The Blinky sample blinks an LED forever using the GPIO API <gpio_api>
.
The source code shows how to:
- Get a pin specification from the
devicetree <dt-guide>
as a :cgpio_dt_spec
- Configure the GPIO pin as an output
- Toggle the pin forever
See pwm-blinky-sample
for a similar sample that uses the PWM API instead.
Your board must:
- Have an LED connected via a GPIO pin (these are called "User LEDs" on many of Zephyr's
boards
). - Have the LED configured using the
led0
devicetree alias.
Build and flash Blinky as follows, changing reel_board
for your board:
After flashing, the LED starts to blink. If a runtime error occurs, the sample exits without printing to the console.
You will see a build error at the source code line defining the struct gpio_dt_spec led
variable if you try to build Blinky for an unsupported board.
On GCC-based toolchains, the error looks like this:
error: '__device_dts_ord_DT_N_ALIAS_led_P_gpios_IDX_0_PH_ORD' undeclared here (not in a function)
To add support for your board, add something like this to your devicetree:
/ {
aliases {
led0 = &myled0;
};
leds {
compatible = "gpio-leds";
myled0: led_0 {
gpios = <&gpio0 13 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;
};
};
};
The above sets your board's led0
alias to use pin 13 on GPIO controller gpio0
. The pin flags :cGPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH
mean the LED is on when the pin is set to its high state, and off when the pin is in its low state.
Tips:
- See
gpio-leds
for more information on defining GPIO-based LEDs in devicetree. - If you're not sure what to do, check the devicetrees for supported boards which use the same SoC as your target. See
get-devicetree-outputs
for details. - See :zephyr_file:`include/zephyr/dt-bindings/gpio/gpio.h` for the flags you can use in devicetree.
- If the LED is built in to your board hardware, the alias should be defined in your
BOARD.dts file <devicetree-in-out-files>
. Otherwise, you can define one in adevicetree overlay <set-devicetree-overlays>
.