//! This shows how to configure UART //! You can short the TX and RX pin and see it reads what was written. //! Additionally you can connect a logic analzyer to TX and see how the changes //! of the configuration change the output signal. //! //! The following wiring is assumed: //! - TX => GPIO4 //! - RX => GPIO5 //% CHIPS: esp32 esp32c2 esp32c3 esp32c6 esp32h2 esp32s2 esp32s3 #![no_std] #![no_main] use esp_backtrace as _; use esp_hal::{ clock::ClockControl, delay::Delay, gpio::Io, peripherals::Peripherals, prelude::*, uart::{config::Config, TxRxPins, Uart}, }; use esp_println::println; use nb::block; #[entry] fn main() -> ! { let peripherals = Peripherals::take(); let system = peripherals.SYSTEM.split(); let clocks = ClockControl::boot_defaults(system.clock_control).freeze(); let io = Io::new(peripherals.GPIO, peripherals.IO_MUX); let pins = TxRxPins::new_tx_rx( io.pins.gpio4.into_push_pull_output(), io.pins.gpio5.into_floating_input(), ); let mut serial1 = Uart::new_with_config( peripherals.UART1, Config::default(), Some(pins), &clocks, None, ); let delay = Delay::new(&clocks); println!("Start"); loop { serial1.write_byte(0x42).ok(); let read = block!(serial1.read_byte()); match read { Ok(read) => println!("Read 0x{:02x}", read), Err(err) => println!("Error {:?}", err), } delay.delay_millis(250); } }