Intermediate
30 min

Conquer the challenges of autonomy with multi-band RTK GNSS solution based on ZED-F9R-02B and ATmega328P

Precision in every dimension

GNSS RTK 2 Click with Arduino UNO Rev3

Published Feb 14, 2024

Click board™

GNSS RTK 2 Click

Dev Board

Arduino UNO Rev3

Compiler

NECTO Studio

MCU

ATmega328P

Our multi-band RTK GNSS solution stands as the beacon of precision in the face of complex multipath environments. Designed to excel where others falter, it's the ideal navigation companion for modern autonomous robotics applications.

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Hardware Overview

How does it work?

GNSS RTK 2 Click is based on the ZED-F9R, a multi-band professional-grade GNSS positioning module featuring the u-blox F9 receiver platform, providing a reliable multi-band GNSS sensor fusion solution for industrial applications. Thanks to the multi-band RF front-end architecture, all four major GNSS constellations (GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, and BeiDou) plus SBAS and QZSS satellites can be received concurrently. The ZED-F9R high-performance sensor fusion module also has an integrated inertial measurement unit (IMU) for centimeter-level accuracy RTK positioning (RTK rover feature). The ZED-F9R's built-in algorithms fuse the IMU data, GNSS measurements, wheel ticks, correction data, and a vehicle dynamics model to provide optimal positioning accuracy where GNSS alone would fail. The module operates in the open sky, in the wooded countryside, in demanding multipath environments, and even in challenging environments such as cities. Designed for industrial applications, ZED-F9R is the ultimate solution for a data-driven economy where control and position availability are crucial. This module represents a turnkey self-contained solution, eliminating the technical risk and effort of selecting and integrating RF components and third-party libraries such as precise positioning engines. It also supports a range of correction services, RTCM or SPARTN-formatted corrections, enabling high-precision navigation using internet or satellite data through an unpopulated UART

header in the middle of the board. This interface allows each application to optimize performance according to the application's unique needs. GNSS RTK 2 Click communicates with an MCU using the UART interface at 115200bps as its default communication protocol. Users can use other interfaces, such as SPI and I2C, to configure the module and write the library themselves. The interface is selected by positioning SMD jumpers labeled COMM SEL in an appropriate position. When choosing the SPI communication, with the correct selection of the COMM SEL jumpers, it is also necessary to populate the DSEL jumper to configure the interface pins as SPI. In the default state, the jumper labeled as DSEL is unpopulated. The receiver also can enter a Safe-Boot mode. When the jumper labeled SFBT is populated, the receiver starts in Safe-Boot mode, and the GNSS operation is disabled. The USB interface, compatible with USB version 2.0 (Full Speed, 12 Mbit/s), can be used for communication as an alternative to the UART. The USB port can be used as an additional power supply if the Click board™ is required to be a standalone device. In case of a mains supply failure, the module can use a backup supply voltage from a connected battery. Backup voltage supplies the real-time clock and battery-backed RAM and enables all relevant data to be saved in the backup RAM to allow a hot or warm start later. In addition to these features, this board also uses several mikroBUS™ socket pins. RDY pin routed to the AN pin of the mikroBUS™ socket is

used as a communication indicator when bytes are ready to be transmitted. The RST pin routed on the PWM pin of the mikroBUS™ socket provides the general reset ability, and the TMP pin, alongside its LED indicator, routed on the INT pin of the mikroBUS™ socket provides one pulse per second time pulse with configurable duration and frequency. The RTK pin routed on the RST pin of the mikroBUS™ socket, alongside an LED indicator labeled RTK, indicates the RTK positioning status. When LED blinks, a valid stream of RTCM messages is received, but no RTK fixed mode has been achieved. When the LED is constantly lit, the LED indicates that RTK mode has been achieved. It also has another LED indicator labeled as GDC that shows the current geofence status of whether the receiver is inside any active areas. For example, this feature can wake a sleeping host when a defined geofence condition is reached. GNSS RTK 2 Click has an SMA antenna connector for connecting an appropriate antenna, also offered by Mikroe, such as a GPS Active External Antenna. This antenna is an excellent choice for all GSM/GPRS applications supporting L1 and L2 band frequencies. This Click board™ can be operated only with a 5V logic voltage level. The board must perform appropriate logic voltage level conversion before using MCUs with different logic levels. However, the Click board™ comes equipped with a library containing functions and an example code that can be used as a reference for further development.

