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You also need a programmer (e.g. HW-USBN-2A from Lattice)
You also need a programmer (e.g. HW-USBN-2A from Lattice) to deploy the VHDL-Code on your PLD.


After installing the software and the drivers for your programmer you can start a new project.
After installing the software and the drivers for your programmer you can start a new project.

Revision as of 11:39, 9 July 2012

GPIOs

Mapping

 In the following sheet you can find the GPIOs and their linux-number
 

Control

How to control a GPIO:

 cd /sys/class/gpio
 echo 44 >export              // create new directory
 cd gpio44                    // go into this directory
 cat direction                // show if GPIO is used as an input or an output
 out
 echo 1 >value                // change output to '1'=high
 echo in >direction           // change GPIO to input
 cat value                    // show input value
 0                            // '0' = low

PLD

Development Software

To write your own VDHL-code you can use the ispLEVER Classic Software from Lattice ([1]


You also need a programmer (e.g. HW-USBN-2A from Lattice) to deploy the VHDL-Code on your PLD.

After installing the software and the drivers for your programmer you can start a new project.

Programming example

You can find a demo-project here:media:PLD-demo.zip

You have to download the *.jed-File with the programmer to your PLD.


 In the constraint editor of ispLEVER you can define, which input X_VAR1 is.
 In this example GPIO E is defined as X_VAR1. If you define GPIO E as an
 output and set GPIO E high, the PLD LED should flash red.