2. Getting started

2.1. Hardware setup

2.1.1. AM69A EVM

AM69A EVM is a low cost, small form factor board designed to bring smart cameras, robots and intelligent machines to life. For more information related to the board, full list of peripherals supported, pin settings for boot modes and more visit AM69A EVM User guide

To run the demos on AM69A EVM you will require,

  • AM69A EVM

  • Minimum 16GB high performance SD card

  • External Power Supply or Power Accessory Requirements

  • USB 2.0 mouse

  • Full-HD (1080p) HDMI display

  • Optional 100Base-T Ethernet cable connected to internet

  • Optional UART cable

  • Optional USB camera (Any V4L2 compliant 1MP/2MP camera, Eg. Logitech C270/C920/C922)

    1. Nominal Output Voltage: 5-20VDC

    2. Maximum Output Current: 5000 mA

    3. Refer to AM69A EVM User guide for more details.

Connect the components to the EVM as shown in the image.

../../../_images/am69a_evm.jpg

Fig. 2.1 AM69A EVM connections

Set the boot pins to SD boot mode as shown in the following image.

../../../_images/am69a_bootpins.jpg

Fig. 2.2 AM69A EVM boot pins

2.1.2. USB Camera

UVC (USB video class) compliant USB cameras are supported by AM69A EVM. The driver for the same is enabled in SDK. The SDK has been tested with C270/C920/C922 versions of Logitech USB cameras. Please refer to Getting Error when trying to capture from multiple USB cameras simultaneously to stream from multiple USB cameras simultaneously.

2.1.3. OV5640 YUV sensor

OV5640 CSI camera module is a 2MP sensor with built-in ISP which can transmit raw YUYV frames over CSI lanes. The camera can be connected to the bottom side of the Edge AI SK board as shown below. The OV5640 camera module requires an additional power supply with following requirements

  • Output Voltage: 5 VDC

  • Output Current: 2.0 A

For added flexibility you can order a Samtec extender cable from here, https://www.samtec.com/products/hqcd

../../../_images/am69a_csi_camera_connection.png

Fig. 2.3 OV5640 CSI based YUV sensor connection with AM69A Starter Kit for Edge AI

Note

By default OV5640 is disabled for AM69A SK. After connecting the camera you can enable it by specifying the dtb overlay file in /run/media/BOOT-mmcblk1p1/uEnv.txt as below,

name_overlays=k3-j784s4-edgeai-apps.dtbo k3-am69-sk-csi2-ov5640.dtbo

Reboot the board after editing and saving the file. Dtb files can be found under /boot/dtb/ti.

Config file to run analytics pipeline with OV5640 camera module is present under /opt/edgeai-gst-apps/configs/ov5640_sensor_example.yaml. Please refer Edge AI sample apps to use the file.

2.1.4. RPiV2(IMX219) Raw sensor

RPiV2 camera module is supported by AM69A EVM. It is a 8MP sensor with no ISP, which can transmit raw SRGGB8 frames over CSI lanes at 1080p resolution at 30 fps.

For more details visit Rpi camera module v2

Note

For trying different resolutions of the same sensor we would also require different DCC binary files to work with tiovxisp and tiovxldc plugins.

Below is a patch posted upstream to enable other higher fps with lower resolution modes https://patchwork.linuxtv.org/project/linux-media/patch/20210115185233.333407-1-angelogioacchino.delregno@somainline.org/

The camera can be connected to the RPi header as shown below on AM69A. Note that the headers have to be lifted up to connect the cameras and put back firmly to keep the connector cable in place.

../../../_images/am69a_rpi.jpg

Fig. 2.4 IMX219 CSI sensor connection with AM69A EVM

Note

By default IMX219 is disabled. After connecting the camera you can enable it by specifying the dtb overlay file in /run/media/BOOT-mmcblk1p1/uEnv.txt as below,

name_overlays=k3-j784s4-edgeai-apps.dtbo k3-am69-sk-csi2-rpi-cam-imx219.dtbo

Reboot the board after editing and saving the file. Dtb files can be found under /boot/dtb/ti.

Config file to run analytics pipeline with IMX219 camera is present under /opt/edgeai-gst-apps/configs/imx219_cam_example.yaml. Please refer Edge AI sample apps to use the file.

Please refer Camera sources (v4l2) to know how to list all the cameras connected and select which one to use for the demo.

By default IMX219 will be configured to capture at 8 bit, but it also supports 10 bit capture in 16 bit container. To use it in 10 bit mode, below steps are required:

  • Call setup_cameras.sh script modifying the imx219 format.

export IMX219_CAM_FMT='[fmt:SRGGB10_1X10/1920x1080]'
/opt/edgeai-gst-apps/scripts/setup_cameras.sh
  • Change the imaging binaries to use 10 bit versions

mv /opt/imaging/imx219/linear/dcc_2a.bin /opt/imaging/imx219/linear/dcc_2a_8b_1920x1080.bin
mv /opt/imaging/imx219/linear/dcc_viss.bin /opt/imaging/imx219/linear/dcc_viss_8b_1920x1080.bin
mv /opt/imaging/imx219/linear/dcc_2a_10b_1920x1080.bin /opt/imaging/imx219/linear/dcc_2a.bin
mv /opt/imaging/imx219/linear/dcc_viss_10b_1920x1080.bin /opt/imaging/imx219/linear/dcc_viss.bin
  • Set the input format in the /opt/edgeai-gst-apps/configs/imx219_cam_example.yaml as rggb10

2.1.5. Mini Fusion

Mini Fusion is supported by AM69A EVM. Mini fusion can be used to connect FPDLink cameras to the EVM via CSI lanes. Some of the cameras supported are IMX219 and IMX390.

