This project span from two requirements, firstly testing the performance of the ADC (analogue to digital) and ECSPI interfaces when running against the M4. Secondly as a diagnostic aid to verify low bandwidth clock signs (<100Khz) from the PWM or clock/GPIO pins were correctly mux'd from the A9 side. The end result is a simple low bandwidth (<100Khz) oscilloscope. In the above video we first demonstrate the capture of the 50Khz PWM (50% duty cycle) which is generated from the A9 side, see how scope manages to display the signal and correctly calculate the frequency. Secondly we feed the scope a PWM ranging from 3Khz to 95Khz to demonstrate its ability to track and best calculate the input frequency of the signal.
The imx6sx ADC is rated to produce up to 1 Million samples per seconds, however the Reference Manual isn't particularly clear on settings to get this level of performance. It's clear that the fastest conversion are only possible in 8 bit mode (lowest precision) using the IPG clock. From our testing we roughly achieved 500 thousand samples per second by applying no hardware averaging and no clock divider ratio. By disabling hardware averaging we trade off precision for speed in 8 bit mode.
The scope simply consist of reading an ADC pin (in our case A3), buffering 128 samples, outputting samples to the OLED display through the ECSPI interface clocked at 8Mhz. A primitive trigger mechanism is implemented to catch start of a rising signal. This is complemented with high precision EPIT timer to calculate the frequency of input signal for display.
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