Zynq UltraScale MPSoC Base TRD 2016.4

This wiki page complements the 2016.4 version of the Base TRD. For other versions, refer to the Zynq UltraScale+ MPSoC Base TRD overview page.

Note: The ES1 reference design zip file is no longer available for download. Please update to ES2 or production silicon.


Table of Contents


1 Revision History



Change Log:
  • Update all projects, IP and tools versions to 2016.3, except Petalinux
  • Add support for ZCU102 rev 1.0 board with ES2 silicon
  • Split reference design into 9 design modules with dedicated tutorials
  • Remove support for HDMI input via FMC-HDMI-CAM
  • Add USB webcam support for video capture (USB2 only!)
  • Add virtual video device (vivid) support for video capture
  • Use X11 Qt and Mali backend instead of fbdev



2 Overview


The Zynq UltraScale+ MPSoC Base Targeted Reference Design (TRD) is an embedded video processing application running on a combination of APU (SMP Linux), RPU (bare-metal) and PL.

The design consists of the following video data paths:
  • Video capture pipelines capturing video from:
    • a virtual video device (vivid) implemented purely in software
    • a USB webcam connected to the PS (optional)
    • a test pattern generator (TPG) implemented inside the PL
  • A memory-to-memory processing pipeline implementing a 2D-convolution filter with programmable coefficients.
  • A display pipeline with two layers, one used for video and the other for a graphical user interface (GUI) rendered by the GPU.

The TRD demonstrates the value of offloading computation intensive tasks like the 2D-convolution filter from the PS onto PL, thereby freeing APU resources. The APU load is plotted on the GUI to compare a pure software vs hardware accelerated implementation. The RPU is used to monitor the live memory throughput of the design by reading the built-in AXI performance monitors (APM) inside the PS. The data is sent to the APU via the OpenAMP communication framework and plotted on the GUI.

This wiki contains information about:
  • How to setup the ZCU102 evaluation board and run the reference design.
  • How to build all the TRD components based on the provided source files via detailed step-by-step tutorials.

Additional material that is not hosted on the wiki:

Note: Certain material in this reference design is separately licensed by third parties and may be subject to the GNU General Public License version 2, the GNU Lesser General License version 2.1, or other licenses.



3 Software Tools and System Requirements


3.1 Hardware


Required:
  • ZCU102 evaluation board / power cable
  • Monitor with DisplayPort input supporting one of the following resolutions:
    • 3840x2160 or
    • 1920x1080 or
    • 1280x720
  • Display Port cable (DP certified)
  • USB hub with mouse and keyboard
  • SD card

Optional:
  • USB webcam

3.2 Software Tools


Required:

Optional:

3.3 Licensing


The video Test Pattern Generator IP inside the Vivado project requires a license which can be obtained from here.

Steps to generate the license:
  1. Click on the link mentioned above.
  2. Fill in the login details and proceed.
  3. Click on “Generate Node-Locked License" icon as shown in the picture:
  4. Under system information, give the host details.
  5. Proceed until you get the license agreement and accept it.
  6. The License (.lic file) will be sent to the email-id mentioned in the login details.
  7. Copy the license file locally and give the same path in the SDSOC license manager.

3.4 Compatibility


The reference design has been tested successfully with the following user-supplied components.

DisplayPort Monitor:
Make/ModelNative Resolution
Viewsonic VP2780-4K3840x2160 (30Hz)
LG 27MU67-B3840x2160 (30Hz)
Acer S277HK3840x2160 (30Hz)
Dell U2414H1920x1080 (60Hz)
GeChic On-Lap1303H1920x1080 (60Hz)

DisplayPort Cable:
  • Cable Matters DisplayPort Cable-E342987
  • Monster Advanced DisplayPort Cable-E194698

USB Webcam:
Make/ModelSupported ResolutionsSupported Formats
Logitech HD Pro Webcam C9201920x1080 (5fps), 1280x720 (10fps)YUYV
Logitech HD Webcam C5251920x1080 (5fps), 1280x720 (10fps)YUYV



4 Design Files


The top-level directory structure is shown in the figure below.



4.1 Design Modules


The reference design is split into 9 design modules DM1 to DM9:
  • DM1 – APU SMP Linux
  • DM2 – RPU0 FreeRTOS Application
  • DM3 – RPU1 Bare-metal Application
  • DM4 – APU/RPU1 Inter Process Communication
  • DM5 – APU Qt Application
  • DM6 – PL Video Capture
  • DM7 – OpenCV-based Image Processing
  • DM8 – PL-accelerated Image Processing
  • DM9 – Full-fledged Base TRD

Each module is described in more detail in UG1221 and on the respective tutorial page.

The following table shows the dependency matrix between different modules. For example: DM6 (row) depends on or builds on top of modules DM1 and DM5 (columns).

DM1DM2DM3DM4DM5DM6DM7DM8
DM1







DM2







DM3







DM4+
+




DM5+






DM6+


+


DM7+


++

DM8+


+++
DM9++++++++

4.2 Design Components


The below figure shows the relevant design components for DM9 as well as inter-dependencies and generated output products.



