Serial adapters/Arduino: Difference between revisions
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m (I just did this, do not need resistor.) |
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* turn on the target, and the boot text should be displayed, |
* turn on the target, and the boot text should be displayed, |
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* press Escape key, and the [[Ok]] prompt should appear. |
* press Escape key, and the [[Ok]] prompt should appear. |
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== Diagram == |
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[[Image:Arduino-uno-serial-passthrough.jpg|900px]] |
Latest revision as of 14:55, 25 February 2022
How to use an Arduino Uno as a serial adapter for an OLPC XO laptop.
Ingredients
- an Arduino Uno, called the Arduino,
- a computer running the Arduino development environment, called the host,
- a USB cable to connect the Arduino to the host, normally supplied,
- an OLPC XO laptop, disassembled to expose the serial connector, called the target,
- a way to connect wires between the Arduino and the target (jumper leads, solder, iron, connectors, etc).
Method
- disconnect all wires from the Arduino,
- connect the USB cable between the Arduino and the host,
- download passthrough-serial-adapter.ino and program it into the Arduino,
- on the host, start a serial terminal application like screen, and verify that pressing keys causes the D13 LED to flash,
- connect a GND pin on the Arduino to the GND pin on the serial connector of the target,
- connect the D0 (RX) pin on the Arduino to the RX pin on the target; this carries keys from the host to the target,
- connect the D1 (TX) pin on the Arduino to the TX pin on the target; this carries text from the target to the host,
- turn on the target, and the boot text should be displayed,
- press Escape key, and the Ok prompt should appear.