by Omemanti
                      #1590

                      @neverdie, I did some digging and cut a part of my PCB that was grounded. range drastically increased, guess I need to order a new prototype :)
                      0_1524929354866_IMG_20180428_172244.jpg

                      NeverDieN 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • O Omemanti

                        @neverdie, I did some digging and cut a part of my PCB that was grounded. range drastically increased, guess I need to order a new prototype :)
                        0_1524929354866_IMG_20180428_172244.jpg

                        NeverDieN Offline
                        NeverDieN Offline
                        NeverDie
                        Hero Member
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #1591

                        @omemanti Ah, that makes sense. That's why on my PCB's I have the antenna portion of the module hanging over the edge of the PCB into empty space.

                        O 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • NeverDieN NeverDie

                          @omemanti Ah, that makes sense. That's why on my PCB's I have the antenna portion of the module hanging over the edge of the PCB into empty space.

                          O Offline
                          O Offline
                          Omemanti
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #1592

                          @neverdie said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                          , that makes sense. That's why on my PCB's I have the antenna portion of the module hanging over the edge of the PCB into e

                          yeah, next one will be a big hole in the middle, lets see how that will work out..

                          Nca78N 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • O Omemanti

                            @neverdie said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                            , that makes sense. That's why on my PCB's I have the antenna portion of the module hanging over the edge of the PCB into e

                            yeah, next one will be a big hole in the middle, lets see how that will work out..

                            Nca78N Offline
                            Nca78N Offline
                            Nca78
                            Hardware Contributor
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #1593

                            @omemanti said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                            @neverdie said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                            , that makes sense. That's why on my PCB's I have the antenna portion of the module hanging over the edge of the PCB into e

                            yeah, next one will be a big hole in the middle, lets see how that will work out..

                            Interesting board !
                            But module in the middle is a bad idea, even with a big hole below the antenna it will affect performance to still have some PCB around
                            For example here is an extract of the Fanstel BT832 module datasheet. It's not the same antenna design but it show having the antenna sticking out is the best solution, else you should but as close as possible to the edge and of course keep ground plane and traces as far as possible.
                            0_1524939172574_bt832_antenna.jpg

                            O 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Nca78N Nca78

                              @omemanti said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                              @neverdie said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                              , that makes sense. That's why on my PCB's I have the antenna portion of the module hanging over the edge of the PCB into e

                              yeah, next one will be a big hole in the middle, lets see how that will work out..

                              Interesting board !
                              But module in the middle is a bad idea, even with a big hole below the antenna it will affect performance to still have some PCB around
                              For example here is an extract of the Fanstel BT832 module datasheet. It's not the same antenna design but it show having the antenna sticking out is the best solution, else you should but as close as possible to the edge and of course keep ground plane and traces as far as possible.
                              0_1524939172574_bt832_antenna.jpg

                              O Offline
                              O Offline
                              Omemanti
                              wrote on last edited by Omemanti
                              #1594

                              @nca78 I'm trying to create a node that fits inside a standard wallsocket. (I'll post it when it's done) it got a motion and moisture sensor.

                              For the next version I'm moving the module more to the outside but I need to take the screwholes into account.
                              The groundplane I used filled the entire PCB, next one will have less ground around the antenna or even holes.

                              It's designed to hold 3 AA batteries to have a couple years of service.

                              0_1524940088510_IMG-20180425-WA0013.jpeg

                              But cutting away that spot around the antenna gave me reception throughout the entire house

                              NeverDieN 1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • alowhumA alowhum

                                @Nca78 Thanks, but it didn't work either :-(

                                Some notes from my adventures with the eByte module:

                                I've been playing with OpenOCD and the ST-Link v2. The ST-Link V2 that I turned into a Black Magic Probe doesn't see the modules.

                                I went into the Arduino's folder that has OpenOCD, created .cfg file, and then:

                                ./openocd -d2 -f nrf52832.cfg
                                

                                This started the OpenOCD server. Then I opened another terminal window and did

                                telnet localhost 4444
                                

                                Now I could manually issue some OpenOCD commands. The goal was to do a manual mass erase.

