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Forum Get a Free Board -- Seeking 2 People to Build a Project with Digilent CMOD S7 featuring Spartan-7 FPGA
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  • Replies 28 replies
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  • scasny
  • xilinx
  • embedded
  • digilent
Related

Get a Free Board -- Seeking 2 People to Build a Project with Digilent CMOD S7 featuring Spartan-7 FPGA

rscasny
rscasny over 6 years ago

I often get members who want learn "the secret" of how to get picked as an official roadtester. Well, successful (and frequent) roadtesters usually start with something small: writing a blog, starting a discussion, or doing a small project -- all these things I look at when I make roadter selections.

 

I also get members who apply for roadtests for FPGA products yet have little or no background in programmable device technology nor any experience in the often-complex design tools for these devices. when you have 60 days to do a roadtest, I feel it would be a big burden on the roadtester if he/she had no experience in these things to begin with.

 

I have thought about both of these types of members and was looking for something simple that (a) would-be roadtester could do to build up their portfolio of things they have done on the community, and (b) something simple where they could learn about FPGAs and get some time to hone their skills with the associated design tool.

 

I hunted around and came up with the Digilent CMODS7 dev board featuring the Xilinx Spartan-7 FPGA. I have two of them I would like to giveaway to any member who feels he or she is in the above two groups and wants to take a step forward.

 

Let me tell you a little about the Digilent CMOD S7Digilent CMOD S7. It's a great little board that will help you increase your skills and help you demonstrate your ability to carry out a project to completion -- the key skill to be a super roadtester.image

 

The Digilent CMOD S-7 is a breadboardable Spartan-7 FPGA board.

 

It come in a small, 48‐pin DIP form factor board, featuring 32 FPGA digital I/O signals, 2 FPGA analog input signals, an external power input rail, and ground are routed to 100‐mil‐spaced through‐hole pins, making the Cmod S7 well suited for use with solderless breadboards. At just 0.7” by 3.05” inches, it can be loaded in a standard socket and used in embedded systems. The board also includes a programming ROM, clock source, USB programming and data transfer circuit, power supplies, LEDs, and buttons.

 

Here are some more features:

 

Xilinx Spartan‐7 FPGA (XC7S25‐1CSGA225C)

o 3,650 slices containing four 6‐input LUTs and 8 flip‐flops

o 1,620 Kbits of fast block RAM

o 3 clock management tiles, each with a phase‐locked loop and mixed‐mode clock manager

o 80 DSP slices

o Internal clock speeds exceeding 450 MHz

o On‐chip analog‐to‐digital converter (XADC)

o Programmable over JTAG and Quad‐SPI Flash

 

Memory

o 4 MB Quad‐SPI Flash

 

Power

o Powered from USB or 5V external supply connected to DIP pin 24

 

USB

o USB‐JTAG programming circuitry

o USB‐UART bridge

 

Push‐buttons and LEDs

o 2 Buttons

o 4 LEDs

o 1 RGB LED

 

Expansion Connectors

o 1 Pmod connector

 

Software Supportimage

The Cmod S7 is fully compatible with the high‐performance Vivado Registered Design Suite versions 2018.1 and newer. It is supported under the free WebPACKTm installation option, which does not require a license, so designs can be implemented at no additional cost. This free installation includes the ability to create MicroBlazeTm soft‐core processor designs. Design resources, example projects, and tutorials are available for download at the Cmod S7 Resource Center.

 

How To Get this Free Board

Leave a comment and tell me about yourself as an element14 member. Tell me about your electronics knowledge as well. What you have done on the community, and what you would like to do to get this board. I'l take a week or so and then review the comments. I'll end up picking two people. I'll send you the board and I you have to post a blog on the CMOD S& including pictures or videos of what you have done.

 

Sincerely,

 

Randall Scasny

RoadTest Program Manager

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Top Replies

  • rscasny
    rscasny over 6 years ago in reply to alphanu +3
    Hi Ben. I will be launching another free FPGA board project/giveaway next week. So, stay tuned. Thanks for your email. Randall
  • michaelkellett
    michaelkellett over 6 years ago in reply to mike-0rc +3
    There is a free (as in beer) version of Vivado with no time limits. https://www.xilinx.com/products/design-tools/vivado/vivado-webpack.html MK
  • zamaliphe
    zamaliphe over 6 years ago +2
    so about me well i'm computer programer i come across fpga world throw spartan 3E500 i learned the VHDL / verilog as start and i have done some small projects using it now i normally use HLS and c / c…
Parents
  • mike-0rc
    mike-0rc over 6 years ago

    LOL, I ordered a Cmod A7 about 2 maybe 3 months ago....Still in it's box, eventually this is being mounted into production test equipment for super fast I/O.

