Device description
The
top face
of the iC6000 features:
A
– The indicator lights provide the status of the iC6000 hardware as follows.
Power Indicator
– Green
§
On – Powered on
§
Off – Powered off
R
- Running indicator – Red
§
On – Target
microcontroller is
executing code
§
Off – Target
microcontroller is
halted
F
- Free indicator – Yellow
§
On – iC6000 is
available for a
connection from a
host PC
§
Off – Active
connection to the
iC5700 from a host
PC exists
The
front face
of the iC5700 features:
B
– The grounding socket (marked GND) should be used, together with the supplied Grounding
Wire to create an electrical connection between the iC6000 and the target circuitry. The socket
is suitable for a 2 mm Multi Contact Plug (also known as a Banana Plug) if building a longer
or a replacement cable on your own.
C
– The location where the Aurora cable exits the iC6000 BlueBox after the assembly.
The
rear face
of the iC6000 features the remaining connectors as follows:
D
– Trig Out Socket - BlueBox trace trigger event can optionally stimulate Trig Out signal, on
which an external hardware (e.g. oscilloscope or logic analyzer) connected to this socket, can
trigger concurrently.
E
– 10/100 Ethernet Socket
F
– USB 3.0 Socket - It is
highly recommended
to use the supplied USB 3.0 cable delivered with
your iC6000 as it has been confirmed to fulfill the maximum USB 3.0 transfer rate (5Gbit/s).
Use of alternate cables must be undertaken at your own risk.
The USB 3.0 interface provides the highest possible data transfer rate of the two available
interfaces. It is highly recommended to use the USB 3.0 when using the trace feature due to the
quantity of data to be uploaded to the PC.