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Nexys A7-50T Out of Box Demo

Description

This project is a Vivado demo using the Nexys A7-50T's switches, LEDs, pushbuttons, RGB LEDS, seven-segment display, VGA connector, USB HID Host port, PWM audio output, PDM microphone, 3-axis accelerometer and the temperature sensor written in VHDL. When programmed onto the board, all sixteen of the switches are tied to their corresponding LEDs. Every time a switch is toggled, the LED directly above it will toggle with it. The seven-segment display runs a constant snake pattern.

The two RGB LEDs are initially set to smoothly change from red to green, then green to blue, then blue to red. The table below describes how the D-pad buttons affects the RGB LEDs and the microphone. Once the audio recording is started with the BTNU button the data is taken from the omni-directional microphone and stored into the DDR2 memory. While recording audio the LEDs will light up from left to right. After about 5 seconds the recording stops and the audio will be read from DDR2 memory and played through the headphone jack (labeled mono audio out). Afterwhich the LEDs will turn off from right to left.

The VGA displays a Digilent / Analog Devices logo, the mouse cursor connected by the usb HID Host port, the audio signal from the microphone, the x , y and z data from the Accelerometer, the FPGA temperature and the value of the RGB componnents. The VGA is only displayed in 1280×1024 resolution:

Button Function
BTNU Audio recording is started and data is taken from the
omni-directional microphone
BTNC The RGB LEDs are set to green
BTNL The RGB LEDs are set to red
BTNR The RGB LEDs are set to blue
BTND The RGB LEDs return to their gradual change loop.
If the user keeps pushing BTND, both LEDs will be isolated then
both will be turned off

Requirements

Demo Setup

  1. Download and extract the most recent release ZIP archive from this repository's Releases Page.
  2. Open the project in Vivado 2018.2 by double clicking on the included XPR file found at "<archive extracted location>/vivado_proj/Nexys-A7-50T-OOB.xpr".
  3. In the Flow Navigator panel on the left side of the Vivado window, click Open Hardware Manager.
  4. Plug the Nexys A7-50T into the computer using a MicroUSB cable.
  5. Open a serial terminal emulator (such as TeraTerm) and connect it to the Nexys A7-50T's serial port, using a baud rate of 9600.
  6. In the green bar at the top of the Vivado window, click Open target. Select Auto connect from the drop down menu.
  7. In the green bar at the top of the Vivado window, click Program device.
  8. In the Program Device Wizard, enter "<archive extracted location>vivado_proj/Nexys-A7-50T-OOB.runs/impl_1/top.bit" into the "Bitstream file" field. Then click Program.
  9. The demo will now be programmed onto the Nexys A7-50T. See the Description section of this README to learn how to interact with this demo.

Next Steps

This demo can be used as a basis for other projects, either by adding sources included in the demo's release to those projects, or by modifying the sources in the release project.

Check out the Nexys A7-50T's Resource Center to find more documentation, demos, and tutorials.

For technical support or questions, please post on the Digilent Forum.

Additional Notes

For more information on how this project is version controlled, refer to the Digilent Vivado Scripts Repository