                                Some OpenOCD commands and their output:

                                flash probe 0                                                                 c Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
                                
                                > flash banks
                                #0 : nrf52.flash (nrf51) at 0x00000000, size 0x00000000, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
                                #1 : nrf52.uicr (nrf51) at 0x10001000, size 0x00000000, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
                                
                                > flash probe 1
                                Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
                                flash 'nrf51' found at 0x10001000
                                
                                > nrf51 mass_erase 0
                                Target not halted
                                

                                This command actually resulted in OpenOCD ballooning to 8Gb in ram. Then after 5 minutes of seemingly being busy, I got the 'target not halted' command.

                                > flash info 1
                                Unknown device (HWID 0x00000000)
                                #1 : nrf51 at 0x10001000, size 0x00000100, buswidth 1, chipwidth 1
                                	#  0: 0x00000000 (0x100 0kB) not protected
                                Target not halted
                                error retrieving flash info
                                

                                Here is says "target not protected".

                                > nrf52.cpu curstate
                                reset
                                

                                Weird: the processor says it is in reset state? Could it be that it is not so much protected, but that it is constantly being reset? But then why is this with all the chips?

                                Once the OpenOCD server is running I also tried getting into the chip with

                                telnet localhost 3333
                                

                                But then I get "Error: attempted 'gdb' connection rejected"

                                The OpenOCD documentation mentions the chip protection:

                                Flash Driver: nrf5
                                All members of the nRF51 microcontroller families from Nordic Semiconductor include internal flash and use ARM Cortex-M0 core. Also, the nRF52832 microcontroller from Nordic Semiconductor, which include internal flash and use an ARM Cortex-M4F core.
                                flash bank $_FLASHNAME nrf5 0 0x00000000 0 0 $_TARGETNAME
                                Some nrf5-specific commands are defined:
                                Command: nrf5 mass_erase
                                Erases the contents of the code memory and user information configuration registers as well. It must be noted that this command works only for chips that do not have factory pre-programmed region 0 code.
                                http://www.openocd.org/doc/html/Flash-Commands.html

                                I also got out my voltmeter. Pin 21 and pin 25 have 3v on them, the rest don't.

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                maciekczwa
                                wrote on last edited by maciekczwa
                                #1595

                                @alowhum

                                Hi I managed to clear the access protection.

                                I connected ebyte module directly to raspberry pi.

                                I used this guide http://hivetool.org/w/index.php?title=BMD301 with little modifications

                                Compiled openocd - current version - 7b94ae9e520877e7f2341b48b3bd0c0d1ca8a14b

                                Added chip definition - I don't know if it is needed, I can check that - I have more modules to unlock

                                diff --git a/src/flash/nor/nrf5.c b/src/flash/nor/nrf5.c
                                index 31dd5aae..e01d7ddf 100644
                                --- a/src/flash/nor/nrf5.c
                                +++ b/src/flash/nor/nrf5.c
                                @@ -204,6 +204,7 @@ static const struct nrf5_device_spec nrf5_known_devices_table[] = {
                                
                                 	/* nRF52832 Devices */
                                 	NRF5_DEVICE_DEF(0x00C7, "52832", "QFAA", "B0",    512),
                                +	NRF5_DEVICE_DEF(0x00C7, "52832", "QFN48", "B00",    512),
                                 };
                                
                                 static int nrf5_bank_is_probed(struct flash_bank *bank)
                                

                                Started openocd:

                                openocd -f interface/raspberrypi-native.cfg -c "transport select swd; set WORKAREASIZE 0" -f target/nrf52.cfg
                                

                                Connected with telnet to port 4444
                                Commands:

                                nrf52.dap apreg 1 0x0c
                                nrf52.dap apreg 1 0x04 0x01
                                reset
                                

                                I tried also with st-link but I think it doesn't support dap commands? Can anyone confirm that?

                                After clearing access protection I am able to successfully flash chip with st-link.
                                Now it shows in logs:
                                Info : nrf52.cpu: hardware has 6 breakpoints, 4 watchpoints
                                Before it was:
                                Info : nrf52.cpu: hardware has 0 breakpoints, 2 watchpoints

                                Good luck with unlocking your modules:)

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                1
                                • alowhumA Offline
                                  alowhumA Offline
                                  alowhum
                                  Plugin Developer
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #1596

                                  @maciekczwa said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                                  nrf52.dap apreg 1 0x0c

                                  Thanks for the tip! Unfortunately ST-Link V2 gives:

                                  > nrf52.dap apreg 1 0x0c
                                  invalid command name "nrf52.dap"
                                  

                                  (same with just "dap", which I had tried earlier).

