Arm® TrustZone® Getting Started Application on SAM L11: Step 2
Configure Secure Real-Time Clock (RTC) Peripheral Library
Under the bottom left Device Resources tab, expand Harmony > Peripherals > RTC.
Double-click or drag and drop RTC to add the RTC Peripheral Library (PLIB) to the Project Graph.
In the Clock Easy view, verify the RTC clock is set to run at 1 kHz internal ultra-low-power clock.
When a module is added to the Project Graph, the MPLAB® Code Configurator (MCC) automatically enables the clock to the module. The default RTC clock source is an internal 1 kHz ultra-low-power clock (OSCULP1K).
Go back to the Project Graph and configure the RTC PLIB to generate a compare interrupt every 500 milliseconds.
Configure Secure I²C Peripheral Library and Secure I²C pins
Under the Device Resources tab, expand Harmony > Peripherals > SERCOM.
Double-click on SERCOM1 to add the SERCOM instance 1 to the project.
Select the SERCOM 1 Peripheral Library and configure it for the I²C protocol as shown.
Open the Pin Configuration tabs by clicking Project Graph > Plugins > Pin Configuration.
Select the Pin Settings tab and sort the entries by Ports, as shown below.
Now, select the Pin Settings tab and then scroll down to the SERCOM1 module as shown:
- Enable I²C Clock (I²C_SCL)(SERCOM_PAD1) on PA17 (Pin #18) as Secure mode.
- Enable I²C Data (I²C_SDA)(SERCOM_PAD0) on PA16 (Pin #17) as Secure mode.
This completes the configuration of the I²C peripheral library. The application code will use the I²C PLIB Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) to read temperature from the temperature sensor.
Configure Non-Secure Universal Synchronous Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter (USART) Peripheral Library and USART pins
Under the tab Device Resources tab, expand Harmony > Peripheral > SERCOM.
Double-click on SERCOM0 to add the SERCOM instance 0 to the project.
Select the SERCOM0 Peripheral Library in the Project Graph and verify default SERCOM Operation Mode configuration is set as USART. Configure it as shown:
Verify the default baud rate is set to 115200 Hz.
Select the Pin Settings tab and then scroll down to the SERCOM0 module.
- Enable USART_TX (SERCOM_PAD2) on PA24 (Pin #23) as NonSecure Mode.
- Enable USART_RX (SERCOM_PAD3) on PA25 (Pin #24) as NonSecure Mode.
Configure Non-Secure DMA Peripheral Library
Launch DMA Configurator by selecting Project Graph > Plugins > DMA Configuration.
Click on the DMA Settings tab.
Configure DMA Channel 0 to transmit application buffer to the USART TX register. The DMA transfers one byte from the user buffer to USART transmit buffer on each trigger.
- Configure DMA Channel 1 to receive the USART RX register data to application recieve buffer. The DMA transfers one byte from the USART receive buffer to user buffer on each trigger.
Based on the trigger source, the DMA channels configuration is automatically set by MCC.
- Trigger Action: Action taken by DMA on receiving a trigger.
- One beat transfer: Generally used during a memory-to-peripheral or peripheral-to-memory transfer.
- One block transfer: Generally used during the memory-to-memory transfer on a software trigger.
- Source Address Mode, Destination Address Mode: Select whether to increment Source/Destination Address after every transfer. Automatically set by MCC based on the trigger type. For example:
- If the trigger source is USART transmit, then the Source Address is incremented, and the Destination Address is fixed.
- If the trigger source is USART receive, then the Source Address is fixed, and the Destination Address is incremented.
- Beat Size: Size of one beat. The default value is 8-bits. For example:
- If the Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) peripheral is configured for 16-bit/32-bit mode, then the beat size must be set to 16-bits/32-bits respectively.
Click on Add Channel to add DMA channels and configure the DMA channels.
Launch NVIC Configuration by selecting Project Graph > Plugins > NVIC Configuration.
Click on the NVIC Settings tab. Verify that the DMAC_0(DMA Channel 0) and DMAC_1(DMA Channel 1) as NON-SECURE projects.