2.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	Flashing the Arduino HID
Serial Firmware (the default option)
This operation can be done using your RPi (except Pi Zero W). Here the common steps:
- 
Disconnect the RESET wire from the Arduino board. 
- 
Connect the Arduino and RPi with a suitable USB cable. 
- 
Upload the firmware (USB keyboard & mouse is used by default, on this step you can choose PS/2 keyboard): # rw # systemctl stop kvmd # cp -r /usr/share/kvmd/hid/arduino ~ # cd ~/hid # make # make install # reboot
- 
Connect the RESET wire, disconnect the USB cable, and reboot the RPi. 
With a Pi Zero W, you may consider building the firmware on a faster system and programming using USB or booting from another SD card and following the build steps using a clone of the KVMD repo.
SPI Firmware
This operation can be done using your Raspberry Pi without disconnecting any wires:
- 
Connect the Arduino and RPi with a suitable USB cable. 
- 
Execute rw, add linedtoverlay=spi0-1csto/boot/config.txtand performreboot.
- 
Build and upload the firmware (USB keyboard & mouse is used by default) # rw # systemctl stop kvmd # cp -r /usr/share/kvmd/hid/arduino ~ # cd ~/hid # make spi # make install # reboot
Common Errors
Circuit Issues
Common - Reset Wire
Different pins are used for the reset wire but serve a similar function. For programming the TTL firmware over USB, the reset wire should be disconnected. When programming using SPI, the reset wire needs to be connected through a transistor circuit and connected to GPIO25 (pin 22 on the GPIO header)
SPI-specific Wiring
The 3v3, ground, Reset (GPIO25), MISO, MOSI, SCLK, and CS1 need to be connected appropriately. SPIO_CS0 and SPIO_CS1 can both be used but the default configuration uses SPIO_CS1 for the Arduino Microcontroller (CS0 is used for another device on the V3). These generally follow a block as follows:
Pin  0        2         4
      2        0         0
      .........GR.C.......
Row # 12345678901234567890
      ........3MMS........
Pin   0       1          3
       1       7          9
The most common error is an "off-by-one" error where pins are shifted by a row. Some cases have non-standard GPIO layouts so please be careful when following these instructions using a case that has a modified pinout.