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IIOT Sideways.png

Introduction

The following quick start guide provides background information about the HummingBoard IIOT.

The guide will give a technical overview about the product and by the end of it you should be able to boot an operating system and begin testing your application.

Revision and Notes

Date

Owner

Revision

Notes

Yazan

1.0

Initial release

Table of Contents

Table of Contents
minLevel1
maxLevel7

Hardware Setup

Product specifications

Model

HummingBoard

HUMMINGBOARD RZ/G2L IIOT SBC

SOM Model

Renesas RZ/G2L Solo / Dual core Arm Cortex A55
Up to 1.2GHz (With Arm M33)

Memory & Storage

Up to 2GB DDR4
Up to 128GB eMMC
MicroSD

Network

2 x Ethernet RJ45 10/100/1000
1 x 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac WiFi and Bluetooth (2.4/5 GHz)

Connectivity

3 x USB3.0 ( Host)
M.2 B-Key LTE modem (eSIM, NanoSim)
M.2 M-Key
Additional addon cards are supported*
SIM card slot

Media

MIPI-DSI
MIPI-CSI The Evaluation kit comes with 7” touch display MIPI-DSI
MIPI-CSI 4 lanes

I/O

1 x Reset button
1 x ON/OFF button
1 x Configurable push button
1 x RGB LED2 x USB2.0
2 x CAN-FD
2x RS232 or 2x RS485, or RS232 + RS485 (SW Configuration)
1 x I/O Digital Input
1 x I/O Digital output
1 x Reset button
1 x ON/OFF button
1 x Configurable push button
1 x RGB LED

Misc

TPM2.0
GPIO
RTC
EEPROM

OS Support

Linux

Environment

Commercial: 0°C to 70°C
Industrial: -40°C to 85°C

Dimensions

PCBA: 140 88 x 90mm135 mm
Enclosure : <TBD>

Power

7V – 28V wide range
PoE sink support 802.3af Class 0
Reverse polarity support

Enclosure

Optional extruded aluminum (IP32) enclosure

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Info

Supported with RZ/G2L SOM. For more detailed information about our SOM RZ/G2L series please visit this user manual : RZ/G2L SOM Hardware User Manual .

Block Diagram

The following figure describes the RZ/G2L Block Diagram.

Image RemovedHummingBoard RZ_G2L Industrial IOT Block Diagram.pngImage Added

Visual features overview

Please see below the features overview of the connector side of the HummingBoard IIOT & RZ/G2L SOM.

image-20240929-161102.pngImage RemovedHummingBoard RZ_G2L IIOT SBC Layout .pngImage Added

Print side connector overview of the HummingBoard IIOT & RZ/G2L SOM.

image-20240929-120103.png

J5004 {2x RS485, 2x CAN-FD, 2x RS232, DIG_IN, DIG_OUT}

image-20241013-104136.pngImage Added

image-20241121-134703.pngImage Added

Plug for connector J5004 : 20 Position Terminal Block Plug, Female Sockets 0.138" (3.50mm) like this.

Software Setup

Cable setup and prerequisites

Here is what you will need to power up and use the board:

  • Linux or Windows PC

  • HummingBoard IIOT with SOM

  • 12V Power adapter (HummingBoard IIOT has wide range input of 7V-28V), alternatively you can use a PoE injector to power on the device.

  • Type-C to USB for console, the HummingBoard IIOT has an onboard FTDI chip.

  • IP router or IP switch

Boot Select

image-20240901-112851.png

Before powering up the board for the first time it is recommended to select the boot media using onboard DIP switch S5:

Switch

1
(MD0)

2
(MD1)

3
(MD2)

4
(SD0_DEV_SEL)

5
(VDD_1.8V)

6
(VDD_3.3V)

uSD

OFF

OFF

OFF

OFF

OFF

ON

eMMC

ON

OFF

OFF

ON

OFF

ON

Serial Dowanloder

ON

OFF

ON

OFF

OFF

ON

Info

MDx = BOOT_MODEx, VDD_BOOT = 1.8V or 3.3V (Select S5[5] or S5[6]) .
Note that MD1 and MD0 have been swapped between PCB version 1.1 and PCB version 1.0.

Booting from SD card

Boot Select

Here is the correct DIP switch position for SD boot:

image-20240929-162042.png

Info

Note: The black rectangle represents the switch position.

Once you set the switches, you can apply the following for booting from an SD card.

  1. Downloading the Debian image

Download the Debian image by running the following command on your Linux/Windows PC:

Code Block
wget https://solid-run-images.sos-de-fra-1.exo.io/RZ/Debian/build_date_20240529-git_rev_f22483f/rzg2l-solidrun-sd-debian-f22483f.img.xz
  1. Writing the image to the SD card

Use the following commands for writing the image to an SD card:

Code Block
xz -dc rzg2l-solidrun-sd-debian-f22483f.img.xz | dd of=/dev/sdX bs=4k conv=fdatasync 

Note: Plug a micro SD into your Linux PC, the following assumes that the micro SD is added as /dev/sdX and all it’s partitions are unmounted.