For more details visit Arducam V3Link Camera Kit

The interface between AM69A, Mini Fusion board and the camera is shown below. Note that the headers have to be lifted up to connect the cameras and put back firmly to keep the connector cable in place.

../../../_images/am69a_mini_fusion.png

Fig. 2.5 Fusion Mini connection with AM69A EVM

Note

After connecting the camera you can enable it by specifying the dtb overlay file in /run/media/BOOT-mmcblk1p1/uEnv.txt. Let’s take an example of single RPi camera connected to Mini fusion board at Port 0.

name_overlays=k3-am69-sk-csi2-v3link-fusion.dtbo k3-v3link-imx219-0-0.dtbo

Similarly for camera connected to other port, dtbo can be appended above. Reboot the board after editing and saving the file. Dtb files can be found under /boot/dtb/ti.

Run the script to setup the cameras.

source /opt/edgeai-gst-apps/scripts/setup_cameras_v3link.sh

Config file to run analytics pipeline with IMX219 camera is present under /opt/edgeai-gst-apps/configs/imx219_cam_example.yaml. Please refer Edge AI sample apps to use the file.

2.2. Software setup

2.2.1. Preparing SD card image

Download the latest SD card .wic image and flash it to SD card using Balena etcher tool available at:

https://www.balena.io/etcher/

Note

We have tested with Balena Etcher version 1.7.0 which can be found here, https://github.com/balena-io/etcher/releases/tag/v1.7.0

There seem to be a known-issue with latest 1.7.2 version of Balena Etcher https://forums.balena.io/t/etcher-error-message-cannot-read-property-message-of-null/350471

The tool can be installed either on Windows/Linux. Just download the etcher image and follow the instructions to prepare the SD card.

../../../_images/balena_etcher.png

Fig. 2.6 Balena Etcher tool to flash SD card with Processor SDK Linux Edge AI for AM69A

The etcher image is created for 16 GB SD cards, if you are using larger SD card, the root filesystem will automatically expand to use the full SD card capacity after the first boot. In case it does not automatically expand, use the steps below on a Linux PC

#find the SD card device entry using lsblk (Eg: /dev/sdc)
#use the following commands to expand the filesystem
#Make sure you have write permission to SD card or run the commands as root

#Unmount the BOOT and rootfs partition before using parted tool
umount /dev/sdX1
umount /dev/sdX2

#Use parted tool to resize the rootfs partition to use
#the entire remaining space on the SD card
#You might require sudo permissions to execute these steps
parted -s /dev/sdX resizepart 2 '100%'
e2fsck -f /dev/sdX2
resize2fs /dev/sdX2

#replace /dev/sdX in above commands with SD card device entry

2.2.2. Power ON and Boot

Ensure that the power supply is disconnected before inserting the SD card. Once the SD card is firmly inserted in its slot and the board is powered ON, the board will take less than 20sec to boot and start running the Edge AI Gallery Application as shown

../../../_images/am69a_oob_banner.jpg

Fig. 2.7 AM69A EVM out-of-box UI demo showing wallpaper

You can also view the boot log by connecting the UART cable to your PC and use a serial port communications program. 4 serial ports will come up on your PC, you should connect to port 2 to get the boot logs

For Linux OS minicom** works well. Please refer to the below documentation on ‘minicom’ for more details.

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Minicom

When starting minicom, turn on the colors options like below:

sudo minicom -D /dev/ttyUSB2 -c on

For Windows OS Tera Term works well. Please refer to the below documentation on ‘TeraTerm’ for more details

https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/terminal-basics/tera-term-windows

Note

If using a Windows computer, the user may need to install additional drivers for ports to show up: https://www.silabs.com/developers/usb-to-uart-bridge-vcp-drivers

Note

Baud rate should be configured to 115200 bps in serial port communication program. You may not see any log in the UART console if you connect to it after the booting is complete or login prompt may get lost in between boot logs, press ENTER to get login prompt

As part of the linux systemd /opt/edgeai-gst-apps/init_script.sh is executed which does the below,

  • This sets up necessary environment variables.

  • If any camera is connected to the board, the script sets it up and prints its device id and other information.

Once Linux boots login as root user with no password.

2.2.3. Connect remotely

If you don’t prefer the UART console, you can also access the device with the IP address that is shown on the display. With the IP address one can ssh directly to the board, view the contents and run the demos. For best experience we recommend using VSCode which can be downloaded from here,

https://code.visualstudio.com/download

You also require the “Remote development extension pack” installed in VSCode as mentioned here:

https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/ssh

../../../_images/vs_code.png

Fig. 2.8 Microsoft Visual Studio Code for connecting to AM69A EVM via SSH

If you are using Ubuntu 22.04 , add the following to ~/.ssh/config

# Add to ~/.ssh/config. Absolute IP or range of IP can be defined using *
Host 10.24.*
    HostKeyAlgorithms=+ssh-rsa

You can now SSH using terminal.

$ ssh root@10.24.69.123