embassy/cyw43
Dario Nieuwenhuis 4f7ac1946a cyw43: add Bluetooth support.
Co-Authored-By: Brandon Ros <brandonros1@gmail.com>
2024-08-05 21:07:42 +02:00
..
src cyw43: add Bluetooth support. 2024-08-05 21:07:42 +02:00
Cargo.toml cyw43: add Bluetooth support. 2024-08-05 21:07:42 +02:00
CHANGELOG.md Add cyw43/cyw43-pio changelogs 2024-08-05 22:19:01 +10:00
README.md Remove "cargo install probe-rs", point users to probe.rs instead. 2024-05-21 23:45:01 +02:00

cyw43

Rust driver for the CYW43439 wifi chip, used in the Raspberry Pi Pico W. Implementation based on Infineon/wifi-host-driver.

Current status

Working:

  • Station mode (joining an AP).
  • AP mode (creating an AP)
  • Scanning
  • Sending and receiving Ethernet frames.
  • Using the default MAC address.
  • embassy-net integration.
  • RP2040 PIO driver for the nonstandard half-duplex SPI used in the Pico W.
  • Using IRQ for device events
  • GPIO support (for LED on the Pico W)

TODO:

  • Setting a custom MAC address.
  • Bus sleep (for power consumption optimization)

Running the examples

  • Install probe-rs following the instructions at https://probe.rs.
  • cd examples/rp

Example 1: Scan the wifi stations

  • cargo run --release --bin wifi_scan

Example 2: Create an access point (IP and credentials in the code)

  • cargo run --release --bin wifi_ap_tcp_server

Example 3: Connect to an existing network and create a server

  • cargo run --release --bin wifi_tcp_server

After a few seconds, you should see that DHCP picks up an IP address like this

11.944489 DEBUG Acquired IP configuration:
11.944517 DEBUG    IP address:      192.168.0.250/24
11.944620 DEBUG    Default gateway: 192.168.0.33
11.944722 DEBUG    DNS server 0:    192.168.0.33

This example implements a TCP echo server on port 1234. You can try connecting to it with:

nc 192.168.0.250 1234

Send it some data, you should see it echoed back and printed in the firmware's logs.