Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Wed, 13 Nov 2019 14:37:29 -0700
From:      Ian Lepore <ian@freebsd.org>
To:        ticso@cicely.de
Cc:        freebsd-arm@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Choose between Raspberry Pi 4B 4GB and ROCKPro64
Message-ID:  <d027f6b1c798ae649061c1248a12c7d0838004c0.camel@freebsd.org>
In-Reply-To: <20191113213142.GY43404@cicely7.cicely.de>
References:  <7b75e2ed23e334878fbb3c1d585ffc51.squirrel@10.1.1.11> <20191015220433.GS96402@funkthat.com> <20191112124539.GM43404@cicely7.cicely.de> <1573571378957-0.post@n6.nabble.com> <20191112221610.GN43404@cicely7.cicely.de> <20191112225251.GB4552@funkthat.com> <20191113075343.GP43404@cicely7.cicely.de> <20191113164800.GS43404@cicely7.cicely.de> <0ad483794f3f1163a852025f4aa331efde82fb7d.camel@freebsd.org> <20191113213142.GY43404@cicely7.cicely.de>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Wed, 2019-11-13 at 22:31 +0100, Bernd Walter wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 01:42:13PM -0700, Ian Lepore wrote:
> > On Wed, 2019-11-13 at 17:48 +0100, Bernd Walter wrote:
> > > I just remembered that I own an FTDI FT4232H module.
> > > This one is capable of 12Mbps with 2k Buffers and high speed USB.
> > > I have it at a different location - guess I will have to drive
> > > and
> > > pick it up.
> > 
> > You'll certainly have no trouble with the ftdi 4232.  I've tested
> > those
> > at 6mpbs in both directions concurrently without any data loss.
> > 
> > IMO, breaking free of the 115200 barrier is long overdue, but it
> > would
> > have been nice if the step up everyone took was to 921600, because
> > virtually all usb-serial support that.  With line-level rather than
> > ttl-level adapters, 1mpbs is often the effective speed limit
> > because of
> > the cheap rs232 line-level chips they use.
> 
> I don't think many USB uarts are capable to divide 48MHz into 921600
> *
> oversampling without being off too much.
> The high speed ones are a different beast, since they likely have a
> PLL and run with an internal 480MHz clock.
> 

I don't think I've ever heard of a usb-serial chip that can't do
921600, it's a "standard" speed (115200 * 4).  The newer ftdi chips
still use an external 12mhz clock/crystal, but now they have an
internal pll that kicks it up to 60mhz, then the baudrate generator
divides that down.

-- Ian




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?d027f6b1c798ae649061c1248a12c7d0838004c0.camel>