GNSS RTK 2 Click hardware overview image

Features overview

Development board

Arduino UNO is a versatile microcontroller board built around the ATmega328P chip. It offers extensive connectivity options for various projects, featuring 14 digital input/output pins, six of which are PWM-capable, along with six analog inputs. Its core components include a 16MHz ceramic resonator, a USB connection, a power jack, an

ICSP header, and a reset button, providing everything necessary to power and program the board. The Uno is ready to go, whether connected to a computer via USB or powered by an AC-to-DC adapter or battery. As the first USB Arduino board, it serves as the benchmark for the Arduino platform, with "Uno" symbolizing its status as the

first in a series. This name choice, meaning "one" in Italian, commemorates the launch of Arduino Software (IDE) 1.0. Initially introduced alongside version 1.0 of the Arduino Software (IDE), the Uno has since become the foundational model for subsequent Arduino releases, embodying the platform's evolution.

Arduino UNO Rev3 double side image

Microcontroller Overview

MCU Card / MCU

default

Architecture

AVR

MCU Memory (KB)

32

Silicon Vendor

Microchip

Pin count

28

RAM (Bytes)

2048

You complete me!

Accessories

Click Shield for Arduino UNO has two proprietary mikroBUS™ sockets, allowing all the Click board™ devices to be interfaced with the Arduino UNO board without effort. The Arduino Uno, a microcontroller board based on the ATmega328P, provides an affordable and flexible way for users to try out new concepts and build prototypes with the ATmega328P microcontroller from various combinations of performance, power consumption, and features. The Arduino Uno has 14 digital input/output pins (of which six can be used as PWM outputs), six analog inputs, a 16 MHz ceramic resonator (CSTCE16M0V53-R0), a USB connection, a power jack, an ICSP header, and reset button. Most of the ATmega328P microcontroller pins are brought to the IO pins on the left and right edge of the board, which are then connected to two existing mikroBUS™ sockets. This Click Shield also has several switches that perform functions such as selecting the logic levels of analog signals on mikroBUS™ sockets and selecting logic voltage levels of the mikroBUS™ sockets themselves. Besides, the user is offered the possibility of using any Click board™ with the help of existing bidirectional level-shifting voltage translators, regardless of whether the Click board™ operates at a 3.3V or 5V logic voltage level. Once you connect the Arduino UNO board with our Click Shield for Arduino UNO, you can access hundreds of Click boards™, working with 3.3V or 5V logic voltage levels.

Click Shield for Arduino UNO accessories 1 image

GNSS Active External Antenna is a unique multi-band type of antenna coming from u-blox that is the perfect selection for high precision GNSS applications, which require highly accurate location abilities such as RTK. The ANN-MB-00 is a multi-band (L1, L2/E5b/B2I) active GNSS antenna with a 5m cable and SMA connector. The antenna supports GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, and BeiDou and includes a high-performance multi-band RHCP dual-feed patch antenna element, a built-in high-gain LNA with SAW pre-filtering, and a 5 m antenna cable with SMA connector, and is waterproof.

GNSS RTK 2 Click accessories image

Used MCU Pins

mikroBUS™ mapper

Transmission Ready Indicator
PC0
AN
RTK Positioning Status
PD2
RST
SPI Chip Select
PB2
CS
SPI Clock
PB5
SCK
SPI Data OUT
PB4
MISO
SPI Data IN
PB3
MOSI
NC
NC
3.3V
Ground
GND
GND
Reset
PD6
PWM
Timepulse
PC3
INT
UART TX
PD0
TX
UART RX
PD1
RX
I2C Clock
PC5
SCL
I2C Data
PC4
SDA
Power Supply
5V
5V
Ground
GND
GND
1

Take a closer look

Click board™ Schematic

GNSS RTK 2 Click Schematic schematic

Step by step

Project assembly

Click Shield for Arduino UNO front image hardware assembly

Start by selecting your development board and Click board™. Begin with the Arduino UNO Rev3 as your development board.

