All examples built from a single Makefile: set the
GCC_INSTALL_ROOT variable to point to the bin directory in an
arm-none-eabi GCC installation.
Examples are:
ex1.c: simple polling ADC;ex2.c: manually triggered single sample ADC with DMA;ex3.c: manually triggered multiple sample ADC with DMA;ex4.c: timer-driven multiple sample ADC with DMA;ex5.candex5-view.py: bare-bones USB oscilloscope.
All written to run on a Nucleo-144 board with an STM32F767ZI.
The USB oscilloscope example uses Python (you'll need Python 3), and
relies on a couple of Python libraries, listed in the usual
requirements.txt file. The best way to deal with this is to create a
virtual environment:
python -m venv .venv
. ./.venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt
Then you'll be able to run the ex5-view.py script.
Note The serial port used by the Python script is hard-coded.
Depending on your Linux distribution (or if you're using Windows),
you may need to change it. Search for the string "/dev/ttyACM0" and
replace it with whatever your operating system uses for the USB
virtual serial port from the ST-Link on the Nucleo board.