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SeeedStudio BeagleBone® Green

Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green is a low cost, open-source, community supported development platform for developers and hobbyists. It is a joint effort by BeagleBoard.org and Seeed Studio. It is based on the classical open-source hardware design of BeagleBone® Black and developed into this differentiated version. The Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green includes two Grove connectors, making it easier to connect to the large family of Grove sensors. The on-board HDMI is removed to make room for these Grove connectors.

Boot Linux in under 10 seconds and get started on development in less than 5 minutes with just a single USB cable.

Features

  • Fully Compatible with BeagleBone® Black
  • Processor: AM335x 1GHz ARMR Cortex-A8
    • 512MB DDR3 RAM
    • 4GB 8-bit eMMC on-board flash storage
    • 3D graphics accelerator
    • NEON floating-point accelerator
    • 2x PRU 32-bit microcontrollers
  • Connectivity
    • USB client for power & communications
    • USB host
    • Ethernet
    • 2x 46 pin headers
    • 2x Grove connectors (I2C and UART)
  • Software Compatibility
    • Debian
    • Android
    • Ubuntu
    • Cloud9 IDE on Node.js w/ BoneScript library
    • plus much more

Specification

ItemValue
ProcessorAM335x 1GHz ARMR Cortex-A8
RAM512MB DDR3
on-board Flash Storage4GB eMMC
CPU SupportsNEON floating-point & 3D graphics accelerator
Micro USB Supportspowering & communications
USBHost 1
Grove Connectors2 (One I2C and One UART)
GPIO2 x 46 pin headers
Ethernet1
Operating Temperature0 ~ 75

Application Ideas

  • Internet of Things
  • Smart House
  • Industrial
  • Automation & Process Control
  • Human Machine Interface
  • Sensor Hub
  • Robot

Here are some funny projects for your reference.

Home CenterRetro LampDrive a Motor
MAKE IT NOW!MAKE IT NOW!MAKE IT NOW!
Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green Acrylic CaseGPIO ControlSmart Light
MAKE IT NOW!MAKE IT NOW!MAKE IT NOW!

Hardware Overview

  • USB Host - USB Host
  • DC Power and USB Client - Power the board and act as client
  • LEDs
    • D2 is configured at boot to blink in a heartbeat pattern
    • D3 is configured at boot to light during microSD card accesses
    • D4 is configured at boot to light during CPU activity
    • D5 is configured at boot to light during eMMC accesses
  • Boot button
    • When there's a SD card insert, the system will boot from SD card first, if you want to boot from eMMC, press this button and then power on.
    • Use as a normal button after boot, connect to GPIO_72
  • I2C Grove Interface - Connected to I2C2
  • Uart Grove Interface - Connected to UART2
  • Serial Debug - Connect to UART0, PIN1~PIN6: GND, NC, NC, RX, TX, NC, note that pin1 is near to the USB.

Pin map

Each digital I/O pin has 8 different modes that can be selected, including GPIO.

65 Possible Digital I/Os

note
In GPIO mode, each digital I/O can produce interrupts.

PWMs and Timers

note

Up to 8 digital I/O pins can be configured with pulse-width modulators (PWM) to produce signals to control motors or create pseudo analog voltage levels, without taking up any extra CPU cycles.

Analog Inputs

note

Make sure you don't input more than 1.8V to the analog input pins. This is a single 12-bit analog-to-digital converter with 8 channels, 7 of which are made available on the headers.

UART

note

There is a dedicated header for getting to the UART0 pins and connecting a debug cable. Five additional serial ports are brought to the expansion headers, but one of them only has a single direction brought to the headers.

I2C

note

The first I2C bus is utilized for reading EEPROMS on cape add-on boards and can't be used for other digital I/O operations without interfering with that function, but you can still use it to add other I2C devices at available addresses. The second I2C bus is available for you to configure and use.

SPI

note
For shifting out data fast, you might consider using one of the SPI ports.

enter image description here

Mechincal Drawing

Getting Started

note

This chapter is writing under Win10. The steps are familiar for the other operate systems.

