This guide provides steps to setup the Verdin am62 and run a cross-compiled LVGL application on the target.
This guide is done with Verdin AM62 Dual 1GB WB IT on Yavia carrier board.
You can purchase the Verdin am62 from Toradex website.
There are different Verdin AM62 available:
- Verdin AM62 Quad 2GB WB IT
- Verdin AM62 Dual 1GB WB IT
- Verdin AM62 Quad 1GB IT
- Verdin AM62 Quad 1GB ET
- Verdin AM62 Solo 512MB WB IT
- Verdin AM62 Solo 512MB
You can find the differences between these SOMs on the Verdin AM62 Datasheet here (1-5).
This is a SoM (System on Module) that can be tested with a carrier board. Toradex recommends ordering one of the following carrier boards for your first-time order:
The default buffering is fbdev.
Frame buffer, 2 threads
Name | Avg. CPU | Avg. FPS | Avg. time | render time | flush time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Empty screen | 71.00% | 24 | 27 | 10 | 17 |
Moving wallpaper | 86.00% | 21 | 38 | 23 | 15 |
Single rectangle | 27.00% | 27 | 5 | 3 | 2 |
Multiple rectangles | 76.00% | 23 | 34 | 20 | 14 |
Multiple RGB images | 87.00% | 22 | 34 | 20 | 14 |
Multiple ARGB images | 90.00% | 16 | 48 | 35 | 13 |
Rotated ARGB images | 95.00% | 7 | 118 | 105 | 13 |
Multiple labels | 89.00% | 20 | 39 | 26 | 13 |
Screen sized text | 7.00% | 27 | 6 | 5 | 1 |
Multiple arcs | 84.00% | 21 | 37 | 23 | 14 |
Containers | 92.00% | 13 | 63 | 50 | 13 |
Containers with overlay | 93.00% | 9 | 86 | 73 | 13 |
Containers with opa | 93.00% | 10 | 78 | 65 | 13 |
Containers with opa_layer | 97.00% | 4 | 237 | 224 | 13 |
Containers with scrolling | 92.00% | 13 | 63 | 50 | 13 |
Widgets demo | 36.00% | 23 | 22 | 18 | 4 |
All scenes avg. | 75.00% | 17 | 57 | 46 | 11 |
The other configurations that can be used are:
- DRM
- Wayland
- SDL
Any of these buffering strategies can be used with multiple threads to render the frames.
Check out Verdin am62 in action, running LVGL's benchmark demo:
-
MCU: Verdin AM62 (datasheet)
- 2 64-bit Arm® Cortex®-A53 @1.4GHz
- Arm® Cortex®-M4F MCU @400MHz
-
RAM: 1GB DDR RAM
-
16-Bit data bus with inline ECC
-
Supports speeds up to 1600 MT/s
-
-
Flash: 8GB eMMC Flash
-
GPU: PowerVR Rogue AXE-1-16M
The guide was done on Yavia. You can find the datasheet of the carrier board here.
If it is the first time you are booting the SoM, it comes with Toradex Easy Installer by default, so you can skip the next section
As mentioned, this is required if you want to flash again the SoM to start with a clean setup, or because you want to change the OS version.
The following steps come from Tezi documentation. For this guide, we will use the USB OTG approach.
-
Download Tezi here. Download the lastest release, version 6 for Verdin AM62.
-
Then put the SoM in recovery mode:
- Plug a USB Type-C to Type-A cable into the DRP connector (J7)
- Connect the USB cable to your PC (host)
- Press and hold the Recovery button (B3) while plugging the power supply cable into the J1 connector. You can also press the recovery button and press the reset button next to it.
- Keep the B3 button pressed for 6 seconds and release it.
If something goes wrong, there is a video showing how to enter the board in recovery mode in Tezi documentation (section "Put your SoM in recovery mode").
-
Load Tezi through the USB OTG interface. To do so, go to the directory you downloaded Tezi and unzip it. Then to load Tezi:
cd <unzipped_directory> ./recovery-linux.sh
-
Then wait for Tezi installer to display the flash options on the screen.
In this guide, we will use the default Toradex Embedded Linux Reference Multimedia Image
.
You need a mouse plugged in the USB port to select and flash the image. Wait for the installation to be completed!
