MGM260P 2.4 GHz +10 dBm Radio Board
Overview
The MGM260P +10 dBm Radio Board is a plug-in board for the Wireless Starter Kit Mainboard (BRD4001A) and the Wireless Pro Kit Mainboard (BRD4002A) based on the MGM260P Module. It supports the development of 2.4 GHz Wireless IoT devices for protocols including Bluetooth LE, Bluetooth Mesh, Zigbee, and Matter.
See Radio Boards for more information about the Wireless Mainboard platform.
Hardware
MGM260PD22VNA Module
CPU core: ARM Cortex®-M33 with FPU, DSP and TrustZone
Memory: 3200 kB Flash, 512 kB RAM
Transmit power: up to +10 dBm
Operation frequency: 2.4 GHz
Crystals for LFXO (32.768 kHz) on the board and HFXO (40 MHz) in the module
For more information about the MGM260P module and radio board, refer to these documents:
Supported Features
The mgm260p_rb4350a board supports the hardware features listed below.
- on-chip / on-board
- Feature integrated in the SoC / present on the board.
- 2 / 2
-
Number of instances that are enabled / disabled.
Click on the label to see the first instance of this feature in the board/SoC DTS files. -
vnd,foo -
Compatible string for the Devicetree binding matching the feature.
Click on the link to view the binding documentation.
System Clock
The MGM260P Module is configured to use the HFRCODPLL oscillator at 80 MHz as the system clock, locked to the 40 MHz crystal oscillator.
Serial Port
The MGM260P Module has 3 USARTs and 4 EUSARTs. USART0 is connected to the board controller and is used for the console.
Programming and Debugging
The mgm260p_rb4350a board supports the runners and associated west commands listed below.
| flash | debug |
|---|
Flashing
Connect the board to your host computer using the USB port.
Here is an example for the Hello World application.
# From the root of the zephyr repository
west build -b mgm260p_rb4350a samples/hello_world
west flash
Open a serial terminal (minicom, putty, etc.) with the following settings:
Speed: 115200
Data: 8 bits
Parity: None
Stop bits: 1
Reset the board and you should see the following message in the terminal:
Hello World! mgm260p_rb4350a
Bluetooth
To use Bluetooth functionality, run the command below to retrieve necessary binary blobs from the Silicon Labs HAL repository.
west blobs fetch hal_silabs
Then build the Zephyr kernel and a Bluetooth sample with the following command. The Observer sample application is used in this example.
# From the root of the zephyr repository
west build -b mgm260p_rb4350a samples/bluetooth/observer