STEP1. Plug in your Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green via USB

Use the provided micro USB cable to plug your Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green into your computer. This will both power the board and provide a development interface. Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green will boot Linux from the on-board 2GB or 4GB eMMC.

Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green will operate as a flash drive providing you with a local copy of the documentation and drivers. Note that this interface may not be used to re-configure the microSD card with a new image, but may be used to update the boot parameters using the uEnv.txt file.

You'll see the PWR LED lit steadily. Within 10 seconds, you should see the other LEDs blinking in their default configurations.

  • D2 is configured at boot to blink in a heartbeat pattern
  • D3 is configured at boot to light during microSD card accesses
  • D4 is configured at boot to light during CPU activity
  • D5 is configured at boot to light during eMMC accesses

STEP2. Install Drivers

Install the drivers for your operating system to give you network-over-USB access to your Beagle. Additional drivers give you serial access to your board.

Operating SystemUSB DriversComments
Windows (64-bit)64-bit installer
Windows (32-bit)32-bit installer
Mac OS XNetwork SerialInstall both sets of drivers.
Linuxmkudevrule.shDriver installation isn't required, but you might find a few udev rules helpful.
note
For Windows system, please note that:
  • Windows Driver Certification warning may pop up two or three times. Click "Ignore", "Install" or "Run"
  • To check if you're running 32 or 64-bit Windows see this.
  • On systems without the latest service release, you may get an error (0xc000007b). In that case, please install and retry:
  • You may need to reboot Windows.
  • These drivers have been tested to work up to Windows 10
note

Additional FTDI USB to serial/JTAG information and drivers are available from https://www.ftdichip.com/Drivers/VCP.htm.

note

Additional USB to virtual Ethernet information and drivers are available from https://www.linux-usb.org/gadget/ and https://joshuawise.com/horndis.

STEP3. Browse to your Beagle

Using either Chrome or Firefox (Internet Explorer will NOT work), browse to the web server running on your board. It will load a presentation showing you the capabilities of the board. Use the arrow keys on your keyboard to navigate the presentation.

Click http://192.168.7.2 to launch to your Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green. Older software images require you to EJECT the BeagleBone® drive to start the network. With the latest software image, that step is no longer required.

Click to view larger image

STEP4. Cloud9 IDE

To begin editing programs that live on your board, you can use the Cloud9 IDE by click

enter image description here

Update to latest software

You need to update the board to latest software to keep a better performance, here we will show you how to make it step by step.

STEP1. Download the latest software image

First of all, you have to download the suitable image here.

enter image description here

note

Due to sizing necessities, this download may take about 30 minutes or more.

The file you download will have an .img.xz extension. This is a compressed sector-by-sector image of the SD card.

STEP2. Install compression utility and decompress the image

Download and install 7-zip.

note
Choose a version that suitable for your system.

Use 7-zip to decompress the SD card .img file

STEP3. Install SD card programming utility

Download and install Image Writer for Windows. Be sure to download the binary distribution.

STEP4. Write the image to your SD card

You need a SD adapter to connect your microSD card to your computer at the first. Then use the software Image Write for Windows to write the decompressed image to your SD card.

enter image description here

Click on Write button, then the process is started.

enter image description here

note
  • You may see a warning about damaging your device. This is fine to accept as long as you are pointing to your SD card for writing.
  • You should not have your BeagleBone® connected to your computer at this time.
  • This process may need up to 10 minutes.

STEP5. Boot your board off of the SD card

Insert SD card into your (powered-down first) board. Then the board will boot from the SD card.

note

If you don't need to write the image to your on-board eMMC, you don't need to read the last of this chapter. Otherwise please go ahead.

If you desire to write the image to your on-board eMMC, you need to launch to the board, and modify a file.