Click Shield for Arduino UNO front image hardware assembly
Arduino UNO Rev3 front image hardware assembly
Charger 27 Click front image hardware assembly
Prog-cut hardware assembly
Charger 27 Click complete accessories setup image hardware assembly
Arduino UNO Rev3 Access MB 1 - upright/background hardware assembly
Necto image step 2 hardware assembly
Necto image step 3 hardware assembly
Necto image step 4 hardware assembly
Necto image step 5 hardware assembly
Necto image step 6 hardware assembly
Arduino UNO MCU Step hardware assembly
Necto No Display image step 8 hardware assembly
Necto image step 9 hardware assembly
Necto image step 10 hardware assembly
Debug Image Necto Step hardware assembly

Track your results in real time

Application Output

This Click board can be interfaced and monitored in two ways:

  • Application Output - Use the "Application Output" window in Debug mode for real-time data monitoring. Set it up properly by following this tutorial.

Software Support

Library Description

This library contains API for GNSS RTK 2 Click driver.

Key functions:

  • gnssrtk2_reset_device - This function resets the device by toggling the RST pin

  • gnssrtk2_generic_read - This function reads a desired number of data bytes from the module

  • gnssrtk2_parse_gngga - This function parses the GNGGA data from the read response buffer

Open Source

Code example

The complete application code and a ready-to-use project are available through the NECTO Studio Package Manager for direct installation in the NECTO Studio. The application code can also be found on the MIKROE GitHub account.

/*!
 * @file main.c
 * @brief GNSS RTK 2 Click example
 *
 * # Description
 * This example demonstrates the use of GNSS RTK 2 click by reading and displaying
 * the GNSS coordinates.
 *
 * The demo application is composed of two sections :
 *
 * ## Application Init
 * Initializes the driver and resets the click board.
 *
 * ## Application Task
 * Reads the received data, parses the GNGGA info from it, and once it receives the position fix
 * it will start displaying the coordinates on the USB UART.
 *
 * ## Additional Function
 * - static void gnssrtk2_clear_app_buf ( void )
 * - static err_t gnssrtk2_process ( gnssrtk2_t *ctx )
 * - static void gnssrtk2_parser_application ( char *rsp )
 *
 * @author Stefan Filipovic
 *
 */

#include "board.h"
#include "log.h"
#include "gnssrtk2.h"

#define PROCESS_BUFFER_SIZE 300

static gnssrtk2_t gnssrtk2;
static log_t logger;

static char app_buf[ PROCESS_BUFFER_SIZE ] = { 0 };
static int32_t app_buf_len = 0;
static int32_t app_buf_cnt = 0;

/**
 * @brief GNSS RTK 2 clearing application buffer.
 * @details This function clears memory of application buffer and reset its length and counter.
 * @return None.
 * @note None.
 */
static void gnssrtk2_clear_app_buf ( void );

/**
 * @brief GNSS RTK 2 data reading function.
 * @details This function reads data from device and concatenates data to application buffer.
 * @param[in] ctx : Click context object.
 * See #gnssrtk2_t object definition for detailed explanation.
 * @return @li @c  0 - Read some data.
 *         @li @c -1 - Nothing is read or Application buffer overflow.
 * See #err_t definition for detailed explanation.
 * @note None.
 */
static err_t gnssrtk2_process ( gnssrtk2_t *ctx );

/**
 * @brief GNSS RTK 2 parser application.
 * @param[in] rsp Response buffer.
 * @details This function logs GNSS data on the USB UART.
 * @return None.
 * @note None.
 */
static void gnssrtk2_parser_application ( char *rsp );

void application_init ( void )
{
    log_cfg_t log_cfg;  /**< Logger config object. */
    gnssrtk2_cfg_t gnssrtk2_cfg;  /**< Click config object. */

    /** 
     * Logger initialization.
     * Default baud rate: 115200
     * Default log level: LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG
     * @note If USB_UART_RX and USB_UART_TX 
     * are defined as HAL_PIN_NC, you will 
     * need to define them manually for log to work. 
     * See @b LOG_MAP_USB_UART macro definition for detailed explanation.
     */
    LOG_MAP_USB_UART( log_cfg );
    log_init( &logger, &log_cfg );
    log_info( &logger, " Application Init " );