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • O Omemanti

                                    @nca78 I'm trying to create a node that fits inside a standard wallsocket. (I'll post it when it's done) it got a motion and moisture sensor.

                                    For the next version I'm moving the module more to the outside but I need to take the screwholes into account.
                                    The groundplane I used filled the entire PCB, next one will have less ground around the antenna or even holes.

                                    It's designed to hold 3 AA batteries to have a couple years of service.

                                    0_1524940088510_IMG-20180425-WA0013.jpeg

                                    But cutting away that spot around the antenna gave me reception throughout the entire house

                                    NeverDieN Offline
                                    NeverDieN Offline
                                    NeverDie
                                    Hero Member
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #1597

                                    @omemanti That PIR sensor lens sure has a small footprint. I'll be interested to hear how well it performs and whether you like it or not.

                                    O 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • NeverDieN NeverDie

                                      @omemanti That PIR sensor lens sure has a small footprint. I'll be interested to hear how well it performs and whether you like it or not.

                                      O Offline
                                      O Offline
                                      Omemanti
                                      wrote on last edited by Omemanti
                                      #1598

                                      @neverdie it's the AM612, and in the little tests I did so far, it did great.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      2
                                      • alowhumA Offline
                                        alowhumA Offline
                                        alowhum
                                        Plugin Developer
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #1599

                                        @maciekczwa If you could share a guide to unlocking these devices, I would be very grateful. I'm have a bit of trouble still. I create an JLink device form an STM32. But even that gives the same general error on all my modules.

                                        nrfjprog --recover
                                        ERROR: JLinkARM DLL reported an error. Try again. If error condition
                                        ERROR: persists, run the same command again with argument --log, contact Nordic
                                        ERROR: Semiconductor and provide the generated log.log file to them.
                                        

                                        I tried lots of DLL versions, and a new version of nrfjprog.. no luck.

                                        nrfjprog --recover --log
                                        nrfjprog verion 9.7.0
                                        --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        FUNCTION: open_dll.
                                        FUNCTION: open_dll.
                                        FUNCTION: enum_emu_snr.
                                        FUNCTION: enum_emu_snr.
                                        FUNCTION: enum_emu_snr.
                                        FUNCTION: enum_emu_snr.
                                        FUNCTION: connect_to_emu_with_snr.
                                        FUNCTION: connect_to_emu_with_snr.
                                        FUNCTION: connect_to_emu_without_snr.
                                        FUNCTION: enum_emu_snr.
                                        Device "NRF52832_XXAA" selected.
                                        FUNCTION: read_connected_emu_snr.
                                        FUNCTION: read_connected_emu_snr.
                                        FUNCTION: read_device_family.
                                        FUNCTION: read_device_family.
                                        JLinkARM.dll CORESIGHT_WriteAPDPReg returned error -1.
                                        JLinkARM.dll CORESIGHT_WriteAPDPReg returned error -102.
                                        FUNCTION: close_dll.
                                        FUNCTION: close_dll.
                                        
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                                        • T Toyman

                                          @alowhum I intentionally asked you because I know the problem exists.
                                          You need to erase the chip via Jlink Commander. Neither nrfjprog nor anything alse will work (AFAIK)
                                          Actually, it was @NeverDie who found it in the beginning of his quest with nrf52. "The thing that started it all" (c)

                                          Mars WarriorM Offline
                                          Mars WarriorM Offline
                                          Mars Warrior
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #1600

                                          @alowhum, you seem to need Jlink Commander:

                                          @toyman said in nRF5 Bluetooth action!:

                                          @alowhum I intentionally asked you because I know the problem exists.
                                          You need to erase the chip via Jlink Commander. Neither nrfjprog nor anything alse will work (AFAIK)
                                          Actually, it was @NeverDie who found it in the beginning of his quest with nrf52. "The thing that started it all" (c)

                                          Furthermore, It would be nice to have a small step-by-step guide to unlock and then program the ebyte module.
                                          @Omemanti and @NeverDie are using these modules, so should be able to write something up that works for other ppl ;-)

                                          (My ebyte modules are still on their way)

                                          O NeverDieN 2 Replies Last reply
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