The below table shows which design components are used in which design modules. A graphical view for each design module is provided on the respective design module tutorial page.
Design ComponentDesign Module
DM1DM2DM3DM4DM5DM6DM7DM8DM9
apu/perfapm-client/perfapm-client


Y



Y
apu/perfapm-client/perfapm-client-test


Y




apu/petalinux_bspY

YYYYYY
apu/videao_app/video_lib



YYYYY
apu/videao_app/video_qt2



YYYYY
apu/zcu102_base_trd/samples/filter2d





YYY
pl/zcu102_base_trd




Y


pl/zcu102_dp_only



Y



pmu/pmu_fwYYYYYYYYY
rpu0/heartbeat
Y





Y
rpu1/perfapm-server/perfapm

YY



Y
rpu1/perfapm-server/perfapm-ctl

Y





rpu1/perfapm-server/perfapm-server


Y



Y



5 Tutorials


5.1 Board Setup


Required:
  • Connect power supply to J52.
  • Connect USB mouse and keyboard using a USB hub to J83.
  • Connect DisplayPort cable to P11; connect other end to monitor.
  • Insert SD card (FAT formatted) with binaries copied from $TRD_HOME/images/dm9 directory.
  • Connect micro-USB cable to J83 USB UART connector; use the following settings for your terminal emulator:
    • Baud Rate: 115200
    • Data: 8 bit
    • Parity: None
    • Stop: 1 bit
    • Flow Control: None

Optional:
  • Connect USB webcam to a USB hub to J83.

Jumpers & Switches:
  • Set boot mode according to your board and silicon revision
    • For rev D with ES1 silicon: SW6[4:1] - on,off,on,off
    • For rev 1.0 with ES2 silicon: SW6[4:1] - on,off,off,off
  • Configure USB 2.0 jumpers for host mode
    • J110: 2-3
    • J109: 1-2
    • J112: 2-3
    • J7: 1-2
    • J113: 1-2



To run the prebuilt SD card image for design module 9, follow the instructions here .

5.2 Build and Run Flow


The following tutorials assume that the $TRD_HOME environment variable has been set as below.

For rev 1.0 / ES2:
% export TRD_HOME=</path/to/downloaded/zip-file>/rdf0421-zcu102-base-trd-2016-4
For rev D / ES1:
% export TRD_HOME=</path/to/downloaded/zip-file>/zcu102-base-trd-2016-4

For some modules, the $PETALINUX environment variables needs to be set as well. This is done automatically when you source the PetaLinux settings.sh script (see PetaLinux installation guide).

For the individual tutorials, follow the links below:



6 Other Information


6.1 Known Issues


  • The board doesn't boot and the INIT_B LED stays red.
    • Frequency: Rare
    • Workaround: Power cycle the board
  • SDSoC accelerator code runs very slow in pure software implementation when Debug configuration is used
    • Frequency: Always
    • Workaround: Set project build configurations to Release which sets sdsoc compiler to optimize most (-O3)
  • Linux 'reboot' command not working
    • Frequency: Always
    • Workaround: Power cycle the board
  • At 1080p and 720p resolutions, the mouse cursor disappears when moved too far to the right and/or bottom of the screen
    • Frequency: Always
    • Workaround: Move mouse toward left and/or top until the cursor reappers on the screen
  • PetaLinux prints the following warning message: WARNING: Failed to pack PMUFW, pre-built PMUFW doesnt exist. See help to load custom pmufw
    • Frequency: Always
    • Workaround: Message can be ignored
  • Video capture cannot be started in GUI for native display of 1280x720 or 1920x1080 in auto-detection mode
    • Frequency: Always
    • Workaround: Edit the file autostart.sh and modify the arguments for the desired target resolution, e.g. for 1920x1080 change line
      video_qt2_wrap.sh &
      to
      video_qt2_wrap.sh -r 1920x1080 &
      or close the application and restart with command
      run_video.sh -r 1920x1080

6.2 Limitations


  • The application only supports the following display resolutions: 3840x2160p30, 1920x1080p60, and 1280x720p60.
  • The application does not support audio.
  • Only USB2.0 webcams are supported at this point.
  • Make sure the DisplayPort cable is plugged in when you power on the board, otherwise the framebuffer console will default to 1024x768 resolution and the application will not start.
  • DP-to-HDMI adapters are not supported, see AR 67462



7 Support


To obtain technical support for this reference design, go to the:
  • Xilinx Answers Database to locate answers to known issues
  • Xilinx Community Forums to ask questions or discuss technical details and issues. Please make sure to browse the existing topics first before filing a new topic. If you do file a new topic, make sure it is filed in the sub-forum that best describes your issue or question e.g. Embedded Linux for any Linux related questions. Please include "ZCU102 Base TRD" and the release version in the topic name along with a brief summary of the issue.

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