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User Manual
Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Version: DocId: 02 EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 M2M.GEMALTO.COM Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 2 of 70 Document Name: Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Version: 02 Date: 2014-08-05 DocId: EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Status Confidential / Preliminary GENERAL NOTE THE USE OF THE PRODUCT INCLUDING THE SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION (THE "PRODUCT") IS SUBJECT TO THE RELEASE NOTE PROVIDED TOGETHER WITH PRODUCT. IN ANY EVENT THE PROVISIONS OF THE RELEASE NOTE SHALL PREVAIL. THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS INFORMATION ON GEMALTO M2M PRODUCTS. THE SPECIFICATIONS IN THIS DOCUMENT ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT GEMALTO M2M'S DISCRETION. GEMALTO M2M GMBH GRANTS A NONEXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE THE PRODUCT. THE RECIPIENT SHALL NOT TRANSFER, COPY, MODIFY, TRANSLATE, REVERSE ENGINEER, CREATE DERIVATIVE WORKS; DISASSEMBLE OR DECOMPILE THE PRODUCT OR OTHERWISE USE THE PRODUCT EXCEPT AS SPECIFICALLY AUTHORIZED. THE PRODUCT AND THIS DOCUMENT ARE PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS" BASIS ONLY AND MAY CONTAIN DEFICIENCIES OR INADEQUACIES. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, GEMALTO M2M GMBH DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES AND LIABILITIES. THE RECIPIENT UNDERTAKES FOR AN UNLIMITED PERIOD OF TIME TO OBSERVE SECRECY REGARDING ANY INFORMATION AND DATA PROVIDED TO HIM IN THE CONTEXT OF THE DELIVERY OF THE PRODUCT. THIS GENERAL NOTE SHALL BE GOVERNED AND CONSTRUED ACCORDING TO GERMAN LAW. Copyright Transmittal, reproduction, dissemination and/or editing of this document as well as utilization of its contents and communication thereof to others without express authorization are prohibited. Offenders will be held liable for payment of damages. All rights created by patent grant or registration of a utility model or design patent are reserved. Copyright © 2014, Gemalto M2M GmbH, a Gemalto Company Trademark Notice Gemalto, the Gemalto logo, are trademarks and service marks of Gemalto and are registered in certain countries. Microsoft and Windows are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. All other registered trademarks or trademarks mentioned in this document are property of their respective owners. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 3 of 70 Contents 115 Contents Document History ...................................................................................................... 7 Introduction ................................................................................................................. 8 1.1 Related Documents ........................................................................................... 9 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations ................................................................................... 9 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information ..................................................... 11 1.3.1 Directives and Standards.................................................................... 11 1.3.2 Safety Precautions.............................................................................. 14 1.4 Product Label................................................................................................... 16 Product Concept ....................................................................................................... 17 2.1 Key Features at a Glance ................................................................................ 17 Interface Description ................................................................................................ 20 3.1 Overview .......................................................................................................... 20 3.2 Block Diagram.................................................................................................. 21 3.3 Terminal Circuit................................................................................................ 22 3.4 Operating Modes ............................................................................................. 23 3.5 RS-232 Interface.............................................................................................. 24 3.5.1 9-Pole D-sub Connector ..................................................................... 24 3.6 USB Interface................................................................................................... 25 3.7 Weidmueller GPIO Interface ............................................................................ 25 3.8 Power Supply................................................................................................... 29 3.8.1 Turn Java Terminals on ...................................................................... 30 3.8.2 Reset Java Terminals ......................................................................... 30 3.8.3 Turn Java Terminals off ...................................................................... 30 3.8.4 Disconnecting power supply ............................................................... 31 3.9 Automatic thermal shutdown............................................................................ 32 3.10 Hardware Watchdog ........................................................................................ 32 3.11 RTC.................................................................................................................. 32 3.12 SIM Interface.................................................................................................... 33 3.13 Status LEDs ..................................................................................................... 34 3.14 RF Antenna Interface....................................................................................... 35 Electrical and Environmental Characteristics........................................................ 36 4.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings ............................................................................. 36 4.2 Operating Temperatures.................................................................................. 37 4.3 Storage Conditions .......................................................................................... 38 4.4 Electrical Specifications of the Application Interface........................................ 39 4.4.1 On/Off Control..................................................................................... 39 4.4.2 RS-232 Interface................................................................................. 39 4.4.3 USB Interface...................................................................................... 39 4.4.4 Weidmueller GPIO Interface ............................................................... 40 4.5 Power Supply Ratings...................................................................................... 41 4.6 Antenna Interface............................................................................................. 43 EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 4 of 70 Contents 115 Mechanics, Mounting and Packaging ..................................................................... 45 5.1 Mechanical Dimensions ................................................................................... 45 5.2 Mounting the Java Terminals........................................................................... 47 5.3 Packaging ........................................................................................................ 48 Full Type Approval.................................................................................................... 49 6.1 Gemalto M2M Reference Setup ...................................................................... 49 6.2 Restrictions ...................................................................................................... 50 6.3 CE Conformity.................................................................................................. 50 6.4 EMC ................................................................................................................. 50 6.5 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations ..................................... 51 List of Parts and Accessories.................................................................................. 53 Appendix A: (Hardware) Watchdog......................................................................... 54 8.1 Reset Conditions.............................................................................................. 54 8.1.1 Reset stages ....................................................................................... 55 8.1.2 Reset Delay ........................................................................................ 55 8.2 Restart Conditions ........................................................................................... 55 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface..................................................................... 56 8.3.1 Command Specification ...................................................................... 56 8.4 Configuration via I2C Interface ......................................................................... 65 8.4.1 Command Specification ...................................................................... 65 EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 5 of 70 Figures Figures Figure 1: Figure 2: Figure 3: Figure 4: Figure 5: Figure 6: Figure 7: Figure 8: Figure 9: Figure 10: Figure 11: Figure 12: Figure 13: Figure 14: Figure 15: Figure 16: Figure 17: Figure 18: Figure 19: Sample Java Terminal label (BGS5T USB) .................................................... 16 Java Terminals 3D view .................................................................................. 20 Block diagram ................................................................................................. 21 Java Terminals circuit block diagram .............................................................. 22 Pin assignment RS-232 (D-sub 9-pole female)............................................... 24 EHS5T RS485: Weidmueller connectors (8-pin and 12-pin)........................... 25 EHS6T USB: Weidmueller connectors (8-pin and 12-pin) .............................. 26 BGS5T USB: Weidmueller connectors (8-pin and 12-pin) .............................. 26 6-pole Western jack for power supply, ignition, reset, typical connection ....... 29 SIM interface ................................................................................................... 33 Status LED ...................................................................................................... 34 Antenna connector .......................................................................................... 35 Java Terminals 3D overview ........................................................................... 45 Java Terminals mechanical dimensions ......................................................... 46 Mounting the Java Terminals .......................................................................... 47 Reference equipment for approval.................................................................. 49 Hardware watchdog ........................................................................................ 54 Write data to address register ......................................................................... 68 Read data from address register..................................................................... 69 EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 6 of 70 Tables Tables Table 1: Table 2: Table 3: Table 4: Table 5: Table 6: Table 7: Table 8: Table 9: Table 10: Table 11: Table 12: Table 13: Table 14: Table 15: Table 16: Table 17: Table 18: Table 19: Table 20: Table 21: Table 22: Table 23: Table 24: Table 25: Table 26: Cinterion® Java Terminals overview ................................................................. 8 Terms and abbreviations................................................................................... 9 Directives ........................................................................................................ 11 Standards of North American type approval ................................................... 11 Standards of European type approval............................................................. 11 Requirements of quality .................................................................................. 12 Standards of the Ministry of Information Industry of the People’s Republic of China ............................................................................. 13 Toxic or hazardous substances or elements with defined concentration limits ................................................................................................................ 13 Java Terminals label information .................................................................... 16 Overview of operating modes ......................................................................... 23 9-pole D-sub (female) RS-232 ........................................................................ 24 Weidmueller pin availability............................................................................. 