    // Click initialization.
    gnssrtk2_cfg_setup( &gnssrtk2_cfg );
    GNSSRTK2_MAP_MIKROBUS( gnssrtk2_cfg, MIKROBUS_1 );
    err_t init_flag = gnssrtk2_init( &gnssrtk2, &gnssrtk2_cfg );
    if ( ( UART_ERROR == init_flag ) || ( I2C_MASTER_ERROR == init_flag ) || ( SPI_MASTER_ERROR == init_flag ) )
    {
        log_error( &logger, " Communication init." );
        for ( ; ; );
    }
    
    log_info( &logger, " Application Task " );
}

void application_task ( void )
{
    gnssrtk2_process( &gnssrtk2 );
    if ( app_buf_len > ( sizeof ( GNSSRTK2_RSP_GNGGA ) + GNSSRTK2_GNGGA_ELEMENT_SIZE ) ) 
    {
        gnssrtk2_parser_application( app_buf );
    }
}

void main ( void )
{
    application_init( );

    for ( ; ; )
    {
        application_task( );
    }
}

static void gnssrtk2_clear_app_buf ( void ) 
{
    memset( app_buf, 0, app_buf_len );
    app_buf_len = 0;
    app_buf_cnt = 0;
}

static err_t gnssrtk2_process ( gnssrtk2_t *ctx ) 
{
    int32_t rx_size = 0;
    char rx_buf[ PROCESS_BUFFER_SIZE ] = { 0 };
    if ( GNSSRTK2_DRV_SEL_UART == ctx->drv_sel )
    {
        rx_size = gnssrtk2_generic_read( ctx, rx_buf, PROCESS_BUFFER_SIZE );
    }
    else if ( ( GNSSRTK2_DRV_SEL_I2C == ctx->drv_sel ) || ( GNSSRTK2_DRV_SEL_SPI == ctx->drv_sel ) )
    {
        if ( GNSSRTK2_OK == gnssrtk2_generic_read( ctx, rx_buf, 1 ) )
        {
            if ( GNSSRTK2_DUMMY != rx_buf[ 0 ] )
            {
                rx_size = 1;
            }
        }
    }
    if ( rx_size > 0 ) 
    {
        int32_t buf_cnt = 0;
        if ( ( app_buf_len + rx_size ) > PROCESS_BUFFER_SIZE ) 
        {
            gnssrtk2_clear_app_buf(  );
            return GNSSRTK2_ERROR;
        } 
        else 
        {
            buf_cnt = app_buf_len;
            app_buf_len += rx_size;
        }
        for ( int32_t rx_cnt = 0; rx_cnt < rx_size; rx_cnt++ ) 
        {
            if ( rx_buf[ rx_cnt ] ) 
            {
                app_buf[ ( buf_cnt + rx_cnt ) ] = rx_buf[ rx_cnt ];
            }
            else
            {
                app_buf_len--;
                buf_cnt--;
            }
        }
        return GNSSRTK2_OK;
    }
    return GNSSRTK2_ERROR;
}

static void gnssrtk2_parser_application ( char *rsp )
{
    char element_buf[ 100 ] = { 0 };
    if ( GNSSRTK2_OK == gnssrtk2_parse_gngga( rsp, GNSSRTK2_GNGGA_LATITUDE, element_buf ) )
    {
        static uint8_t wait_for_fix_cnt = 0;
        if ( strlen( element_buf ) > 0 )
        {
            log_printf( &logger, "\r\n Latitude: %.2s degrees, %s minutes \r\n", element_buf, &element_buf[ 2 ] );
            gnssrtk2_parse_gngga( rsp, GNSSRTK2_GNGGA_LONGITUDE, element_buf );
            log_printf( &logger, " Longitude: %.3s degrees, %s minutes \r\n", element_buf, &element_buf[ 3 ] );
            memset( element_buf, 0, sizeof( element_buf ) );
            gnssrtk2_parse_gngga( rsp, GNSSRTK2_GNGGA_ALTITUDE, element_buf );
            log_printf( &logger, " Altitude: %s m \r\n", element_buf );
            wait_for_fix_cnt = 0;
        }
        else
        {
            if ( wait_for_fix_cnt % 5 == 0 )
            {
                log_printf( &logger, " Waiting for the position fix...\r\n\n" );
                wait_for_fix_cnt = 0;
            }
            wait_for_fix_cnt++;
        }
        gnssrtk2_clear_app_buf(  );
    }
}

// ------------------------------------------------------------------------ END

Additional Support

Resources

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