SLAU533D September   2013  – April 2017

 

  1.   MSP430F5529 LaunchPad™ Development Kit (MSP‑EXP430F5529LP)
    1.     Trademarks
    2. 1 Getting Started
      1. 1.1 Key Features
      2. 1.2 Kit Contents
      3. 1.3 Out-of-Box Experience
        1. 1.3.1 Step 1: Install a Software Development Platform
        2. 1.3.2 Step 2: Connect the Hardware
        3. 1.3.3 Step 3: Verify the storage volume has been loaded
        4. 1.3.4 Step 4: Open a text editor, and press the buttons
        5. 1.3.5 Step 5: Customize the strings
    3. 2 Hardware
      1. 2.1 Block Diagram
      2. 2.2 Hardware Features
        1. 2.2.1 MSP430F5529
        2. 2.2.2 eZ-FET lite Onboard Emulator
        3. 2.2.3 Integrated Full-Speed USB Hub
        4. 2.2.4 Power
        5. 2.2.5 Clocking
        6. 2.2.6 Application (or "Backchannel") UART
        7. 2.2.7 Emulator and Target Isolation Jumper Block
        8. 2.2.8 Isolation Jumper Block: 3.3-V and 5-V Jumpers
        9. 2.2.9 Isolation Jumper Block: Emulator Connection and Application UART
      3. 2.3 Measure Current Draw of MSP430 MCU
      4. 2.4 Using an External Power Source
        1. 2.4.1 External 3.3-V Power Source
        2. 2.4.2 External 5-V Power Source Without USB Connection
        3. 2.4.3 External 5-V Power Source With USB Connection
      5. 2.5 Using the eZ-FET lite Emulator With a Different Target
      6. 2.6 USB BSL Button
      7. 2.7 BoosterPack Plug-in Module Pinout
      8. 2.8 Design Files
      9. 2.9 Hardware Change Log
    4. 3 Software Examples
      1. 3.1 MSP430 Software Libraries: driverlib and the USB API
      2. 3.2 Viewing the Code
        1. 3.2.1 CCS
        2. 3.2.2 IAR
      3. 3.3 Example Project Software Organization
      4. 3.4 USB Configuration Files
      5. 3.5 Out-of-Box Experience: emulStorageKeyboard
        1. 3.5.1  Flowchart
        2. 3.5.2  Pre-Initialization
        3. 3.5.3  Initialization
          1. 3.5.3.1 Configuring the Keyboard
          2. 3.5.3.2 Configuring the MSC Interface
        4. 3.5.4  Handling SCSI Commands
        5. 3.5.5  LPM0 Entry
        6. 3.5.6  LPM0 Exit
        7. 3.5.7  Emulated Storage Volume
        8. 3.5.8  Sending Data as a USB Keyboard
        9. 3.5.9  Properly Handling USB Unplug Events
        10. 3.5.10 Non-Maskable Interrupt (NMI) Vector
      6. 3.6 Example: simpleUsbBackchannel
        1. 3.6.1 What It Does
        2. 3.6.2 Installing the CDC Interface
        3. 3.6.3 Operating the Example
        4. 3.6.4 Backchannel UART Library: bcUart.c, bcUart.h
        5. 3.6.5 Code Description: Initialization
          1. 3.6.5.1 Stopping the Watchdog
          2. 3.6.5.2 Configuring VCORE
          3. 3.6.5.3 Configuring Clocks
          4. 3.6.5.4 Configuring Ports
          5. 3.6.5.5 Initializing the Backchannel UART
          6. 3.6.5.6 Configuring USB
        6. 3.6.6 Code Description: Main Loop
        7. 3.6.7 Modifying to Use an HID-Datapipe Interface
      7. 3.7 Starting Device Manager
    5. 4 Additional Resources
      1. 4.1 LaunchPad Development Kit Websites
      2. 4.2 Information on the MSP430F5529
      3. 4.3 Download CCS, IAR, mspgcc, or Energia
      4. 4.4 USB Developers Package
      5. 4.5 MSP430Ware and TI Resource Explorer
      6. 4.6 F5529 Code Examples
      7. 4.7 MSP430 Application Notes
      8. 4.8 TI E2E Community
      9. 4.9 Community at Large
    6. 5 FAQs
    7. 6 Schematics
  2.   Revision History

Step 2: Connect the Hardware

Connect the LaunchPad development kit to a host PC using the USB cable included with the LaunchPad development kit. The demo should work on any recent version of these operating systems. If prompted, let the PC automatically install software. The install is "silent", which means that the PC's operating system already has the drivers it needs.

When you connect a USB device to your computer, the computer goes through the enumeration process. During enumeration, the host asks for the device's USB descriptors to learn the device's identity, capabilities, and more. Using the descriptors, the device presents one or more USB interfaces to the host, where each interface is associated with either a pre-defined device class, or a custom driver. The major operating systems already ship with drivers for most common device classes, which is why you do not need to provide them during installation.

The F5529 LaunchPad development kit software demo presents two USB interfaces to the host:

  • A Mass Storage Class (MSC) interface, which results in a storage volume
  • A Human Interface Device (HID) interface, which is configured as a keyboard

All major host operating systems already have drivers for these classes.

Note: The eZ-FET emulator, application UART, and USB hub also enumerate when the LaunchPad development kit is attached. These are part of the LaunchPad development kit emulator, and so they always enumerate on Windows and Linux PCs, no matter what software is loaded into the MSP430F5529 device. In contrast, the MSC and HID interfaces described in this section are generated by the software demo application that is loaded onto the LaunchPad development kit as shipped from TI. See Section 2.2.3 for more information.