3.
Curiosity Nano
Curiosity Nano is an evaluation platform of small boards with low pin count microcontroller (MCU) boards with
on-board debuggers and access to most of the microcontrollers I/Os. The Curiosity Nano platform offers easy
integration with MPLAB
®
X IDE. All boards are identified in the IDE, and when connected a Kit Window is displayed
with links to key documentation, including relevant user guides, application notes, data sheets, and example code.
Everything is easy to find. The on-board debugger features a virtual serial port (CDC) for serial communication to a
host PC and a Data Gateway Interface (DGI) with debug GPIO pin(s).
3.1
On-Board Debugger Overview
PIC16F15276 Curiosity Nano contains an on-board debugger for programming and debugging. The on-board
debugger is a composite USB device consisting of several interfaces:
• A debugger that can program and debug the PIC16F15276 in MPLAB
®
X IDE
• A mass storage device that allows drag-and-drop programming of the PIC16F15276
• A virtual serial port (CDC) that is connected to a Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter (UART) on the
PIC16F15276, and provides an easy way to communicate with the target application through terminal software
• A Data Gateway Interface (DGI) for code instrumentation with logic analyzer channels (debug GPIO) to visualize
program flow
The on-board debugger controls a Power and Status LED (marked PS) on the PIC16F15276 Curiosity Nano board.
The table below shows how the LED is controlled in different operation modes.
Table 3-1. On-Board Debugger LED Control
Operation Mode
Power and Status LED
Boot Loader mode
The LED blinks slowly during power-up
Power-up
The LED is ON
Normal operation
The LED is ON
Programming
Activity indicator: The LED blinks slowly during programming/debugging
Drag-and-drop
programming
Success:
The LED blinks slowly for 2 sec.
Failure:
The LED blinks rapidly for 2 sec.
Fault
The LED blinks rapidly if a power fault is detected
Sleep/Off
The LED is OFF. The on-board debugger is either in a sleep mode or powered down.
This can occur if the board is externally powered.
Info:
Slow blinking is approximately 1 Hz, and rapid blinking is approximately 5 Hz.
3.1.1
Debugger
The on-board debugger on the PIC16F15276 Curiosity Nano board appears as a Human Interface Device (HID)
on the host computer’s USB subsystem. The debugger supports full-featured programming and debugging of the
PIC16F15276 using MPLAB
®
X IDE.
Curiosity Nano
©
2021 Microchip Technology Inc.
User Guide
DS50003143A-page 6