27 Female 6-pole Western plug for power supply, ignition, power down............. 29 Allowed maximum antenna gain (including cable loss)................................... 35 Absolute maximum ratings.............................................................................. 36 Operating supply voltage for Java Terminals.................................................. 36 Board temperature of Java module................................................................. 37 Storage conditions .......................................................................................... 38 On/Off control line specifications..................................................................... 39 RS-232 interface specifications....................................................................... 39 Weidmueller GPIO interface specifications (requirements) ............................ 40 Power supply specifications ............................................................................ 41 RF Antenna interface GSM / UMTS................................................................ 43 List of parts and accessories........................................................................... 53 Address register for I2C commands ................................................................ 66 I2C status result codes .................................................................................... 67 EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 7 of 70 0 Document History Document History Preceding document: "Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description" Version 01 New document: "Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description" Version 02 Chapter What is new 1.4 Revised product label shown in Figure 1. 3.7 Revised section with regard to the Weidmueller pin availability. 4.1 Completed Table 15 giving absolute maximum ratings. 4.2 Added remarks on board temperature. 4.5 Revised and completed section listing power supply ratings. 6.3 Added CE conformity mark. 6.5 Revised section to include notes for IC (also in the Frensh language). Revised and updated Appendix A: (Hardware) Watchdog. New document: "Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description" Version 01 Chapter What is new --- Initial document setup. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 8 of 70 1 Introduction 16 Introduction This document1 describes the hardware of the Cinterion® Java Terminals. The Java Terminals come in three variants depending on the included Cinterion® module and the available interfaces: • • • EHS5T RS485 contains a Cinterion® EHS5-E module and implements a USB 2.0 interface with a USB-B connector as well as a 6-pole Western jack as plug-in power supply connector. Via a Weidmüller GPIO connectors it also implements a RS-485 interface including power supply and ignition line. EHS6T USB contains a Cinterion® EHS6 module and implements a USB 2.0 interface with a USB-B connector and also a V.24 / V.28 RS-232 interface with a D-sub 9-pole female socket as well as a 6-pole Western jack as plug-in power supply connector. BGS5T USB contains a Cinterion® BGS5 module and implements a USB 2.0 interface with a USB-B connector and also a V.24 / V.28 RS-232 interface with a D-sub 9-pole female socket as well as a 6-pole Western jack as plug-in power supply connector. Wherever necessary and appropriate this document distinguishes between these three variants. Table 1 gives a short overview of the available interfaces for the different Java Terminals. Table 1: Cinterion® Java Terminals overview Module/Interface EHS5T RS485 EHS6T USB BGS5T USB Cinterion® module EHS5-E EHS6 BGS5 RS-232 (Sub-D) USB (USB-B) (no RS-485) (no RS-485, Weidmüller connector (GPIOs, SPI, I2C, RS-485) Power supply (RJ-11) RF antenna no SPI) The scope of this document includes interface specifications, electrical as well as mechanical characteristics of the Java Terminals. It specifies standards pertaining to wireless applications and outlines requirements that must be adhered to for successful product design. The Java Terminals are compact GSM/UMTS modems for the transfer of data in GSM/UMTS networks. Industrial standard interfaces and an integrated SIM card reader allow using the Java Terminals easily as GSM/GPRS/UMTS terminals. 1. The document is effective only if listed in the appropriate Release Notes as part of the technical documentation delivered with your Gemalto M2M product. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 9 of 70 1.1 Related Documents 16 1.1 [1] [2] Related Documents AT Command Set for your Java Terminal product Release Notes for your Java Terminal product To visit the Gemalto M2M GmbH Website please use the following link: http://m2m.gemalto.com 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations Table 2: Terms and abbreviations Abbreviation Description ARP Antenna Reference Point ATC AT Command BTS Base Transceiver Station CB Cell Broadcast CODEC Coder-Decoder DCE Data Circuit terminating Equipment DSR Data Set Ready DTR Data Terminal Ready EFR Enhanced Full Rate EGSM Enhanced GSM EMC Electromagnetic Compatibility ESD Electrostatic Discharge ETS European Telecommunication Standard FDMA Frequency Division Multiple Access G.C.F. GSM Conformity Forum GSM Global Standard for Mobile Communication HW Hardware IC Integrated Circuit IF Intermediate Frequency IMEI International Mobile Equipment Identifier I/O Input/ Output IGT Ignition ISO International Standards Organization ITU International Telecommunications Union kbps kbits per second LVD Low voltage Directive EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 10 of 70 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations 16 Table 2: Terms and abbreviations Abbreviation Description Mbps Mbits per second MMI Machine Machine Interface MO Mobile Originated MS Mobile Station MT Mobile Terminated NC Not Connected NTC Negative Temperature Coefficient PA Power Amplifier PCB Printed Circuit Board PCM Pulse Code Modulation PCS Personal Communication System PD Power Down PDU Protocol Data Unit R&TTE Radio and Telecommunication Terminal Equipment RF Radio frequency RI Ring Indication RX Receive direction SIM Subscriber Identification Module SMS Short Message Service SW Software TDD Time Division Duplex TDMA Time Division Multiple Access TX Transmit direction UART Universal Asynchronous Receiver and Transmitter EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 11 of 70 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 16 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 1.3.1 Directives and Standards Java Terminals have been designed to comply with the directives and standards listed below1. Table 3: Directives 99/05/EC Directive of the European Parliament and of the council of 9 March 1999 on radio equipment and telecommunications terminal equipment and the mutual recognition of their conformity (in short referred to as R&TTE Directive 1999/5/EC). The product is labeled with the CE conformity mark 2002/95/EC (RoHS 1) 2011/65/EC (RoHS 2) Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 January 2003 (and revised on 8 June 2011) on the restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment (RoHS) 2002/96/EC Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) 2003/108/EC Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 December 2003 amending directive 2002/96/ec on waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) Table 4: Standards of North American type approval CFR Title 47 “Code of Federal Regulations, Part 15 B, Part 22 and Part 24 (Telecommunications, PCS)”; US Equipment Authorization FCC OET Bulletin 65 (Edition 97-01) Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines for Human Exposure to Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields UL 60 950-1 Product Safety Certification (Safety requirements) NAPRD.03 V5.15 “Overview of PCS Type certification review board Mobile Equipment Type Certification and IMEI control” PCS Type Certification Review board (PTCRB) RSS102 (Issue 4) RSS132 (Issue 3) RSS133 (Issue 6) Canadian Standard IEEE Std. C95.1-1999 IEEE Standard for Safety Levels with Respect to Human Exposure to Radio Frequency Electromagnetic Fields, 3 kHz to 300 GHz Table 5: Standards of European type approval 3GPP TS 51.010-1 “Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2); Mobile Station (MS) conformance specification” ETSI EN 301 511 V9.0.2 Candidate Harmonized European Standard (Telecommunications series) Global System for Mobile communications (GSM); Harmonized standard for mobile stations in the GSM 900 and DCS 1800 bands covering essential requirements under article 3.2 of the R&TTE directive (1999/5/EC) (GSM 13.11 version 7.0.1 Release 1998) GCF-CC V3.49 Global Certification Forum - Certification Criteria 1. Standards of North American type approval do not apply to EHS5T RS485, 3G/WCDMA related standards do not apply to BGS5T USB. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 12 of 70 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 16 Table 5: Standards of European type approval ETSI EN 301 489-1 V1.9.2 Candidate Harmonized European Standard (Telecommunications series) Electro Magnetic Compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Electro Magnetic Compatibility (EMC) standard for radio equipment and services; Part 1: Common Technical Requirements ETSI EN 301 489-7 V1.3.1 Candidate Harmonized European Standard (Telecommunications series) Electro Magnetic Compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Electro Magnetic Compatibility (EMC) standard for radio equipment and services; Part 7: Specific conditions for mobile and portable radio and ancillary equipment of digital cellular radio telecommunications systems (GSM and DCS) ETSI EN 301 489-24 V1.5.1 Electromagnetic Compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) standard for radio equipment and services; Part 24: Specific conditions for IMT-2000 CDMA Direct Spread (UTRA) for Mobile and portable (UE) radio and ancillary equipment ETSI EN 301 908-01 V5.2.1 Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Base Stations (BS) and User Equipment (UE) for IMT-2000 Third Generation cellular networks; Part 1: Harmonized EN for IMT-2000, introduction and common requirements of article 3.2 of the R&TTE Directive ETSI EN 301 908-02 V5.2.1 Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Base Stations (BS) and User Equipment (UE) for IMT-2000 Third Generation cellular networks; Part 2: Harmonized EN for IMT-2000, CDMA Direct Spread (UTRA FDD) (UE) covering essential requirements of article 3.2 of the R&TTE Directive EN 62311-2008 Assessment of electronic and electrical equipment related to human exposure restrictions for electromagnetic fields (0 Hz - 300 GHz) EN 60950-1 (2006)+ A11:2009+A1:2010+ AC:2011+A12:2011 Safety of information technology equipment Table 6: Requirements of quality IEC 60068 Environmental testing DIN EN 60529 IP codes EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 13 of 70 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 16 Table 7: Standards of the Ministry of Information Industry of the People’s Republic of China SJ/T 11363-2006 “Requirements for Concentration Limits for Certain Hazardous Substances in Electronic Information Products” (2006-06). SJ/T 11364-2006 “Marking for Control of Pollution Caused by Electronic Information Products” (2006-06). According to the “Chinese Administration on the Control of Pollution caused by Electronic Information Products” (ACPEIP) the EPUP, i.e., Environmental Protection Use Period, of this product is 20 years as per the symbol shown here, unless otherwise marked. The EPUP is valid only as long as the product is operated within the operating limits described in the Hardware Interface Description. Please see Table 1.3.2 for an overview of toxic or hazardous substances or elements that might be contained in product parts in concentrations above the limits defined by SJ/T 11363-2006. Table 8: Toxic or hazardous substances or elements with defined concentration limits EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 14 of 70 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 16 1.3.2 Safety Precautions The following safety precautions must be observed during all phases of the operation, usage, service or repair of any cellular terminal or mobile incorporating Java Terminals. Manufacturers of the cellular terminal are advised to convey the following safety information to users and operating personnel and incorporate these guidelines into all manuals supplied with the product. Failure to comply with these precautions violates safety standards of design, manufacture and intended use of the product. Gemalto M2M GmbH assumes no liability for customer’s failure to comply with these precautions. When in hospitals or other health care facilities, observe the restrictions on the use of mobiles. Switch off the cellular terminal or mobile if to be instructed to do so by the guidelines posted in sensitive areas. Medical equipment may be sensitive to RF energy. The operation of cardiac pacemakers, other implanted medical equipment and hearing aids can be affected by interference from cellular terminals or mobiles placed close to the device. If in doubt about potential danger, contact the physician or the manufacturer of the device to verify that the equipment is properly shielded. Pacemaker patients are advised to keep their hand-held mobile away from the pacemaker, while it is on. This personal subgroup always should check the distance to the mobile. Switch off the cellular terminal or mobile before boarding an aircraft. Make sure it cannot be switched on inadvertently. The operation of wireless appliances in an aircraft is forbidden to prevent interference with communications systems. Failure to observe these instructions may lead to the suspension or denial of cellular services to the offender, legal action, or both. Check the local and actual laws about these themes. Do not operate the cellular terminal or mobile in the presence of flammable gases or fumes. Switch off the cellular terminal when you are near petrol stations, fuel depots, chemical plants or where blasting operations are in progress. Operation of any electrical equipment in potentially explosive atmospheres can constitute a safety hazard. Your cellular terminal or mobile receives and transmits radio frequency energy while switched on. Remember that interference can occur if it is used close to TV sets, radios, computers or inadequately shielded equipment. Follow any special regulations and always switch off the cellular terminal or mobile wherever forbidden, or when you suspect that it may cause interference or danger. Road safety comes first! Do not use a hand-held cellular terminal or mobile while driving a vehicle unless it is securely mounted in a holder for speakerphone operation. Before making a call with a hand-held terminal or mobile park the vehicle. Speakerphones must be installed by qualified personnel. Faulty installation or operation can constitute a safety hazard. Check the actual and local laws about these themes. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 15 of 70 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 16 IMPORTANT! Cellular terminals or mobiles operate using radio signals and cellular networks. In that case connections cannot be guaranteed at all times under all conditions. Therefore, you should never rely solely upon any wireless device for essential communications, for example emergency calls. Remember, in order to make calls or receive calls the cellular terminal or mobile must be switched on in a service area with adequate cellular signal strength. Some networks do not allow for emergency calls if certain network services or phone features are in use (e.g. lock functions, fixed dialing etc.). You may need to deactivate those features before you can make an emergency call. Some networks require a valid SIM card to be properly inserted in the cellular terminal or mobile. If a power supply unit is used to supply the device it must meet the demands placed on SELV circuits in accordance with EN60950. The maximum permissible connection length between the device and the supply source should not exceed 3m. According to the guidelines for human exposure to radio frequency energy, an antenna connected to the FME jack of the device should be placed at least 20cm away from human bodies. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 16 of 70 1.4 Product Label 16 1.4 Product Label The label fixed to the bottom of a Java Terminal comprises the following information. 10 11 12 14 15 13 16 Figure 1: Sample Java Terminal label (BGS5T USB) Table 9: Java Terminals label information No. Information Cinterion logo Product name Product variant Marking "Made in Germany" Product ordering number Barcode (Code128) Product IMEI Date code WEEE symbol (see Table 3) 10 Chinese RoHS symbol (see Table 7) 11 CE logo with fixed notified body number (may be replaced for samples with "Not for sale") 12 FCC ID 13 IC ID 14 Manufacturer code 15 Power supply unit ratings 16 Manufacturer code (2D) EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 17 of 70 2 Product Concept 19 Product Concept 2.1 Key Features at a Glance Feature Implementation General Incorporates Cinterion® Java module The Java module handles all signal and data processing within the Java Terminals. Internal software runs the application interface and the complete GSM/UMTS protocol stack. Frequency bands EHS5T RS485 (with EHS5-E module): GSM/GPRS/EDGE: Dual band GSM 900/1800MHz UMTS/HSPA+: Dual band UMTS 900/2100MHz EHS6T USB (with EHS6 module): GSM/GPRS/EDGE: Quad band 850/900/1800/1900MHz UMTS/HSPA+: Five band 800/850/900/1900/2100MHz BGS5T USB (with BGS5 module): GSM/GPRS: Quad band 850/900/1800/1900MHz GSM class Small MS Output power (according to Release 99, V5) depending on frequency band supported by module Class 4 (+33dBm ±2dB) for EGSM850 Class 4 (+33dBm ±2dB) for EGSM900 Class 1 (+30dBm ±2dB) for GSM1800 Class 1 (+30dBm ±2dB) for GSM1900 Class E2 (+27dBm ± 3dB) for GSM 850 8-PSK Class E2 (+27dBm ± 3dB) for GSM 900 8-PSK Class E2 (+26dBm +3 /-4dB) for GSM 1800 8-PSK Class E2 (+26dBm +3 /-4dB) for GSM 1900 8-PSK Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 2100, WCDMA FDD BdI Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 1900,WCDMA FDD BdII Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 900, WCDMA FDD BdVIII Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 850, WCDMA FDD BdV Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 800, WCDMA FDD BdVI The values stated above are maximum limits. According to Release 99, the maximum output power in a multislot configuration may be lower. The nominal reduction of maximum output power varies with the number of uplink timeslots used and amounts to 3.0dB for 2Tx. Power supply Single supply voltage 8V to 30V Operating temperature Normal operation: -30°C to +85°C Extended operation: -40°C to -30°C and +85°C to +90°C Physical Dimensions: 113.5mm x 75mm x 25.5mm (excluding antenna and serial interface connectors) Weight: 120g (approx.) RoHS, WEEE All hardware components are fully compliant with the EU RoHS and WEEE Directives HSPA features 3GPP Release 6,7 (EHSxT only) DL 7.2Mbps, UL 5.7Mbps HSDPA Cat.8 / HSUPA Cat.6 data rates Compressed mode (CM) supported according to 3GPP TS25.212 EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 18 of 70 2.1 Key Features at a Glance 19 Feature Implementation UMTS features 3GPP Release 4 (EHSxT only) PS data rate – 384 kbps DL / 384 kbps UL CS data rate – 64 kbps DL / 64 kbps UL GSM / GPRS / EDGE features Data transfer GPRS: • Multislot Class 12 • Full PBCCH support • Mobile Station Class B • Coding Scheme 1 – 4 EGPRS (EHSxT only): • Multislot Class 12 • EDGE E2 power class for 8 PSK • Downlink coding schemes – CS 1-4, MCS 1-9 • Uplink coding schemes – CS 1-4, MCS 1-9 • SRB loopback and test mode B • 8-bit, 11-bit RACH • PBCCH support • 1 phase/2 phase access procedures • Link adaptation and IR • NACC, extended UL TBF • Mobile Station Class B CSD: • V.110, RLP, non-transparent • 2.4, 4.8, 9.6, 14.4kbps • USSD SMS • • • • Point-to-point MT and MO Cell broadcast Text and PDU mode Software AT commands Hayes 3GPP TS 27.007, TS 27.005, Gemalto M2M Java™ Open Platform Java™ Open Platform with • Java™ profile IMP-NG & CLDC 1.1 HI • Secure data transmission via HTTPS/SSL • Multi-threading programming and multi-application execution Major benefits: seamless integration into Java applications, ease of programming, no need for application microcontroller, extremely cost-efficient hardware and software design – ideal platform for industrial GSM applications. The memory space available for Java programs is around 10MB in the flash file system and around 6MB RAM. Application code and data share the space in the flash file system and in RAM. SIM Application Toolkit SAT Release 99 TCP/IP stack Protocols: TCP server/client, UDP, HTTP, FTP, SMTP, POP3 Access by AT commands Firmware update Upgradeable via serial or USB interface EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 19 of 70 2.1 Key Features at a Glance 19 Feature Implementation Interfaces USB interfaces USB 2.0 Slave interface RS232 RS-232 interface for AT commands and data: • Supports RTS/CTS hardware handshake • Supports software XON/XOFF flow control • Multiplex ability according to GSM 07.10 Multiplexer protocol • Baud rates from 1200bps to 230400bps • Autobauding supported Weidmueller connector 20-pin (8-pin and 12-pin) header with GPIO interface, external power supply, ADC, SPI, I²C and RS-485 option, depending on variant Power connector 6-pole Western connector (female) for power supply, ignition, power down signal SIM card reader Supported SIM cards: 3V, 1.8V Antenna Antenna connected via female SMA connector Power on/off, Reset Power on DTR line at RS-232 interface, IGT_IN line at power connector or watchdog Power off Normal switch-off by AT^SMSO or external On/Off push button Automatic switch-off in case of critical temperature conditions Reset Orderly shutdown and reset by AT command Emergency restart via RST_IN line at power connector or via watchdog Special features Real time clock Timer functions via AT commands Phonebook SIM card and terminal (Hardware) Watchdog Configurable watchdog to control module EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 20 of 70 3 Interface Description 35 Interface Description 3.1 Overview Java Terminals provide the following interfaces for power supply, antenna, SIM card and data transfer: • • • • • • 6-pin Western connector (female) for power supply, ignition, power down signal SMA antenna connectors (female) for RF antenna and future Rx diversity or GPS antennas SIM card reader 9-pin (female) D-sub connector (RS-232 interface) 4-pin (female) USB-B connector 12-pin and 8-pin Weidmueller GPIO connectors (including RS-485) SIM card reader Western jack for power supply RJ-45 Ethernet connector (for future use, currently not available) D-sub socket (RS-232 interface) (not for EHS5T RS485) GPS antenna SMA connector (for future use, currently not available) USB connector SIM card reader RF antenna SMA connector 20-pin Weidmueller connector (8-pin and 12-pin) Rx diversity antenna SMA connector (for future use; currently not available) Figure 2: Java Terminals 3D view EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 21 of 70 3.2 Block Diagram 35 3.2 Block Diagram Figure 3 shows a block diagram of a sample configuration that incorporates a Java Terminal and typical accessories. RF antenna interface RS-232 driver Antenna RF antenna interface Not for EHS5T RS485 USB Host controller Java module Weidmueller GPIO driver/interface IGT_IN RST_IN SIM card interface SIM card Power supply LEDs Power regulation Java Terminal Power supply External application Figure 3: Block diagram EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 22 of 70 3.3 Terminal Circuit 35 3.3 Terminal Circuit Figure 4 shows a general Java Terminal block diagram that includes all variants. Not every interface is available for all Terminal products. GPIO Driver bidirect. EMC GPIO connector 12‐pin RS232 interface VCCref D‐Sub 9‐pin Level‐ shifter EMC GPIO22/WD_RETRIG (Hardware) Watchdog RS232 driver EMC GPIO connector 8‐pin Batt+ Supply RS485 RFin EMC CCxxx Batt+ Java module LED LED active link Electronic SIM (opt.) LED LED green yellow SIM card interface SMA female SMA female Antenna interfaces for future use (GNSS, Rx diversity) Rfin SIM card holder I²C Driver LED drivers LED Antenna interface Power supply MII Quartz SMA female Quartz Western Jack 6‐pin Magnetics (for future use) Ethernet RJ45 10/100 Ethernet Phy Controller KSZ8721 RFout Micro controller EMERG_RST EMC (on/off) EMC USB ON USB‐B connector Alternative USB or Ethernet connector V180 Vreg Batt+ USB Batt+ Line regulator DC/DC converter EMC power Figure 4: Java Terminals circuit block diagram EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 23 of 70 3.4 Operating Modes 35 3.4 Operating Modes The table below briefly summarizes the various operating modes referred to in the following chapters. Table 10: Overview of operating modes Normal operation GSM IDLE Software is active. Once registered to the GSM network paging with BTS is carried out. The Terminal is ready to send and receive. Watchdog active. GSM TALK GSM DATA Connection between two subscribers is in progress. Power consumption depends on network coverage individual settings, such as DTX off/on, FR/EFR/HR, hopping sequences, antenna. Watchdog active. GPRS / UMTS / HSPA Terminal is ready for GPRS data transfer, but no data is IDLE currently sent or received. Power consumption depends on network settings and GPRS configuration (e.g. multislot settings). Watchdog active. POWER DOWN GPRS DATA GPRS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on network settings (e.g. power control level), uplink / downlink data rates, GPRS configuration (e.g. used multislot settings) and reduction of maximum output power. Watchdog active. EGPRS DATA (EHSxT only) EGPRS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on network settings (e.g. power control level), uplink / downlink data rates, EGPRS configuration (e.g. used multislot settings) and reduction of maximum output power. Watchdog active. UMTS TALK UMTS DATA (EHSxT only) UMTS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on network settings (e.g. TPC Pattern) and data transfer rate. Watchdog active. HSPA DATA (EHSxT only) HSPA data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on network settings (e.g. TPC Pattern) and data transfer rate. Watchdog active. Normal shutdown after sending the AT^SMSO command. The RTC works continuously, but the software is not active. Interfaces are not accessible. Watchdog continues to operate, depending on its configuration. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 24 of 70 3.5 RS-232 Interface 35 3.5 RS-232 Interface The RS-232 interface is not available for EHS5T RS485. The interface is implemented as a serial asynchronous transmitter and receiver conforming to ITU-T V.24 Interchange Circuits DCE. It is configured for 8 data bits, no parity and 1 stop bit, and can be operated at bit rates from 1200bps to 921kbps. Autobauding supports bit rates from 1.2kbps to 230kbps. For more information see also Section 3.5.1. 3.5.1 9-Pole D-sub Connector Via RS-232 interface, the host controller controls the Java Terminals and transports data. Figure 5: Pin assignment RS-232 (D-sub 9-pole female) Table 11: 9-pole D-sub (female) RS-232 Pin no. Signal name I/O Function DCD Data Carrier Detected RXD Receive Data TXD Transmit Data DTR Data Terminal Ready Attention: The ignition of Java Terminals is activated via a rising edge of high potential (+3 ... +15 V) GND Ground DSR Data Set Ready RTS Request To Send CTS Clear To Send RING Ring Indication Java Terminals are designed for use as a DCE. Based on the conventions for DCE-DTE connections it communicates with the customer application (DTE) using the following signals: • Port TxD @ application sends data to TXD of the Java Terminals • Port RxD @ application receives data from RXD of the Java Terminals Hardware handshake using the RTS and CTS signals and XON/XOFF software flow control are supported. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 25 of 70 3.6 USB Interface 35 In addition, the modem control signals DTR, DSR, DCD and RING are available. The modem control signal RING (Ring Indication) can be used to indicate, to the cellular device application, that a call or Unsolicited Result Code (URC) is received. There are different modes of operation, which can be set with AT commands. Note: The DTR signal will only be polled once per second from the internal firmware of Java Terminals. 3.6 USB Interface The Java Terminals support a USB 2.0 High Speed (480Mbit/s) device interface that is Full Speed (12Mbit/s) compliant. The USB interface can be used as command and data interface and for downloading firmware. It is only available as a slave device and not able to act as a USB host. 3.7 Weidmueller GPIO Interface The Weidmueller connectors (8-pin and 12-pin) provide access to various module signals including a number of configurable GPIOs. Note that not all of the Weidmueller pins are available for every Java Terminal variant. The following figures show the available pins for the Java Terminal variants and the below Table 12 lists the overall availablility of the Weidmueller pins. EHS5T RS485: GPIO6 GPIO7 n/a GPIO8 n/a n/a n/a VCCref n/a +5Vout GND TXD1/ RXD1/ A+ SPI_MISO SPI_MOSI (RS485) DSR0/ I2CDAT ADC1_IN/ SPI_CLK 10 I2CCLK B(RS485) 11 12 GPIO20 GPIO21 n/a: not applicable Figure 6: EHS5T RS485: Weidmueller connectors (8-pin and 12-pin) EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 26 of 70 3.7 Weidmueller GPIO Interface 35 EHS6T USB: GPIO6 GPIO7 GPIO8 GPIO11 VCCref GPIO12 GPIO13 GPIO14 GPIO15 +5Vout GND TXD1/ RXD1/ CTS1 RTS1 SPI_MISO SPI_MOSI (RS232)/ (RS232/ SPI_CS DSR0/ I2CDAT ADC1_IN/ SPI_CLK 10 I2CCLK 11 12 GPIO20 GPIO21 Figure 7: EHS6T USB: Weidmueller connectors (8-pin and 12-pin) BGS5T USB: GPIO6 GPIO7 n/a GPIO8 n/a n/a n/a GND TXD1 RXD1 10 +5Vout DSR0/ ADC1_IN VCCref n/a I2CDAT I2CCLK CTS1 RTS1 (RS232)/ (RS232/ 11 12 GPIO20 GPIO21 n/a: not applicable Figure 8: BGS5T USB: Weidmueller connectors (8-pin and 12-pin) EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 27 of 70 3.7 Weidmueller GPIO Interface 35 The following Table 12 shows the availablility of the Weidmueller pins for various Java Terminal variants. Table 12: Weidmueller pin availability PI Signal Comment EHS5T RS485 EHS6T USB BGS5T USB 8-pin connector GPIO6 Configurable via AT command, also as PWM2 signal GPIO7 Configurable via AT command, also as PWM1 signal GPIO8 Configurable via AT command, also as COUNTER signal GPIO11 Configurable via AT command GPIO12 Configurable via AT command GPIO13 Configurable via AT command GPIO14 Configurable via AT command GPIO15 Configurable via AT command Input supply for level converter to specify external power level (e.g., connect +5Vout for 5V power level) 12-pin connector VCCref GND TXD1 or SPI_MISO Configurable via AT command, also as SPI_MISO signal TXD1 or SPI_MI SO TXD1 or SPI_MISO TXD1 RXD1 or SPI_MOSI Configurable via AT command, also as SPI_MOSI signal RXD1 or SPI_M OSI RXD1 or SPI_MOSI RXD1 CTS1 or SPI_CS or A+ Either CTS1 (for RS-232) or SPI_CS or A+ (for RS-485) depending on product variant A+ (RS485) CTS1 or SPI_CS CTS1 RTS1 or B- Either RTS1 (for RS-232) or BB(for RS-485) depending on prod- (RSuct variant 485 RTS1 RTS1 +5Vout External power supply up to 100mA, usable as VCCref input DSR0 or ADC1_IN or SPI_CLK Configurable via AT command I2CDAT I2C interface 10 I2CCLK I2C interface 11 GPIO20 Configurable via AT command 12 GPIO21 Configurable via AT command (no SPI) Please refer to the respective “AT Command Set“ for details on how to configure the GPIO pins. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 28 of 70 3.7 Weidmueller GPIO Interface 35 EHS5T‘s RS-485 interface is based on the TIA/EIA-485 standard defining electrical characteristics of drivers and receivers for use in balanced multidrop communication systems. RS-485 is used in a lot of different fieldbus systems like Profibus, Interbus, Modbus and P-net. RS-485 uses a shielded twisted pair cable where the shield is used as ground return, and the inner pairs are used for balanced communication. The two conductors in each pair are called A and B. RS-485 is usually half-duplex. Data transmission speed depends on the length of the RS-485 bus cable and may be up to 115kbps. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 29 of 70 3.8 Power Supply 35 3.8 Power Supply The power supply of the Java Terminals has to be a single voltage source of VPLUS=8V…30V capable of providing a peak current (pulsed 2x577ms at T=4.615ms) of about 1.2A at 8V during an active transmission. The uplink burst causes strong ripple (drop) on the power lines. The drop voltage should not exceed 1V, but the absolute minimum voltage during drops must be >7.6V. The Java Terminals are protected from supply voltage reversal. An external fast acting fuse >0.4A with melting integral I2t (0.15 … 0.25)A2s is necessary to use the Java Terminals at a 12V or 24V unlimited power supply system. The power supply must be compliant with the EN60950 guidelines. A switching regulator regulates the input voltage for the internal supply. When power fails for >1ms, Java Terminals reset or switch off. The watchdog can be configured to restart the Java Terminals. When power fails for >15s the RTC will be reset. Table 13: Female 6-pole Western plug for power supply, ignition, power down Pin Signal name Use Parameters PLUS Power supply 8V – 30V DC, max. 33V for 1 min PLUS Power supply 8V – 30V DC, max. 33V for 1 min RST_IN Signal for module reset UIH > 8V for t>10ms resets the terminal. UIL <2V and low level for normal operation. IGT_IN Ignition GND Ground 0V GND Ground 0V UIH >8V Ignition >8V for more than 200ms switches the Java Terminals on. Ignition is activated only by a rising edge. The rise time is <20ms Pin assignmment and typical connection: 654321 1 PLUS 2 PLUS 3 RST_IN 4 IGT_IN 5 GND 6 GND VPLUS DC Figure 9: 6-pole Western jack for power supply, ignition, reset, typical connection Mains adapter: If it fits into the design of your application we recommend the plug-in supply unit used with the type approved Gemalto M2M reference setup. Ordering information can be found in Chapter 7. This 12V mains adapter comes with a 6-pole Western plug and provides an internal connection between IGT_IN pin and PLUS pin for auto ignition (power up). EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 30 of 70 3.8 Power Supply 35 3.8.1 Turn Java Terminals on Java Terminals are turned on by plugging an appropriate power supply unit between PLUS and GND of the 6-pole Western jack. While the RST_IN pin (pin 3) is not active (voltage <2V) you can start the Java Terminals by activating the RS-232 DTR line if in POWER DOWN mode. The IGT_IN signal (pin 4) may be used to switch on Java Terminals if in POWER DOWN mode. The watchdog can also be configured to turn the Java Terminals on if in POWER DOWN mode. After startup of the Java Terminals the RS-232 lines are in an undefined state for approx. 900ms. This may cause undefined characters to be transmitted over the RS-232 lines during this period. 3.8.2 Reset Java Terminals An easy way to reset the Java Terminals is entering the command AT+CFUN=x,1. For details on AT+CFUN please see [1]. The watchdog can also be configured to reset the Java Terminals if in POWER DOWN mode. As an alternative, you can shut down the Java Terminals as described in Section 3.8.3 and then restart it as described in Section 3.8.1. 3.8.3 Turn Java Terminals off Normal shutdown: • To turn off the Java Terminals use the AT^SMSO command, rather than disconnecting the mains adapter. This procedure lets the Java Terminals log off from the network and allows the software to enter a secure state and save data before disconnecting the power supply. After AT^SMSO has been entered the Java Terminals returns the following result codes: ^SMSO: MS OFF OK ^SHUTDOWN The "^SHUTDOWN" result code indicates that the Java Terminals turns off in less than 1 second. After the shutdown procedure is complete the Java Terminals enters the POWER DOWN mode. The yellow LED stops flashing (see Section 3.13 for a detailed LED description). The RTC is still fed from the voltage regulator in the power supply ASIC. Please note that if there is an auto ignition connection between PLUS and IGT_IN the module will restart automatically after a normal shutdown. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 31 of 70 3.8 Power Supply 35 Emergency restart: • In the event of software hang-ups etc. the Java Terminals can be restarted by applying a voltage >8V to the RST_IN pin (pin 3) for more than 10ms. The RST_IN signal restarts the Java Terminals. Caution: Use the RST_IN pin only when, due to serious problems, the software is not responding for more than 5 seconds. Pulling the RST_IN pin causes the loss of all information stored in the volatile memory since power is cut off immediately. Therefore, this procedure is intended only for use in case of emergency, e.g. if Java Terminals fails to shut down properly. Watchdog shutdown: • The watchdog can also be configured to turn the Java Terminals off. When the Java Terminals enter the POWER DOWN mode, e.g. after you have issued the AT^SMSO command or activated the RST_IN signal, all RS-232 interface lines are active for a period of 50ms to max. 3.5s. This may cause undefined characters to be transmitted on the RS-232 lines which can be ignored. 3.8.4 Disconnecting power supply Before disconnecting the power supply from the PLUS pin, make sure that the Java Terminals are in a safe condition. The best way is to wait 1s after the "^SHUTDOWN" result code has been indicated. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 32 of 70 3.9 Automatic thermal shutdown 35 3.9 Automatic thermal shutdown An on-board NTC measures the temperature of the built-in BGS2 module. If over- or undertemperature is detected on the module the Java Terminals automatically shut down to avoid thermal damage to the system. Table 17 specifies the ambient temperature threshold for the Java Terminals. The automatic shutdown procedure is equivalent to the power-down initiated with the AT^SMSO command, i.e. Java Terminals log off from the network and the software enters a secure state avoiding loss of data. In IDLE mode it takes typically one minute to deregister from the network and to switch off. Alert messages transmitted before the Java Terminals switch off are implemented as Unsolicited Result codes (URCs). For details see the description of AT^SCTM command provided in [1]. Thermal shutdown will be deferred if a critical temperature limit is exceeded, while an emergency call or a call to a predefined phone number is in progress, or during a two minute guard period after power up. See [1] for details. The watchdog can be configured to restart the Java Terminals after a defined period. 3.10 Hardware Watchdog The Java Terminals feature a programmable hardware watchdog that permanently monitors the terminals‘ hardware and can be configured to react to various hardware states. The watchdog may for example be configured to periodically restart the terminal, independant of its current operating state. Figure 4 shows how the watchdog is integrated into the Java Terminals. Please refer to Chapter 8 for details on how to control and configure the hardware watchdog. 3.11 RTC The internal Real Time Clock (RTC) of the Java Terminals retains the time and date and handles the alarm (reminder) function. The AT+CCLK command serves to set the time and date, and AT+CALA specifies a reminder message. See [1] for details. A dedicated voltage regulator backs up the RTC even in Power Down mode and enables Java Terminals to keep track of time and date. However, please note that the Alarm mode described in [1], Section AT+CALA, is not intended for the Java Terminals. The AT+CALA command can only be used to set a reminder message, but not to configure the mobile to wake up from POWER DOWN mode into Alarm mode. Therefore, after setting a timer with AT+CALA be sure not to shut down the Java Terminals by AT^SMSO or RST_IN signal. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 33 of 70 3.12 SIM Interface 35 3.12 SIM Interface The SIM interface is intended for 1.8V and 3V SIM cards in accordance with GSM 11.12 Phase 2. The card holder is a five wire interface according to GSM 11.11. A sixth pin has been added to detect whether or not a SIM card is inserted. SIM inserted Figure 10: SIM interface The SIM - with the circuit side facing upwards - is inserted by gently pushing it into the SIM card holder until it snaps hold. It is now protected from accidental removal. The SIM can be removed from the card holder by using a flat object such as a screwdriver to carefully press the inserted SIM until it snaps out again. All signals of the SIM interface are protected from electrostatic discharge with spark gaps to GND and clamp diodes to 1.8V resp. 2.9V and GND. Removing and inserting the SIM card during operation requires the software to be reinitialized. Therefore, after reinserting the SIM card it is necessary to restart Java Terminals. Note: No guarantee can be given, nor any liability accepted, if loss of data is encountered after removing the SIM card during operation. Also, no guarantee can be given for properly initializing any SIM card that the user inserts after having removed a SIM card during operation. In this case, the application must restart the Java Terminals. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 34 of 70 3.13 Status LEDs 35 3.13 Status LEDs Java Terminals have two LEDs indicating its operating states through the semitransparent casing: • A green LED indicates whether the Java Terminals are ready to operate. • A yellow LED indicates the network registration state of the Java Terminals. Green LED (Power on/off) Yellow LED (Network status) Figure 11: Status LED The yellow LED is driven by a line of the integrated module that can be configured by using the AT^SLED command to either light permanently or to flash. For details on the AT command please refer to [1]. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 35 of 70 3.14 RF Antenna Interface 35 3.14 RF Antenna Interface An external RF antenna is connected via the Java Terminals’s female SMA connector that is also the antenna reference point (ARP). Figure 12: Antenna connector The system impedance is 50. In any case, for good RF performance, the return loss of the customer application’s antenna should be better than 10dB (VSWR < 2). Java Terminals withstand a total mismatch at this connector when transmitting with power control level for maximum RF power. Inside the Java module an inductor to ground provides additional ESD protection to the antenna connector. To protect the inductor from damage no DC voltage must be applied to the antenna circuit. For the application it is recommended to use an antenna with an SMA (male) connector: Please note that the terminal should be installed and operated with a minimum distance of 20cm between the antenna connected to the terminal and any human bodies. Also, the transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. The allowed maximum antenna gain (including cable loss) for stand-alone situation is given below in Table 14. Table 14: Allowed maximum antenna gain (including cable loss) Module 850MHz 900MHz 1800MHz 1900MHz 2100MHz EHS6T USB 3.42dBi 4.18dBi 9.64dBi 2.51dBi 15.54dBi BGS5T USB 2.15dBi 2.15dBi 2.15dBi 2.15dBi na EHS5T RS485 na 6.10dBi 12.30dBi na 12.30dBi EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 36 of 70 4 Electrical and Environmental Characteristics 44 Electrical and Environmental Characteristics 4.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings Table 15: Absolute maximum ratings Parameter Port / Description Min. Max. Unit Supply voltage PLUS -40 30 Overvoltage PLUS / for 1min 33 Input voltage for on/off control lines IGT_IN, RST_IN -5 30 RS-232 input voltage TXD, DTR, RTS -25 +25 -0.3 Weidmueller pins input volt- 8-pin and 12-pin connectors age (incl. VCCref) (if pins specified/configured as input pins) Weidmueller pins output current 8-pin and 12-pin connectors (if pins specified/configured as output pins) 50mA drawn @each pin1 -- USB interface All electrical characteristics according to -USB Implementers' Forum, USB 2.0 Specification. -- -- Immunity against discharge of static electricity All interfaces (lines) Contact discharge Human body model +8 +15 kV kV -8 -15 1. Please note that if the VCCref pin is connected to the +5Vout pin, no more than 100mA should be drawn by all pins. In this case it is no longer allowed to draw a maximum of 50mA for each pin. Table 16: Operating supply voltage for Java Terminals Parameter Min Typ Max Unit Supply voltage PLUS measured at (6-pole) western jack plug (1 to 6) @any time, incl. all ripple and drops 5.5 12 30 EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 37 of 70 4.2 Operating Temperatures 44 4.2 Operating Temperatures Table 17: Board temperature of Java module Parameter Min Max Unit Normal operation -30 +85 °C -40 to -30 +85 to +90 °C <-40 >+90 °C Extended operation1 Automatic thermal shutdown 1. Extended operation allows normal mode speech calls or data transmission for limited time until automatic thermal shutdown takes effect. Within the extended temperature range (outside the normal operating temperature range) the specified electrical characteristics may be in- or decreased. 2. Due to temperature measurement uncertainty, a tolerance of ±3°C on these switching thresholds may occur. Note: Within the specified operating temperature ranges the board temperature may vary to a great extent depending on operating mode, used frequency band, radio output power and current supply voltage. Note also the differences and dependencies that usually exist between board (PCB) temperature of the Java module and its ambient temperature. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 38 of 70 4.3 Storage Conditions 44 4.3 Storage Conditions Table 18: Storage conditions Type Condition Unit Reference Air temperature: Low High -30 +75 °C ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 60068-2-1 Ab ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 60068-2-2 Bb Humidity relative: Low High Condens. 10 90 at 30°C 90-100 at 30°C --ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 60068-2-56 Cb ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 60068-2-30 Db Air pressure: Low High 70 106 kPa IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1K4 IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1K4 Movement of surrounding air 1.0 m/s IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1K4 Water: rain, dripping, icing and frosting Not allowed --- --- Radiation: 1120 600 W/m2 ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 60068-2-2 Bb ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 60068-2-2 Bb Solar Heat Chemically active substances Not recommended IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1C1L Mechanically active substances Not recommended IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1S1 IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1M2 Vibration sinusoidal: Displacement Acceleration Frequency range 1.5 2-9 9-200 Shocks: Shock spectrum Duration Acceleration semi-sinusoidal ms 50 m/s2 mm m/s2 Hz IEC 60068-2-27 Ea The conditions stated above are only valid for devices in their original packed state in weather protected, non-temperature-controlled storage locations. Normal storage time under these conditions is 12 months maximum. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 39 of 70 4.4 Electrical Specifications of the Application Interface 44 4.4 Electrical Specifications of the Application Interface 4.4.1 On/Off Control Table 19: On/Off control line specifications Parameter Description Conditions Min. Vhigh Input voltage IGT_IN, RST_IN active high Input voltage DTR active high Vlow Vhigh Vlow Typ Max. Unit 28 +15 -15 1.2 M RIN Input resistance of IGT_IN, RST_IN RIN Input resistance of DTR k 4.4.2 RS-232 Interface Table 20: RS-232 interface specifications Parameter Description Conditions Min. Typ Max. Unit VOUT Transmitter output voltage for RXD, CTS, DSR, DCD, RING @ 3k load ±5 ±6 ±7 ROUT Transmitter output resistance RXD, CTS, DSR, DCD, RING 300 RIN Resistance TXD, RTS, DTR VIn Receiver input voltage range TXD, RTS, DTR -25 VRIHYS Input hysteresis VIlow Input threshold low VIhigh Input threshold high 0.6 4.4.3 k +25 0.5 1.2 1.5 Baudrate LECable 2.4 Autobauding 1.2 230 kbps Fixed range 1.2 230 kbps Length of RS-232 cable 1.8 USB Interface All electrical characteristics according to USB Implementers' Forum, USB 2.0 Specification. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 40 of 70 4.4 Electrical Specifications of the Application Interface 44 4.4.4 Weidmueller GPIO Interface Table 21: Weidmueller GPIO interface specifications (requirements) Function Signal name IO Signal form and level Comment 8-pin, 12pin connectors for: GPIO, Power, I2C and ASC1, SPI, RS-485 GPIO 6-8 GPIO 11-15 GPIO 20-21 IO VOLmax = 0.1V at I = 100µA VOLmax = 0.55V at I = 32mA VOHmin = VCCref - 0.1V at I = 100µA VOHmin = VCCref - 0.4V at I < 12mA VOHmin = VCCref - 0.7V at I < 32mA VILmax = 0.3 * VCCref VIHmin = 0.7 * VCCref If unused keep lines open. Please note that some GPIO lines are or can be configured for functions other than GPIO: GPIO6/GPIO7: PWM GPIO8: Pulse Counter VCCref Vimax = 5.5V Vimin = 1.8V GND -- -- TXD1/ SPI_MISO If unused keep lines open. RXD1/ SPI_MOSI CTS1/A+/ SPI_CS VOLmax = 0.1V at I = 100µA VOLmax = 0.55V at I = 32mA VOHmin = VCCref - 0.1V at I = 100µA VOHmin = VCCref - 0.4V at I < 12mA VOHmin = VCCref - 0.7V at I < 32mA VILmax = 0.3 * VCCref VIHmin = 0.7 * VCCref RTS1/B- +5Vout 5V, +0.05V, -0.2V Ioutmax = 100mA Regulated output for external supply. Can be connected to VCCref. SPI interface is not available for BGS5. If unused, keep open. DSR0/ ADC1_IN (Analog-toDigital converter)/ SPI_CLK I2CDAT IO I2CCLK IO RI = 1M VImax = 0V...VCCref + 0.3V Valid range 0V…5V ADC1_IN can be used as input for external measurements. Resolution 1024 steps Tolerance 0.3% If unused keep line open. Open drain IO VOLmin = 0.3V at I = -3mA VOHmax = VCCref Rpullup = 2.2kOhm According to the I2C Bus Specification Version 2.1 for the fast mode a rise time of max. 300ns is permitted. There is also a maximum VOL=0.4V at 3mA specified. VILmax = 0.35V VIHmin = 1.3V VIHmax = 1.85V The value of the pull-up depends on the capactive load of the whole system (I2C Slave + lines). The maximum sink current of I2CDAT and I2CCLK is 4mA. If unused keep lines open. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 41 of 70 4.5 Power Supply Ratings 44 4.5 Power Supply Ratings Table 22: Power supply specifications Parameter Description Conditions Typical VPLUS Allowed voltage ripple (peak-peak), drop during transmit burst peak current Power control level for Pout max1 IPLUS 2 Average supply current (average time 3 min.) Power Down mode @8V 12.4 20.7 33.5 mA @30V 6.5 9.8 13.7 Average GSM supply current (average time 3 min.)3 IDLE mode (GSM/GPRS, 850/900MHz, 1800/1900MHz) @8V 39.6 29.5 @30V 10.4 15.9 12.7 GPRS DATA mode(1 Tx, 4 Rx, 850/900MHz) @8V 175 160 @30V 47.2 50.3 46.2 GPRS DATA mode(1 Tx, 4 Rx, 1800/1900MHz) @8V 136.4 117.3 @30V 21.2 38 36.1 GPRS DATA mode(4 Tx, 1 Rx, 850/900MHz) @8V 245 286.3 @30V 67 100 81 GPRS DATA mode(4 Tx, 1 Rx, 1800/1900MHz) @8V 186 208.8 @30V 34.1 56 61.8 EDGE DATA mode(1 Tx, 4 Rx, 850/900MHz) @8V 175 160 @30V 47.4 50.2 46.2 EDGE DATA mode(1 Tx, 4 Rx, 1800/1900MHz) @8V 130.7 117.4 @30V 21.3 39.7 36.2 EDGE DATA mode(4 Tx, 1 Rx, 850/900MHz) @8V 237.6 284.9 @30V 67 69.6 81 EDGE DATA mode(4 Tx, 1 Rx, 1800/1900MHz) @8V 186.7 208.9 @30V 34.2 56.4 62 Power control @8V 1100 level for Pout max @30V 260 (850/900MHz) 1130 1200 270 260 820 630 200 160 EHS5T EHS6T BGS5T RS485 USB USB Peak supply current (during 577µs transmission slot every 4.6ms) 27 169.3 63.9 234.6 109.5 170.1 64.4 234.4 109.5 Power control @8V 815 level for Pout max (1800/1900MHz) @30V 195 Unit EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary mA mA mA mA mA mA mA mA mA mA mA 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 42 of 70 4.5 Power Supply Ratings 44 Table 22: Power supply specifications Parameter Description Conditions IPLUS Average UMTS supply current (average time 3 min.) Typical Unit EHS5T EHS6T BGS5T RS485 USB USB IDLE mode @8V 79 --- @30V 10.7 12.3 --- UMTS DATA (Band I; 23dBm) @8V 411 --- @30V 88.3 113.9 --- UMTS DATA Band II; 23dBm @8V --- 447.6 --- @30V --- 123.8 --- UMTS DATA @8V --Band V/VI; 23dBm @30V --- 413.9 --- 115 --- UMTS DATA Band VIII; 23dBm @8V 367 410.1 --- @30V 103 114.2 --- HSPA DATA (Band I; 23dBm) @8V 411 --- @30V 88.3 113.9 --- HSPA DATA Band II; 23dBm @8V --- 447.6 --- @30V --- 123.8 --- HSPA DATA @8V --Band V/VI; 23dBm @30V --- 413.9 --- 115 --- HSPA DATA Band VIII; 23dBm 367 410.1 --- @30V 103 114.2 --- @8V 27 313 313 mA mA mA mA mA mA mA mA mA 1. Lowest voltage (minimum peak) incl. all ripple and drops >7.6V including voltage drop, ripple and spikes, measured at western jack (6-pole) pins. 2. Typical values measured with antenna impedance = 50 Ohm (return loss >20dB). 3. BGS5T USB does not support EDGE. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 43 of 70 4.6 Antenna Interface 44 4.6 Antenna Interface Table 23 lists RF antenna interface specifications for the Java Terminals. Please note that the specified conditions may not apply to or be supported by all terminals. Table 23: RF Antenna interface GSM / UMTS Parameter Conditions UMTS/HSPA connectivity Band I, II, V, VI, VIII (not every module variant supports all bands) Receiver Input Sensitivity @ ARP UMTS 800/850 Band VI/V -104.7/ -106.7 -110 dBm UMTS 900 Band VIII -103.7 -110 dBm UMTS 1900 Band II -104.7 -109 dBm UMTS 2100 Band I -106.7 -110 dBm UMTS 800/850 Band VI/V +21 +24 +25 dBm UMTS 900 Band VIII +21 +24 +25 dBm UMTS 1900 Band II +21 +24 +25 dBm UMTS 2100 Band I +21 +24 +25 dBm RF Power @ ARP with 50Ohm Load Board temperature <85°C Min. Typical Max. Unit GPRS coding schemes Class 12, CS1 to CS4 EGPRS Class 12, MCS1 to MCS9 GSM Class Small MS Static Receiver input Sensitivity @ ARP GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 -102 -109 dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 -102 -108 dBm RF Power @ ARP with 50Ohm Load GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 33 dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 30 dBm GSM EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 44 of 70 4.6 Antenna Interface 44 Table 23: RF Antenna interface GSM / UMTS Parameter RF Power @ ARP with 50Ohm Load, (with maximum reduction) BGS5T USB does not support EDGE, deviating values are given in brackets Conditions GPRS, 1 TX EDGE, 1 TX GPRS, 2 TX EDGE, 2 TX GPRS, 3 TX EDGE, 3 TX GPRS, 4 TX EDGE, 4 TX Min. Typical Max. Unit GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 33 dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 30 dBm GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 27 dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 26 dBm GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 30 dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 27 (28.3) dBm GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 24 dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 23 dBm GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 28.2 (27.7) dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 25.2 (27.4) dBm GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 22.2 dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 21.2 dBm GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 27 (25.4) dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 24 (25.2) dBm GSM 850 / E-GSM 900 21 dBm GSM 1800 / GSM 1900 20 dBm EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 45 of 70 5 Mechanics, Mounting and Packaging 48 Mechanics, Mounting and Packaging 5.1 Mechanical Dimensions Figure 13 shows a 3D view of the Java Terminal and provides an overview of the mechanical dimensions of the board. For further details see Figure 14. To allow for an easier mechanical implementation into an external application a set of 3D STP data for the Java Terminals is attached to this PDF. Please open the Attachments navigation panel to view and save these files. Length: Width: Height: 113.5mm (including fixtures for cable straps) 75mm (excluding antenna and serial interface connectors) 25.5mm Weight: 120g 25.5mm 75mm 113.5mm Figure 13: Java Terminals 3D overview EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 46 of 70 5.1 Mechanical Dimensions 48 Figure 14: Java Terminals mechanical dimensions EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 47 of 70 5.2 Mounting the Java Terminals 48 5.2 Mounting the Java Terminals There are a number of ways to mount the Java Terminals: • • • • Java Terminals can be attached to a rail installation or other surface using the two provided screw holes. Java Terminals can be fastened to a rack or holding using the two provided fixtures for cable straps. Java Terminals can be slid onto a specific DIN rail made according to DIN EN 60715 - C section, C30 format. A catch at the terminal’s bottom side will have to be removed to slide multiple terminals onto a single rail. Using a BOPLA TSH 35-2 universal DIN rail holder the Java Terminals can be fitted onto another special type of DIN rail made according to DIN EN 60715 - Top hat section, 35mm (e.g., Wago 210-113 steel carrier rail). The following figure shows the various possibilities provided to mount the Java Terminals. Screw holes Fixtures for cable straps Screw holes for DIN rail holder BOPLA TSH 35-2 Catch to mount C-rail (C30) Figure 15: Mounting the Java Terminals The various ways to mount the Java Terminals may be combined where appropriate. It is for example possible to slide the terminal onto a DIN rail and in addition use cable straps to fasten it to a holding. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 48 of 70 5.3 Packaging 48 5.3 Packaging Java Terminals come in terminal boxes: • Terminal box size: 191mm x 143mm x 44mm. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 49 of 70 6 Full Type Approval 52 Full Type Approval 6.1 Gemalto M2M Reference Setup The Gemalto M2M reference setup submitted to type approve Java Terminals consists of the following components: • • • Java Terminals with approved Java module PC as MMI Power Supply RS-232/ USB PC Java Terminal Antenna or 50Ohm cable to the system simulator ARP SIM Power supply Figure 16: Reference equipment for approval For ordering information please refer to Chapter 7. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 50 of 70 6.2 Restrictions 52 6.2 Restrictions Later enhancements and modifications beyond the certified configuration require extra approvals. Each supplementary approval process includes submittal of the technical documentation as well as testing of the changes made. • No further approvals are required for customer applications that comply with the approved Java Terminals configuration. • Extra approval must be obtained for applications using other accessories than those included in the approved Java Terminals configuration (power supply, MMI implementation supported by AT commands). 6.3 CE Conformity The Java Terminals meet the requirements of the EU directives listed below: • R&TTE Directive 1999/5/EC The Java Terminals are marked with the CE conformity mark (including notified body number): EHSxT 6.4 BGS5T USB EMC The Java Terminals comply with the equipment requirements specified in EN 301489-1, -7 and -24 are covered by the R&TTE Directive. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 51 of 70 6.5 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations 52 6.5 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations As an integrated product, the Java Terminals EHS6T USB and BGS5T RS485 are fully compliant with the grant of the FCC Equipment Authorization and the Industry Canada Certificates issued for the built-in Java modules, and therefore, bear the labels “Contains FCC ID QIPEHS6” or “Contains FCC ID QIPBGS5. The Equipment Authorization Certification for the Cinterion® Java modules is listed under the following identifiers: FCC Idenitifier: QIPEHS6 or QIPBGS5 Industry Canada Certification Number: 7830A-EHS6 or 7830A-BGS5 Granted to Gemalto M2M GmbH Notes (FCC): Radiofrequency radiation exposure Information: This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. This equipment should be installed and operated with minimum distance of 20 cm between the radiator and your body. This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. This device complies with part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. This terminal equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: • Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. • Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. • Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. • Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. Changes or modifications made to this equipment not expressly approved by Gemalto M2M may void the FCC authorization to operate this equipment. This device contains UMTS, GSM and GPRS class functions in the 900, 1800 and 2100MHz bands that are not operational in U.S. Territories. This device is to be used only for mobile and fixed applications. Users and installers must be provided with antenna installation instructions and transmitter operating conditions for satisfying RF exposure compliance: For more information on the RF antenna interface please refer to Section 3.14 and Section 4.6. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 52 of 70 6.5 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations 52 Notes (IC): (EN) This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003 and RSS-210. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this devive may not cause interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device. (FR) Cet appareil numérique de classe B est conforme aux normes canadiennes ICES-003 et RSS-210. Son fonctionnement est soumis aux deux conditions suivantes: (1) cet appareil ne doit pas causer d'interférence et (2) cet appareil doit accepter toute interférence, notamment les interférences qui peuvent affecter son fonctionnement. (EN) Radio frequency (RF) Exposure Information The radiated output power of the Wireless Device is below the Industry Canada (IC) radio frequency exposure limits. The Wireless Device should be used in such a manner such that the potential for human contact during normal operation is minimized. This device has also been evaluated and shown compliant with the IC RF Exposure limits under mobile exposure conditions. (antennas are greater than 20cm from a person‘s body). (FR) Informations concernant l'exposltion aux fréquences radio (RF) La puissance de sortie émise par l'appareil de sans fiI est inférieure à la limite d'exposition aux fréquences radio d‘Industry Canada (IC). Utilisez l'appareil de sans fil de façon à minimiser les contacts humains lors du fonctionnement normal. Ce périphérique a également été évalué et démontré conforme aux limites d'exposition aux RF d'IC dans des conditions d'exposition à des appareils mobiles (les antennes se situent à moins de 20cm du corps d'une personne). EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 53 of 70 7 List of Parts and Accessories 53 List of Parts and Accessories Table 24: List of parts and accessories Description Supplier Ordering information Java Terminals Gemalto M2M Ordering number EHS5T RS485: L30960-N2730-A100 EHS6T USB: L30960-N2740-A100 BGS5T USB: L30960-N2720-A100 Power supply unit Gemalto M2M Terminal Power Supply (incl. EU adapter) Ordering number: L36880-N8490-A12 UK adapter for above Terminal Power Supply Ordering number: L36880-N8490-A13 US adapter for above Terminal Power Supply Ordering number: L36880-N8490-A14 AU adapter for above Terminal Power Supply Ordering number: L36880-N8490-A15 DIN rail holder - BOPLA TSH 35-2 BOPLA Ordering number: 20035000 BOPLA Gehäuse Systeme GmbH Borsigstr. 17-25 D-32257 Bünde Phone: +49 (0)5223 / 969 - 0 Fax: +49 (0)5223 / 969 - 100 Email: iinfo@bopla.de Web: http://www.bopla.de Antenna - SMARTEQ-MiniMAG Dualband, 0dBd, 2.6m RG174, SMA (m) KÖBEL Mobile Communication Ordering number: 1140.26 with crimped SMA connector KÖBEL Mobile Communication Sesamstrasse 12 D-24632 Lentföhrden RS-232 cable with 9-pin D-sub connector (male) Tecline Ordering number: 300574 Tecline GmbH Behrener Straße 8 D-66117 Saarbrücken Phone: +49-681-926-78-70 Fax: +49-681-926-78-555 Web: http://www.tecline-edv.de/ 8-pin and 12-pin header connector (male) for Weidmueller GPIO interface Weidmueller Ordering number (12-pin): 1277510000 Ordering number (8-pin): 1277480000 Weidmüller Interface GmbH & Co. KG Klingenbergstraße 16 D-32758 Detmold Phone: +49 5231 14-0 Fax: +49 5231 14-2083 Email: iinfo@weidmueller.de Web: http://www.weidmueller.com EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 54 of 70 8 Appendix A: (Hardware) Watchdog 69 Appendix A: (Hardware) Watchdog The watchdog is part of the Java Terminals and connected to the Java module itself (see also Figure 4). It can be used to • Safely reset the module in certain conditions • Restart the module when it has turned off • Configure GPIOs and DSR0/ADC1_IN available at the Weidmueller connector The complete watchdog functionality can be configured via the serial interface ASC0 (for details see Section 8.3). Some configuration commands can also be specified via I2C interface (for details see Section 8.4). Figure 17 shows how the watchdog may be accessed. ASC0 interface (baud rate not equal 1200bps) for watchdog configuration via I2C command RS-232 connector Weidmueller connector TXD0 line (ASC0 with baud rate = 1200bps) for watchdog configuration I2C interface lines or RS-485 lines (with RS-232-to-RS-485 adapter) for watchdog configuration Hardware watchdog Resets/Restarts the Java module under certain conditions and configures GPIOs AT^SSPI for watchdog onfiguration Java module Java Terminal Figure 17: Hardware watchdog 8.1 Reset Conditions The watchdog implements three conditions, under which a reset of the module is automatically performed: • Repetitive: A module reset is performed frequently and repetitive. This reset condition can be used to force the module to reconnect to the mobile network once in a while. Typical frequencies are 24 hours or more. This feature can be configured via the RST_REP timeout. • UART activity: The watchdog can be used to reset the module, when no activity from the module on the UART interface is recognized for a specified amount of time. To prevent the reset, the module has to be active frequently on the UART interface. This reset condition can be configured via the RST_UART timeout, it is deactivated when timeout parameter = 0. • GPIO activity: The watchdog can be used to reset the module, when no activity on the designated GPIO signal is recognized for a specified amount of time. To prevent the reset, the module has to be active frequently by toggling this GPIO signal. This reset condition can be configured via the RST_GPIO timeout, it is deactivated when timeout parameter = 0. When the watchdog is enabled, it will observe the activities on the UART and GPIO interfaces, depending on timeout parameter setting and perform frequent resets, if it is configured to do so. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 55 of 70 8.2 Restart Conditions 69 8.1.1 Reset stages There are up to three possible escalation stages during a module reset: • • • First stage (regular fast shutdown): The watchdog shuts down the module via an internal fast shutdown signal. The fast shutdown procedure will then still finish any data activities on the Java module's flash file system, thus ensuring data integrity, but will no longer deregister gracefully from the network, thus saving the time required for network deregistration. Afterwards, i.e. after an internal V180 signal has gone low, the module is regularly restarted. Second stage (emergency restart): The watchdog resets the module via an internal EMERG_RST signal. The emergency restart procedure causes the loss of all information stored in the Java module‘s volatile memory. Third stage (power off): The watchdog switches the module off. After the first and second stage the watchdog waits for up to three seconds for the internal V180 signal to go LOW. If the V180 signal does not change, the watchdog escalates to the next stage, until it finally ends up switching off the module. The watchdog can be configured to automatically switch on resp. power up the module after a shutdown (always-on mode). 8.1.2 Reset Delay The watchdog implements a protection mechanism to prevent too frequent module resets. When the delayed reset mechanism is enabled, the watchdog will start its activity only after the specified amount of time, MIN_START_TIME. A reasonable value for this timeout is 30 minutes. After the watchdog startup, after a module reset and also after enabling the watchdog, no reset of the module is performed before the timeout of MIN_START_TIME. When the watchdog is enabled, resets can be prevented once for a certain amount of time. This timeout, TRG_DEL, can be configured via the I2C interface. It can be particularly useful when a software update shall be performed. Using the TRG_DEL timeout will prevent the watchdog from resetting the module during the running TRG_DEL timeout, so that the update can be performed safely. An upcoming reset event will be shifted and catch up after the TRG_DEL timeout. 8.2 Restart Conditions When the watchdog is enabled, it will observe the modules on/off state. When it is configured to keep the module "always on", it will restart the module after the specified amount of time after it has discovered that the module has turned off. This important feature is useful in rough environments with often power losses and out-of-temperature conditions where it secures a safe module operation. The timeout condition for the restart feature is called ALWAYS_ON. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 56 of 70 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface 69 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface The complete hardware watchdog functionality can be configured via the serial interface ASC0 as described in this section. The watchdog listens on the module's TXD0 line exclusively at the low baudrate 1200bps, and gives no feedback. This means that if using the watchdog this low baud rate is reserved and should not be configured for the module‘s asynchronous serial interface ASC0. The TXD0 line can be accessed either via RS-232 interface or via RS-485 interface (in conjunction with an RS232-to-RS485 adapter). So, to control and configure the watchdog, a terminal program MUST be set to 1200bps, before a command (see Section 8.3.1) can be sent to the watchdog. Once completed, the terminal program should be changed to higher baud rates again to enable proper communication with the module. Please note that some configuration commands can also be configured via I2C interface (see Section 8.4 for details). 8.3.1 Command Specification The general watchdog command syntax is as follows: WD=, , Where • specifies the command name • gives the numeric argument • is the sum of the digits of the argument. (e.g. the argument 124 produces a checksum 7, because 1+2+4=7). Whenever a non-volatile command is executed, it is saved in the watchdog's flash memory. At watchdog start, the last state is loaded from flash memory. If a config command was successfully executed by the watchdog, the green ON led flashes two times. The watchdog commands are implemented as text commands. In case a command error occours - e.g., a checksum failure - the green ON led flashes 4 times. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 57 of 70 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface 69 The following watchdog configuration commands are available: • • • • • • • • • • • Watchdog on/off - see Section 8.3.1.1 Test mode - see Section 8.3.1.2 Repetitive module reset - see Section 8.3.1.3 UART reset - see Section 8.3.1.4 GPIO reset - see Section 8.3.1.5 Restart delay - see Section 8.3.1.6 Always on - see Section 8.3.1.7 Load default values - see Section 8.3.1.8 Change the Watchdogs I2C Address - see Section 8.3.1.9 Set GPIO Direction - see Section 8.3.1.10 Configure ADC1_IN/DSR0/SPI_CLK Line - see Section 8.3.1.11 Note: Changing the watchdog configuration using any of the following commands disables the watchdog: Repetitive module reset, UART reset, GPIO reset, Restart delay and Always on. With these commands the new configuration setting becomes effective only after the hardware watchdog is enabled again. 8.3.1.1 Watchdog On/Off Command ON Parameter Type Boolean Range 0: Off (watchdog disabled) 1: On (watchdog enabled) Default 0: Off Non-volatile Yes Example WD=ON,0,0 WD=ON,1,1 // disables the watchdog // enables the watchdog This command is used to enable or disable the watchdog function. When disabled, all timers are stopped and the watchdog doesn't perform a module reset. When enabled, all configured timers start after a delay time of MIN_START_TIME. If MIN_START_TIME=0, all reset timers start immediately. Also, when the watchdog is enabled and ALWAYS_ON>0, the watchdog observes the modules on/off state, and starts the module in case it detects that the module is off. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 58 of 70 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface 69 8.3.1.2 Test Mode Command TEST_MODE Parameter Type Boolean Range 0: Off (Exit test mode) 1: On (Enter test mode) Default 0: Off Non-volatile Yes Example WD=TEST_MODE,0,0 WD=TEST_MODE,1,1 // Exit test mode // Enter test mode This commands configures the watchdog‘s test mode. In test mode the watchdog operates normally, but does not actually perform a module reset. Instead, it signals the (simulated) reset via the LED by flashing the green ON LED two times to visualize the watchdog trigger. Entering the test mode disables the actual watchdog functionality. 8.3.1.3 Repetitive Module Reset Command RST_REP Parameter Type Milliseconds Range 0 .. 232-1 Default 0: Feature is disabled Non-volatile Yes Example WD=RST_REP,1800000,9 // Reset every 30 minutes This command configures a repetitive module resets, if the watchdog is enabled. The parameter sets the RST_REP timeout value. If the watchdog is enabled, an unconditional module reset every RST_REP milliseconds is performed. Changing this configuration disables the watchdog. The feature becomes active, if the watchdog is enabled again, and after the MIN_START_TIME has passed. For normal operation, this value should be set to a value greater than 30 minutes. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 59 of 70 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface 69 8.3.1.4 UART Reset Command RST_UART Parameter Type Milliseconds Range 0 .. 232-1 Default 0: Feature is disabled Non-volatile Yes Example WD=RST_UART,600000,6 // Resets the module if there was no activity on the RXD0 line for 10 minutes This command configures a module reset, if no UART activity from the module was observed for the specified amount of time - RST_UART. The module has to be active on the RXD0 signal within the specified time period; otherwise the watchdog will reset the module. Changing this configuration disables the watchdog. The feature becomes active, if the watchdog is enabled again, and after the MIN_START_TIME has passed. For normal operation, this value should be set to a value greater than 10 minutes (600000). 8.3.1.5 GPIO Reset Command RST_GPIO Parameter Type Milliseconds Range 0 .. 232-1 Default 0: Feature is disabled Non-volatile Yes Example WD=RST_UART,600000,6 // Resets the module if there was no activity on the internal WD_RETRIG line for 10 minutes This command configures a module reset, if no activity from the module was observed on the internal signal WD_RETRIG for the specified amount of time. The module has to be active on the WD_RETRIG signal by toggling the GPIO22 module output within the specified time period. Otherwise the watchdog will reset the module. If enabled, each GPIO22 toggling resets the timer to its configured value. Changing this configuration disables the watchdog. The feature becomes active, if the watchdog is enabled again, and after the MIN_START_TIME has passed. For normal operation, this value should be set to a value greater than 10 minutes (600000). EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 60 of 70 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface 69 8.3.1.6 Restart Delay Command MIN_START_TIME Parameter Type Milliseconds Range 0 .. 232-1 Default 18000000ms (30 minutes) Non-volatile Yes Example WD=MIN_START_TIME,18000000,9 // Prevents module resets for 30 minutes after each module startup, and after the watchdog becomes active This command configures the MIN_START_TIME timeout value. By setting the MIN_START_TIME, the watchdog no longer performs a module reset for the given amount of time, after module startup. Whenever the module has been reset and restarted, as well as after the watchdog has been enabled, the watchdog will wait for MIN_START_TIME before performing any (further) resets. The watchdog‘s reset timer only starts after the MIN_START_TIME has expired. Changing this configuration disables the watchdog. The feature becomes active, if the watchdog is enabled again. It is strongly recommended to set this value to a time period of more than 30 minutes for normal operation. During development it may be set to values of less than 30 minutes, but should always be greater than the time the module needs for a complete start up including Java. Also, a module firmware or userware update right after startup should be taken into account which may take up to 15 min. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 61 of 70 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface 69 8.3.1.7 Always On Command ALWAYS_ON Parameter Type Milliseconds Range 0 .. 232-1 Default 0: Feature is disabled Non-volatile Yes Example WD= ALWAYS_ON,60000,6 // Observes the module and restarts it 60 seconds after it has been turned off This command configures the on/off-state observation of the module by specifying a timeout value for ALWAYS_ON. If enabled, the watchdog observes the module‘s internal V180 signal. If the watchdog detects that the module is OFF, it will restart the module after the timeout of ALWAYS_ON milliseconds. Changing this configuration disables the watchdog. The feature becomes active, If the watchdog is enabled. It is strongly recommended to set this value to a time period of more than 1 minute for normal operation to avoid oscillation in e.g. out-of-temperature events. In case of over/under temperature shut down it can be expected that the temperature does not change significantly within a minute. During development the timeout may be set to a period of less than 1 minute. 8.3.1.8 Load Default Values Command DFT_VAL Parameter <1> Type Fixed Range Default --- Non-volatile No Example WD= DFT_VAL,1,1 // Loads the default values This command loads the default configuration values. This disables the watchdog. If the watchdog is enabled, the reset timeout values, the MIN_START_TIME timeout and the ALWAYS_ON timeout become active. Other configuration values become active immediately. The loaded default values are also persistent, i.e. written to the flash memory. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 62 of 70 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface 69 8.3.1.9 Change the Watchdog‘s I2C Address Command I2C_ADDR Parameter Type Number Range 1-127 Default 106 (0x6A) Non-volatile Yes Example WD= I2C_ADDR,87,15 // Changes the I2C address to 87d (0x57) The watchdog‘s I2C slave address can be changed to any 7-bit address. This may become necessary to avoid address conflicts on the I2C bus, if used in an environment, where the default I2C address "0x6A" is already in use by other slave devices connected to the Java Terminal. Changing the I2C address takes effect immediately and has no impact on the watchdog‘s enabled/disabled state. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 63 of 70 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface 69 8.3.1.10 Set GPIO Direction Command GPIO_DIR Parameter Type Number Range 0-1023 Default 993 (0x3E1, 1111100001b) Non-volatile Yes Example WD= GPIO_DIR,682,16 // Sets the GPIOs alternating to output and input (binary value: 1010101010b) This command configures the input/output direction of level-shifters to the module‘s externally available GPIO pins. The argument is a 10-bit number, representing the 10 adjustable directions of the GPIO level-shifters. A set bit (value 1) sets the respective level-shifter to the output direction. A cleared bit changes the respective level-shifter to input direction. The following table describes the connection between the 10-bit argument number, the modules GPIO pins, and the Java Terminals Weidmueller connectors 8-pin and 12-pin: 10-Bit number GPIO 8-pin connector 12-pin connector Default GPIO6 Output GPIO7 Input GPIO8 Input GPIO11 Input GPIO12 Input GPIO13 Output GPIO14 Output GPIO15 Output GPIO21 12 Output GPIO20 11 Output Changing the directions of the level-shifters must be executed with great care. They may only be set in accordance with the modules GPIO‘s input/output configuration. Special care must be taken that no outputs are cross-connected during the switching phase. Configuring a Java terminal output, the level shifter output must be set first, followed by the module output configuration. Configuring a Java terminal input, the module input must be set first, followed by the level shifter input. Please note that the GPIO direction can also be configured via I2C interface. It is recommended to use the I2C interface to configure the GPIO direction. Note: Not every GPIO is supported by every Java Terminal variant - see Section 3.7. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 64 of 70 8.3 Configuration via ASC0 Interface 69 8.3.1.11 Configure ADC1_IN/DSR0/SPI_CLK Line Command ADC_DSR0 Parameter Type Boolean Range 0: Analog input (ADC1_IN) 1: Digital output (DSR0/SPI_CLK) Default 0: Analog input (ADC1_IN) Non-volatile Yes Example WD= ADC_DSR0,0,0 WD= ADC_DSR0,1,1 // Configures the line to be analog input // Configures the line to be digital output This command configures the the ADC/DSR0/SPI_CLK signal on the Weidmueller connector to be either an analog input line (ADC) or a digital output line (DSR0/SPI_CLK). If configured as analog input, the signal is connected to the Java module‘s ADC1_IN line. If configured as digital output, the signal is connected to the Java module‘s DSR0/SPI_CLK line that can be configured to be either DSR0 or SPI_CLK (SPI_CLK not available for BGS5T USB). Note: If configuring the ADC1_IN/DSR0/SPI_CLK line please take great care to be in accordance with the Java module‘s current configuration of the ADC1_IN and DSR0/SPI_CLK signals. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 65 of 70 8.4 Configuration via I C Interface 69 8.4 Configuration via I2C Interface While the complete watchdog functionality may be configured via ASC0 interface (for details see Section 8.3) some of the configuration commands can also be configured during runtime via I2C interface as described in this section. The I2C interface is accessible either via the external Weidmueller connector - I2CDAT and I2CCLK, or via the Java module‘s AT command interface (e.g., ASC0), or through a Java MIDlet during runtime. The I2C interface implements the write and the read protocol as described in Section 8.4.1. The 7-bit device address is 0x6A (binary: 1101010). The default address can be changed by configuration command (see Section 8.3.1.9). 8.4.1 8.4.1.1 Command Specification WRITE Command Syntax Slave address (including write bit “W“) Register address Data byte Example setting the GPIO12 signal direction to “output” (see also section Examples): 0xD4 (including write bit “0“) 0x14 0x01 Legend: S: Start Condition, W: Write bit (=0), A: Acknowledge, P: Stop Condition. 8.4.1.2 READ Command Syntax Slave address (including read bit “R“) Register address Data length (only one byte) Example reading the last status = OK (see also section Examples): 0xD5 (including read bit “1“) 0x00 0x01 (only one byte) Legend: S: Start Condition, R: Read bit (=1), A: Acknowledge, N: Not Acknowledge, P: Stop Condition. EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 66 of 70 8.4 Configuration via I C Interface 69 8.4.1.3 I2C Protocol Overview In write mode (i.e., slave address “0xD4“), one address byte and one data byte is sent to the Java Terminal/Watchdog. The address byte specifies a register to write the data byte to. The data byte value is only written, if it is valid, i.e., in the specified range. After a write attempt, the status code of the operation is saved and the read address register (RAR) is automatically set to the status register address (SR). A subsequent read command from the status register (SR) will then return the latest status code (see Table 26). Only when the address byte is the RAR, i.e. another register is selected to be read, the RAR is not automatically set to the SR register. See Section 8.4.1.4 for sample watchdog configurations via I2C. In read mode, one data byte can be read from the Java Terminal/Watchdog. Attempts to read more bytes will result in undefined values being returned by the device. The device will always return the value that is addressed by the RAR. To read a specific register, a write command with RAR as the address byte and the register to be read as the data byte has to be issued first. The next read will then return the value at this address. Note that there are only a few registers that can be read (see register table - Table 25). When the RAR is written with a non-read address, the RAR is set to the SR, and the status code ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT is saved. Note also that a consecutive read is not valid, as the return value will be ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT, but the caller cannot determine whether the result is the value at the faulty address or an error status code. See Section 8.4.1.4 for sample watchdog configurations via I2C. 8.4.1.4 I2C Commands The following table lists the address register for configuration commands via I2C interface. Table 25: Address register for I2C commands Register address Read/ Write Description Name NonDefault volatile Value range 0x00 Status; only address register to read directly from. SR OK See result codes Table 26 0x10 GPIO6 GPIOxR Yes 0x11 GPIO7 Yes 0: Input 1: Output 0x12 GPIO8 Yes 0x13 GPIO11 Yes 0x14 GPIO12 Yes 0x15 GPIO13 Yes 0x16 GPIO14 Yes 0x17 GPIO15 Yes 0x18 GPIO21 Yes 0x19 GPIO20 Yes 0x30 GPIO direction Low Byte: Read out 8 bits for the GPIOs [15,14,13,12,11,8,7,6] GPIOLBR [0..0xFF] 0x31 GPIO direction High Byte: Read out 2 bits for the GPIOs 20 and 21 in the representation: [0,0,0,0,0,0,<20>,<21>] GPIOHBR [0..0xFF] EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 67 of 70 8.4 Configuration via I C Interface 69 Table 25: Address register for I2C commands Register address Read/ Write Description Name NonDefault volatile Value range 0x50 R/W ADC1_IN/DSR0 ADCDSRR Yes 0x00 0: Analog In 1: Digital Out 0x80 Trigger delay. Specifies delay time for a reset. If a trigger delay time is specified, the watchdog is prevented from resetting the module for the given time. TDR No 0x00 Set time in minutes. 1...255: Minutes 0: Disable 0xFD Hardware watchdog‘s firmware version VER -- [0x00..0x99] [MAJ MIN] 4:MSB: MAJ 4:LSB: MIN MAJ: Main release number (e.g., 1.x) MIN: Sub release number (e.g., x.0) as in version v1.0 0xFF Read address register (RAR) RAR No 0x00 0x00..0xFF Only valid addresses contain valid values Possible result codes for status command (see Section 8.4.1.3 and above Table 25): Table 26: I2C status result codes Result Code Comment OK 0x00 Last command was executed successfully PROTOCOL_ERROR 0x01 Protocol error, i.e. wrong number of bytes ILLEGAL_ADDRESS 0x02 Illegal register address ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT 0x03 Illegal argument. Argument is out of allowed range. UNDEFINED 0xFF EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 68 of 70 8.4 Configuration via I C Interface 69 Examples The following two samples show how the watchdog can be configured via the I2C interface, using the AT^SSPI command (at RS-232/ASC0) to transfer the I2C user data. Please refer to [1] for more information on the AT command AT^SSPI and on how to configure and control the data transfer over the I2C interface. The above Table 25 specifies the address register that can be used in I2C configuration commands. The first example sets GPIO12 to “output“. It therefore configures a write register marked as “W“ in Table 25. AT^SSPI= Open the Java Terminals I2C data connection. CONNECT Indicates that the connection is open. WRITE command enclosed by <>: “a“ is a command ID to better identify and match acknowledgments, “D4“ indicates the slave address (write mode), “14“ specifies the address register GPIO12, and “01“ sets the data byte (i.e., line is “output“). Note: The data byte value is only written if valid, i.e., if in the specified range. After a WRITE command, the status code of the operation is saved to the status register (SR) and a subsequent READ command from the status register will then return the latest status code as listed in Table 26. {a+} Acknowledgement enclosed in curly brackets of a successful data transmission. READ command enclosed by <>: “b“ is a command ID to better identify and match acknowledgements, “D5“ indicates the slave address (read mode), “00“ specifies the address register SR, and “01“ sets the data length to be read. Note: The READ command can only be called in conjunction with the SR address “00“ and the data length of one byte “01“. {b+00} Acknowledgement enclosed in curly brackets of a successful data transmission, together with the response code “00“ indicating that the command was successfully executed. Close data connection. OK Connection closed. PC Watchdog Write: Set GPIO12 to “output“ GPIO12: 01 Command executed successfully Read from status register (SR) SR: 00 Figure 18: Write data to address register EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 Cinterion® Java Terminals Hardware Interface Description Page 69 of 70 8.4 Configuration via I C Interface 69 The second example listed below reads out the firmware version, it therefore uses a read register marked as “R“ in Table 25. However, except for the status address register (SR) no information can be directly retrived from an address register itself, but only indirectly by means of a so-called read-address-register (RAR). An initial WRITE command has to link the register to be read to the RAR first. Now the RAR is linked to the register to be read, and the content of this register can be read from the SR. AT^SSPI= Open the Java Terminals I2C data connection. CONNECT Indicates that the connection is open. WRITE command enclosed by <>: “a“ is a command ID to better identify and match acknowledgments, “D4“ indicates the slave address (write mode), “FF“ specifies the read address register RAR, and “FD“ sets the data byte to the watchdogs firmware version register VER (i.e., RAR and VER are linked by this command). Note: The data byte value is only written if valid, i.e., if in the specified range. After a WRITE command, the status code of the operation, in this case, i.e., where the register address is the RAR, the content of the register given as data byte is saved to the status register (SR) and a subsequent READ command from the status register will then return the register value, i.e., the firmware version. {a+} Acknowledgement enclosed in curly brackets of a successful data transmission. READ command enclosed by <>: “b“ is a command ID to better identify and match acknowledgements, “D5“ indicates the slave address (read mode), “00“ specifies the address register SR, and “01“ sets the data length to be read. Note: The READ command can only be called in conjunction with the SR address “00“ and the data length of one byte “01“. {b+10} Acknowledgement enclosed in curly brackets of a successful data transmission, together with the response code “10“ indicating that the command was successfully executed. The resposne code gives the watchdog‘s firmware version as v1.0. Close data connection. OK Connection closed. PC Watchdog Write: Set RAR to VER RAR: VER Read from status register (SR) SR: 01 VER: 01 Copy firmware version to SR Figure 19: Read data from address register EHSxT_BGS5T_HID_v02 Confidential / Preliminary 2014-08-05 70 About Gemalto Gemalto (Euronext NL0000400653 GTO) is the world leader in digital security with 2011 annual revenues of €2 billion and more than 10,000 employees operating out of 74 offices and 14 Research & Development centers, located in 43 countries. Gemalto develops secure embedded software and secure products which we design and personalize. Our platforms and services manage these secure products, the confidential data they contain and the trusted end-user services they enable. Our inovations enable our clients to offer trusted and convenient digital services to billions of individuals. Gemalto thrives with the growing number of people using its solutions to interact with the digital and wireless world. For more information please visit m2m.gemalto.com, www.facebook.com/gemalto, or Follow@gemaltom2m on twitter. Gemalto M2M GmbH St.-Martin-Str. 60 81541 Munich Germany M2M.GEMALTO.COM © Gemalto 2014. All rights reserved. Gemalto, the Gemalto logo, are trademarks and service marks of Gemalto and are registered in certain countries. April 2013 We are at the heart of the rapidly evolving digital society. Billions of people worldwide increasingly want the freedom to communicate, travel, shop, bank, entertain and work - anytime, everywhere - in ways that are enjoyable and safe. Gemalto delivers on their expanding needs for personal mobile services, payment security, authenticated cloud access, identity and privacy protection, eHealthcare and eGovernment efficiency, convenient ticketing and dependable machine-tomachine (M2M) applications.
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