If you want to create your own system and flash it, here is a detailed guide to use Tezi.
This guide was tested on Ubuntu 22.04 host.
-
Follow this tutorial to install and setup docker on your system.
-
Support to run arm64 docker containers on the host:
sudo apt-get install qemu-user-static docker run --rm --privileged multiarch/qemu-user-static --reset -p yes
sudo apt install picocom nmap
Clone the repository:
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/lvgl/lv_port_toradex_verdin_am62.git
IMPORTANT:
-
default application from lv_port_linux runs the widget demo. To run the benchmark demo, modify
lv_port_linux/main.c
:/*Create a Demo*/ // lv_demo_widgets(); // lv_demo_widgets_start_slideshow(); lv_demo_benchmark();
-
The default lv_conf.h might not be the best configuration for the board. Feel free to replace the default lv_conf.h with one of the provided configurations in
lv_conf_example
folder.cp lv_conf_example/lv_conf_fb_2_threads.h lv_port_linux/lv_conf.h
Build the docker image and the lvgl benchmark application:
cd lv_port_toradex_verdin_am62
./scripts/docker_setup.sh --create-image
./scripts/docker_setup.sh --build-app
Run the executable on the target:
-
Get the IP of the target board:
-
Option 1: from the UART, on the board:
sudo picocom -b 115200 /dev/ttyUSB0 ## Then inside the console, log as "root", no password required ## Then retrieve the ip of the board ip a
-
Option 2: Get the IP from your host with nmap
## Find the IP of the board. You need to know your ip (ifconfig or ip a) ## HOST_IP should be built like this : ## If the ip is 192.168.1.86, in the following command HOST_IP = 192.168.1.0/24 nmap -sn <HOST_IP>/24 | grep verdin-am62
-
-
Then transfer the executable on the board:
scp lv_port_linux/bin/lvglsim root@<BOARD_IP>:/root
-
Start the application
ssh root@<BOARD_IP> systemctl stop wayland-app-launch.service ###################################### ## WARNING: do not stop these services if using wayland demo systemctl stop weston.socket systemctl stop weston.service ###################################### ./lvglsim
Some configurations are provided in the folder lv_conf_example
.
The default configuration used is lv_conf_fb_4_threads.h. To change the configuration, modify the lv_port_linux/lv_conf.h
file with the desired configuration.
The folder lv_port_linux
is an example of an application using LVGL.
LVGL is integrated as a submodule in the folder. To change the version of the library:
cd lv_port_linux
git checkout <branch_name_or_commit_hash>
The file main.c
is the default application provided and is configured to run the benchmark demo provided by LVGL library.
The main steps to create your own application are:
- Modify
main.c
- Add any folders and files to extend the functionalities
- Update
Dockerfile
to add any package - Modify
CMakeLists.txt
provided file to ensure all the required files are compiled and linked - Use the docker scripts provided to build the application for ARM64 architecture.
If there is any problem with the output folder generated permissions, modify the permissions:
sudo chown -R $(whoami):$(whoami) lv_port_linux/bin
This error can be printed when running the application:
[Warn] (1382.767, +37) lv_display_refr_timer: No draw buffer lv_refr.c:374
[Warn] (1382.804, +37) lv_display_refr_timer: No draw buffer lv_refr.c:374
[Warn] (1382.841, +37) lv_display_refr_timer: No draw buffer lv_refr.c:374
[Warn] (1382.878, +37) lv_display_refr_timer: No draw buffer lv_refr.c:374
To fix the issue find the existing fbdev available:
ls /dev/fb*
Export the variable to match the fbdev name:
export LV_LINUX_FBDEV_DEVICE=/dev/fb0
While running the application, if there is an error about XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
, add the following environment variable on the board.
export XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/run/user/1000
CMake may have troubles with CMakeLists.txt changes with some variables setup. If there is any problem building, try to clean the build folder:
rm -rf lv_port_linux/build-arm64
If you find any issues with the development board feel free to open an Issue in this repository. For LVGL related issues (features, bugs, etc) please use the main lvgl repository.
If you found a bug and found a solution too please send a Pull request. If you are new to Pull requests refer to Our Guide to learn the basics.