Difference between revisions of "Silicon Labs Simplicity Studio"
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When opened, Simplicity Studio will show Starter Kits and J-Links in the section "Detected Hardware". |
When opened, Simplicity Studio will show Starter Kits and J-Links in the section "Detected Hardware". |
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*After opening a project, a debug probe can be chosen at the bottom of the window. |
*After opening a project, a debug probe can be chosen at the bottom of the window. |
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Latest revision as of 10:34, 9 October 2020
Silicon Labs Simplicity Studio is a free IDE, based on Eclipse, for Silicon Labs Cortex-M (EFM32, EZR32, ...) and 8051 (EFM8, C8051) based devices. Simplicity Studio comes with built-in J-Link support.
How to Use J-Link in a Project
When opened, Simplicity Studio will show Starter Kits and J-Links in the section "Detected Hardware".
- After opening a project, a debug probe can be chosen at the bottom of the window.
- After opening the drop down menu, open Detect...
- The following dialog will open, containing the devices previously shown in the section Detected Hardware:
- Select the desired debug probe
- Right-Click and press Select Target Part
- The adapter needs to be configured according to the device to be debugged
- Click OK
- Click OK
Simplicity Studio will do all further configuration required. Now the project is ready to be debugged with J-Link: