.. _target-apollo4-pw-system: ============================ Ambiq Apollo4 with pw_system ============================ .. warning:: This target is in a very preliminary state and is under active development. This demo gives a preview of the direction we are heading with :ref:`pw_system`, but it is not yet ready for production use. This target configuration uses :ref:`pw_system` on top of FreeRTOS and the `AmbiqSuite SDK `_ HAL. ----- Setup ----- To use this target, Pigweed must be set up to use FreeRTOS and the AmbiqSuite SDK HAL for the Apollo4 series. The FreeRTOS repository can be downloaded via ``pw package``, and the `AmbiqSuite SDK`_ can be downloaded from the Ambiq website. .. _AmbiqSuite SDK: https://ambiq.com/apollo4-blue-plus Once the AmbiqSuite SDK package has been downloaded and extracted, the user needs to set ``dir_pw_third_party_ambiq_SDK`` build arg to the location of extracted directory: .. code-block:: console $ gn args out Then add the following lines to that text file: .. code-block:: # Path to the extracted AmbiqSuite SDK package. dir_pw_third_party_ambiq_SDK = "/path/to/AmbiqSuite_R4.3.0" # Path to the FreeRTOS source directory. dir_pw_third_party_freertos = "/path/to/pigweed/third_party/freertos" ----------------------------- Building and Running the Demo ----------------------------- This target has an associated demo application that can be built and then flashed to a device with the following commands: .. code-block:: console $ ninja -C out pw_system_demo .. seealso:: The :ref:`target-apollo4` for more info on flashing the Apollo4 board. Once the board has been flashed, you can connect to it and send RPC commands via the Pigweed console: .. code-block:: console $ pw-system-console -d /dev/{ttyX} -b 115200 \ > --proto-globs pw_rpc/echo.proto \ > --token-databases \ > out/apollo4_pw_system.size_optimized/obj/pw_system/bin/system_example.elf Replace ``{ttyX}`` with the appropriate device on your machine. On Linux this may look like ``ttyACM0``, and on a Mac it may look like ``cu.usbmodem***``. When the console opens, try sending an Echo RPC request. You should get back the same message you sent to the device. .. code-block:: pycon >>> device.rpcs.pw.rpc.EchoService.Echo(msg="Hello, Pigweed!") (Status.OK, pw.rpc.EchoMessage(msg='Hello, Pigweed!')) You can also try out our thread snapshot RPC service, which should return a stack usage overview of all running threads on the device in Host Logs. .. code-block:: pycon >>> device.rpcs.pw.thread.proto.ThreadSnapshotService.GetPeakStackUsage() Example output: .. code-block:: 20220826 09:47:22 INF PendingRpc(channel=1, method=pw.thread.ThreadSnapshotService.GetPeakStackUsage) completed: Status.OK 20220826 09:47:22 INF Thread State 20220826 09:47:22 INF 5 threads running. 20220826 09:47:22 INF 20220826 09:47:22 INF Thread (UNKNOWN): IDLE 20220826 09:47:22 INF Est CPU usage: unknown 20220826 09:47:22 INF Stack info 20220826 09:47:22 INF Current usage: 0x20002da0 - 0x???????? (size unknown) 20220826 09:47:22 INF Est peak usage: 390 bytes, 76.77% 20220826 09:47:22 INF Stack limits: 0x20002da0 - 0x20002ba4 (508 bytes) 20220826 09:47:22 INF 20220826 09:47:22 INF ... You are now up and running! .. seealso:: The :ref:`module-pw_console` :bdg-ref-primary-line:`module-pw_console-user_guide` for more info on using the the pw_console UI.