Hi Vincent,
1. First step is to select the off-board target (the LPC11U68 is the on-board target, but you are wanting to debug the target MCU on your board). So for your case you need to put a jumper on JP1.
2. Next step is to determine how to power the buffers that sit between the debug probe on the LPCXpresso board (the LPC43xx device) and your target board. When using the LPCXpresso board to debug an external target, you have two choices:
We will work towards improving the documentation on board set up - thanks for the feedback.
Regards,
Brendon
Target to debug location (JP1) On-board Target - open (default) Off-board Target - short
Buffer Pwr Select (JP2) On-board Target 1 - 2 (default) Off-board Target 2 - 3
Schematics for LPCXpresso dev boards can be found from here:
Yours,
LPCXpresso Support
Thank you so much for your prompt reply!
I'm sorry but I did not understand your explanations. Would you be kind enough to give a bit more details?
On the link you mentioned, I could only find the datasheet for the targeted chip (LPC11U68) but not of the board itself... In fact I could not find any information anywhere on the internet (except for that very simplistic block-diagram).
Kind Regards
Vincent V.
Hi Vincent,
1. First step is to select the off-board target (the LPC11U68 is the on-board target, but you are wanting to debug the target MCU on your board). So for your case you need to put a jumper on JP1.
2. Next step is to determine how to power the buffers that sit between the debug probe on the LPCXpresso board (the LPC43xx device) and your target board. When using the LPCXpresso board to debug an external target, you have two choices:
We will work towards improving the documentation on board set up - thanks for the feedback.
Regards,
Brendon