    I did look at the S7 but it did not have enough IO to support the amount of IO needed along with the analogue inputs (I think there was something on this). I have to wait for my test PCB to be manufactured (About a months time) and it has a DIP foot print for the A7. Now I have no experience with FPGA and this will be a first.... I am ok with C and C++ programming and amazingly enough had to learn to program in a week as ASM is not the way to program more than 1K of memory and paging was a painful way to program. However I managed to get an 8bit LCD, RS232, RS485, I2C, SPI and all the peripherals to work in ASM, I had to learn C as it was a development requirement to have my now finished production unit, which utilities the above with a 8bit MCU doing 24bit floating point math at 64Mhz and driving a GLCD display with custom array fonts etc. All self taught I may say I did a great job. Now that I have progressed to a PIC32 and using RTOS multi threaded sub programs to do a wide range of tasks including 100Mbit Lan, USB, RS232, RS485, Multi bus GPIO's, GLCD screens, SQI flash, SPI flash, and a few more things that I cannot say as this is for my work. My next task after testing my PCB will be to create programs for the Cmod A7 and interface the results with a PC program to automatically fill in forms and other tasks...So having a S7 could be beneficial to learn on but I do have access to a A7 on which to learn.. By all means when I start the project at work would I be able to post some but not all of the things on here as a comparison between the two.

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  • zamaliphe
    zamaliphe over 6 years ago in reply to mike-0rc

    well i'm not  sure about your project but you don't expect to many GPIO's on FPGA

    i think thy are marketing FPGA devices as DATA accelerator much more than other uses

    the spartan 7 is unique is that its the only spartan that is supported on vivado

    all other ver you have to Use ISE to program.

    now this make it much easier to use with ( MicroBlaze Soft Processor )

    And AXI interface

    the ( MicroBlaze Soft Processor ) is somewhat similar to how you can program the zend-7000 architecture

    for me i was looking to buy the  (spartan 7) and the artix 7 boards for that reason

    i dont care about the numbers of GPIO's

    and you can use any pin for serial communication using an ip core or even VHDL code

    so really this would get the job done .

     

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  • zamaliphe
    zamaliphe over 6 years ago in reply to mike-0rc

    well i'm not  sure about your project but you don't expect to many GPIO's on FPGA

    i think thy are marketing FPGA devices as DATA accelerator much more than other uses

    the spartan 7 is unique is that its the only spartan that is supported on vivado

    all other ver you have to Use ISE to program.

    now this make it much easier to use with ( MicroBlaze Soft Processor )

    And AXI interface

    the ( MicroBlaze Soft Processor ) is somewhat similar to how you can program the zend-7000 architecture

    for me i was looking to buy the  (spartan 7) and the artix 7 boards for that reason

    i dont care about the numbers of GPIO's

    and you can use any pin for serial communication using an ip core or even VHDL code

    so really this would get the job done .

     

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  • mike-0rc
    mike-0rc over 6 years ago in reply to zamaliphe

    Yes, It is limited on GPIO. I am interfacing one with a SPI bus to a PIC32MZ2048EFH250 as I need some of the IO to be capable of switching faster than 250Mhz of the PIC GPIO (Limited to 100Mhz Port speed). I also ran out of pins on the PIC32 because it utilities multiple add on PCBs 6 USART, RS485 ASCII, RS485 MODBUS rtu, USB2.0, 100Mbit LAN, External Keyboard, GLCD SPI display (Separate SPI bus), CAN bus, 32 Analogue inputs 2 of which double up with the A7 all multi selected via mux's, so quite a busy project. The A7 specifically interfaces with a new product that is also being developed and connects to all the primary nets (Master nets I think they are called) some of the secondary nets are used also but not many, I was asked to get the S7 due to the fact it is supposed to be the latest and easier to program. But....the original test device used the same chip-set as the A7 although I would still need to generate my own code to interface and run specific test routines.

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