59 lines
2.1 KiB
Plaintext
59 lines
2.1 KiB
Plaintext
Title: Bluetooth tester application
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Description:
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Tester application uses binary protocol to control Zephyr stack and is aimed at
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automated testing. It requires two serial ports to operate.
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The first serial is used by Bluetooth Testing Protocol (BTP) to drive Bluetooth
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stack. BTP commands and events are received and buffered for further processing
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over the same serial.
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Supported Profiles:
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GAP, GATT, SM
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Building and running on QEMU:
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QEMU should have connection with the external host Bluetooth hardware.
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The btproxy tool from BlueZ can be used to give access to a Bluetooth controller
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attached to the Linux host OS:
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$ sudo tools/btproxy -u
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Listening on /tmp/bt-server-bredr
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/tmp/bt-server-bredr option is already set in Makefile through QEMU_EXTRA_FLAGS.
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To build tester application for QEMU:
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$ make pristine && make BOARD=qemu_cortex_m3 CONF_FILE=qemu.conf run
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Note: Target board have to support enough UARTs for BTP and controller.
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We recommend using qemu_cortex_m3.
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'bt-stack-tester' UNIX socket (previously set in Makefile) can be used for now
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to control tester application.
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Building and running on Arduino 101:
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Arduino 101 is equipped with Nordic nRF51 Bluetooth LE controller.
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Please refer to the Zephyr Project docs [1] to see how to build and flash the
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controller with the HCI Bluetooth LE firmware.
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Next, build and flash tester application:
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$ make pristine && make flash
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While running tester application on Arduino 101, serial converter, typically
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UART <-> USB is required by BTP to operate. Connect Arduino 101 Tx and Rx lines
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(0 and 1 ports on Arduino 101 board) through the UART converter to the host
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USB port.
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Use serial client, e.g. PUTTY to communicate over the serial port
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(typically /dev/ttyUSBx) with the tester using BTP.
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[1] https://www.zephyrproject.org/doc/boards/x86/arduino_101/doc/board.html#flashing-the-bluetooth-core
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