  1. SD card insertion

Please Insert the SD card into your device.

  1. Power connection

Connect your power adaptor to the DC jack, and then connect the adaptor to mains supply.

  1. Serial Connection

Please insert the micro USB into your device, then you can refer to Serial Connection for installing necessary serial connection software in Linux/Windows.

Once you installed the necessary serial connection software, you should be able to see the following:

  • In order to be able to log in , please insert “root” as a username and password as follows:

More Features

Internet

Connect an Ethernet cable to your HummingBoard Pulse (for internet access during boot-up).
Models HummingBoard with WiFi, can be connected via WiFi or wired Ethernet.

  • Please check you Ethernet connection.

  • Use the following commands in order to keep your system up-to-date:

Code Block
apt-get update 
apt-get upgrade 
reboot
WiFi

An example for connecting to WiFi using wpa_supplicant:

  1. To bring a WiFi interface up, run the following :

Code Block
ifconfig wlan0 up 

To discover your wireless network interface name, see Network Interfaces.

  1. Install the wpa_supplicant package:

Code Block
apt-get install wpasupplicant 
  1. Edit network interfaces file :

At the bottom of the file, add the following lines to allow wlan as a network connection:

Code Block
cat <<EOF > /etc/network/interfaces.d/wlan0
allow-hotplug wlan0
iface wlan0 inet dhcp
wpa-conf /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
iface default inet dhcp

EOF
  1. Create a configuration file with the relevant ssid:

Code Block
cat <<EOF > /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
ctrl_interface=/run/wpa_supplicant
update_config=1

network={
    ssid="MYSSID"
    psk="passphrase" 
}

EOF

Check your personal ssids by running : ‘iw dev wlan0 scan’

  1. Make sure it works:

Restart your device and it should connect to the wireless network. If it doesn't, repeat above steps or get help from an adult.

Bluetooth

  1. For showing all Bluetooth devices, run the following:

Code Block
apt-get install bluez
hciconfig -a
  1. Choose a device, and turn it on:

Code Block
 hciconfig hci0 up
  1. Set up the Bluetooth name:

Code Block
hciconfig hci0 name 'SolidRun_Ble'
  1. Make your Bluetooth detectable by other devices:

Code Block
hciconfig hci0 piscan
  1. If you want to connect to other devices:

  • Start by scanning for other Bluetooth devices:

Code Block
hcitool scan
  • Choose a MAC address and connect :

Code Block
rfcomm connect 0  $MAC 10 & 
  • You can check the communication between the devices by writing :

Code Block
l2ping -c 4  $MAC

Cellular Modem

The cellular modem is a more fully featured extension of which contains a cellular module with additional hardware interfaces and a SIM card slot.

You can connect your cellular modem to the mPCIe, and insert a SIM card.

SPI

For testing you serial peripheral interface - SPI, please see this documentation SPI from Linux with spidev.

GUI On Debian

There is an option with the Debian image, up to the user, to work with a GUI like Weston, GNOME and etc.
For applying this option do the following steps:

First, connect your device to a screen using the working output (HDMI / uHDMI).

For working with Weston GUI:

  1. Install the Weston package.

    Code Block
    $ sudo apt install weston
  2. Make a directory for the output of the Weston GUI.

    Code Block
    $ mkdir /your/directory/location
  3. Give permissions to this directory.

    Code Block
     $ chmod 0700 /your/directory/location
  4. Set the XDG_RUNTIME_DIR env param to your directory.

    Code Block
    $ export XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/your/directory/location
  5. Run Weston.

    Code Block
    $ weston

     

For working with GNOME GUI on top of Xorg:

  1. Install Xorg.

    Code Block
    $ sudo apt install xorg
  2. Install your desired gnome.

    Code Block
    $ sudo apt install gnome-session

    NOTE: ‘gnome-session’ is an example of gnome that we can work with, you can replace the ‘session' with another GNOME extention.

  3. Start your GNOME GUI.

    Code Block
    $ sudo systemctl start gdm
    • For logging in you need a user on your device to log into it. You can create one before step 3 by this command (replace the ‘username’ with name that you want) :

    Code Block
    $ sudo adduser username
    • You can jump between GUIs that you install (like gnome-session) by the setting button that locates in the down right corner of the home screen.

TLV EEPROM Support

RZ/G2L SoMs are being programmed with identifying information such as the product name, MAC Address and SKUs to allow for programmatic identification of hardware.

List Of Supported OS

Build from source

Documentation

Attachments
patterns.*pdf,.*zip,.*rar,.*xlsx

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