In /boot/uEnv.txt:

##enable BeagleBone® Black: eMMC Flasher:
#cmdline=init=/opt/scripts/tools/eMMC/init-eMMC-flasher-v3.sh

Change to:

##enable BeagleBone® Black: eMMC Flasher:
cmdline=init=/opt/scripts/tools/eMMC/init-eMMC-flasher-v3.sh

Then you will find the 4 user led light as below

enter image description here

note

If you don't find the upper tracing light, please press the RESET button to reset the board.

When the flashing is complete, all 4 USRx LEDs will be off. The latest Debian flasher images automatically power down the board upon completion. This can take up to 10 minutes. Power-down your board, remove the SD card and apply power again to be complete.

Grove for Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green

Grove is a modular, standardized connecter prototyping system. Grove takes a building block approach to assembling electronics. Compared to the jumper or solder based system, it is easier to connect, experiment and build and simplifies the learning system, but not to the point where it becomes dumbed down. Some of the other prototype systems out there takes the level down to building blocks. Good stuff to be learned that way, but the Grove system allows you to build real systems. It requires some learning and expertise to hook things up.

Below listed the Grove modules that work well with Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green.

SKUNameInterfacelink
101020054Grove - 3-Axis Digital Accelerometer(+16g)I2Clink
101020071Grove - 3-Axis Digital Accelerometer(+400g)I2Clink
101020034Grove - 3-Axis Digital CompassI2Clink
101020050Grove - 3-Axis Digital GyroAnaloglink
101020081Grove - 6-Axis Accelerometer&Compass v2.0I2Clink
101020072Grove - Barometer Sensor(BMP180)I2Clink
104030010Grove - Blue LEDI/Olink
101020003Grove - ButtonI/Olink
111020000Grove - Button(P)I/Olink
107020000Grove - BuzzerI/Olink
104030006Grove - Chainable RGB LEDI2Clink
101020030Grove - Digital Light SensorI2Clink
103020024Grove - Finger-clip Heart Rate SensorI2Clink
101020082Grove - Finger-clip Heart Rate Sensor with shellI2Clink
113020003Grove - GPSUARTlink
104030007Grove - Green LEDI/Olink
103020013Grove - I2C ADCI2Clink
103020006Grove - I2C HubI2Clink
101020079Grove - IMU 10DOFI2Clink
101020080Grove - IMU 9DOF v2.0I2Clink
101020040Grove - IR Distance InterrupterI/Olink
104030011Grove - OLED Display 0.96''I2Clink
104030008Grove - OLED Display 1.12''I2Clink
104030005Grove - Red LEDI/Olink
103020005Grove - RelayI/Olink
316010005Grove - ServoI/Olink
101020023Grove - Sound SensorAnaloglink
101020004Grove - Switch(P)I/Olink
101020015Grove - Temperature SensorAnaloglink
101020019Grove - Temperature&Humidity Sensor ProAnaloglink

Cape for Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green

You will need some expansion board when you start a project. There're many cape for Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green already, they include LCD display, motor driver as well as HDMI expansion etc. Below is some of them recommend.

Grove CapeMotor Bridge CapeHDMI Cape
enter image description hereenter image description hereenter image description here
GET ONE NOW!GET ONE NOW!GET ONE NOW!
Grove Cape5 Inch LCD7 Inch LCD
enter image description hereenter image description hereenter image description here
GET ONE NOW!GET ONE NOW!GET ONE NOW!

FAQ

1. What is the different between Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green 1 and Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green 2?

We have updated the eMMC on Seeed Studio Beaglebone® Green in 2016. So the previous firmware for Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green 1 is not workable on Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green 2, but the new firmware is ok on Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green 1 and Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green 2.

2. Sometimes the Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green's network port does not work and must be restarted to resume work. Occasionally this happens.

Please replace a stable power supply and try again. Usually mobile phone USB power adapter is more stable than that computer USB. Or you can remove the capacitor C162.

3: What is the operating temperature range of the Seeed Studio BeagleBone® Green?

BeagleBone® Green works in the temperature range of 0-75 Deg Celsius.

References

There're many references to help you to get more information about the board.

Schematic Online Viewer

Resources

Tech Support

Please submit any technical issue into our forum.


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