Difference between revisions of "DIY STM32 Programmer (ST-Link/V2-1)"

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Also, the ones I've got (the one in the photo to the right) are ST-Link/V2 devices.
 
Also, the ones I've got (the one in the photo to the right) are ST-Link/V2 devices.
  
Before diving into any further details, credits to Martin from [http://embedblog.eu/ EmbeddedBlog] who went through the same as here.  His project is linked under [[#Miscellaneous Links]].
+
Before diving into any further details, credits to Martin from [http://embedblog.eu/ EmbeddedBlog] who went through the same as here.  His project is linked under [[#Miscellaneous Links|Miscellaneous Links]].
  
 
{{Clear}}
 
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Revision as of 03:01, 22 July 2021

Original ST-Link

ST-Link devices are almost essential when developing software for the STM32 MCUs. They are relatively cheap and easily available.

They roughly fall into two different categories. ST themselves make a number of them and they all work quite well.

One thing that annoys me with the original ST-Link devices is that the programming header is unlabelled. This essentially mean that every time I use it I have to Google for the actual pinout.

Also, the ones I've got (the one in the photo to the right) are ST-Link/V2 devices.

Before diving into any further details, credits to Martin from EmbeddedBlog who went through the same as here. His project is linked under Miscellaneous Links.

Chinese knock off ST-Link/V2

There are also a lot of Chinese clones available and while they have some limitations they also work quite well.

Unfortunately these devices are also ST-Link/V2 devices, and they do not have the SWO pin on the header, so any debug trace is impossible. For flashing and normal debugging they work fine though.

In short, the ST-Link/V2.1 devices offer a few extra features:

  1. Serial Wire Trace (SWO)
  2. Virtual serial port
  3. Mass storage

All features that, while not absolutely essential, does come quite handy.

Another reason for creating my own "programmer" is that I can experiment with using a GigaDevice GD32F103, which are much easier to source at the moment.

Original ST-Link V2.1

The schematic of the original ST-Link is readily available from the various Nucleo development modules.

ST-Link V2.1 Original Schematics.png

A bit messy schematics but it'll do.

Schematics

Based on ST's original schematics, creating a version using only parts from JLCPCB's parts library was easy (and much nicer if I shall say so myself).

DIY ST-Link V2.1.svg

One thing I left out was the serial resistors of the programming header. This might very well come back and bite me in the ass but space is going to be at a premium.

PCB

For hobby projects like this I will usually stick with double-sided PCB. But in this particular case I wanted this to fit into the aluminium "sleeve" of the Chinese knock off ST-Link devices, so space was at a premium. Also, pricing wise there's not much difference these days, so I went for a four layer PCB and kept +3.3V and GND on the two inner layers.

For SMT assembly, JLCPCB has a minimum size of 20 mm in either direction:

JLCPCB Assembly Capabilities.png

For a USB stick 20 mm is too wide, so I had to design the PCB with a breakaway part connected with mouse bites.

The final rev. a layout looks like this:

PCB Layout rev. a.png

The KiCAD 3D model:

PCB Layout rev. a - 3D model.png

Revision a

A quick order to JLCPCB and within a week I had my first "samples".

I had to solder the USB connector on by hand.

Miscellaneous Links