Segger Microcontroller Systems

Segger Microcontroller, founded in 1992, is a private company involved in the embedded systems industry. It provides products used to develop and manufacture four categories of embedded systems: real-time operating systems (RTOS) and software libraries (middleware), debugging and trace probes, programming tools (integrated development environment (IDE), compiler, linker), and in-system programmers (Flasher line of products). The company is headquartered in Monheim am Rhein, Germany, with remote offices in Gardner, Massachusetts; Milpitas, California; and Shanghai, China.

Segger Microcontroller
TypeGmbH
IndustryEmbedded software
Founded1992 (1992)
HeadquartersMonheim am Rhein, Germany
ProductsMiddleware components, JTAG development tools
Websitewww.segger.com

History

Segger Microcontroller was founded in 1992 by Rolf Segger in Hilden, Germany. The first product was the real-time operating system (RTOS), now named embOS. It was followed by emWin two years later. Initial products focused on RTOS and middleware products. However, the company later produced ISP-programming tools (Flasher) and debug probes (J-Link). In 2015, Segger introduced Embedded Studio, their cross-platform IDE for central processing units conforming to the ARM architecture, though recent versions are also used by RISC-V. All products are developed, maintained and updated in Germany except for Embedded Studio, which is primarily developed by a team of developers in the United Kingdom.

Product categories

Debug and trace probes

Segger is most noted for its J-Link family, which supports JTAG (Joint Test Action Group) and SWD (Serial Wire Debug) debug probes for microcontrollers that have older ARM cores (ARM7, ARM9, ARM11), ARM Cortex-M cores (M0, M0+, M1, M3, M4, M7, M23, M33, M85), ARM Cortex-R cores (R4, R5, R8), ARM Cortex-A cores (A5, A7, A8, A9, A12, A15, A17, A53, A72), Renesas RX, Microchip PIC32, SiLab EFM8, RISC-V.[1] It is also repackaged and sold as an OEM item[2] by Analog Devices as the mIDASLink, Atmel as the SAM-ICE, Digi International as the Digi JTAG Link, and IAR Systems as the J-Link and the J-Link KS. This is the only JTAG emulator that can add Segger's patented flash breakpoint software to a debugger to enable the setting of multiple breakpoints in flash while running on an ARM device which is typically hindered by the limited availability of hardware breakpoints.[3]

J-Trace & J-Link Models[4]
ModelHost
USB
 
Host
Ethernet
 
Host
Wi-Fi
 
Debug
connector
(Pitch)
Trace
connector
 
Target
voltage
 
Target max
interface
speed
Target max
download
speed
Target
VCOM
UART
Software
features
 
Image
 
 
J-Trace PRO Cortex-A/R/M3.0 SS1 Gbit/sNone20-pin (0.1")19-pin 0.05"1.2V to 5V50 MHz3 MByte/s2 pinsAll
J-Trace PRO Cortex-M3.0 SS1 Gbit/sNone20-pin (0.1")19-pin 0.05"1.2V to 5V50 MHz3 MByte/s2 pinsAll
J-Trace PRO RISC-V3.0 SS1 Gbit/sNone20-pin (0.1")19-pin 0.05"1.2V to 5V50 MHz3 MByte/s2 pinsAll
J-Link PRO2.0 HS100 Mbit/sNone20-pin (0.1")None1.2V to 5V50 MHz3 MByte/s2 pinsAll
J-Link ULTRA+2.0 HSNoneNone20-pin (0.1")None1.2V to 5V50 MHz3 MByte/s2 pinsAll
J-Link WiFi2.0 HSNone802.11b/g/n20-pin (0.1")None1.2V to 5V15 MHz1 MByte/s2 pinsAll
J-Link PLUS2.0 HSNoneNone20-pin (0.1")None1.2V to 5V15 MHz1 MByte/s2 pinsAll
J-Link PLUS Compact2.0 HSNoneNone20-pin (0.1")None1.2V to 5V15 MHz1 MByte/s2 pinsAll
J-Link BASE2.0 HSNoneNone20-pin (0.1")None1.2V to 5V15 MHz1 MByte/s2 pinsLimited
J-Link BASE Compact2.0 HSNoneNone20-pin (0.1")None1.2V to 5V15 MHz1 MByte/s2 pinsLimited
J-Link EDU2.0 HSNoneNone20-pin (0.1")None1.2V to 5V15 MHz1 MByte/s2 pinsLimited
J-Link EDU Mini2.0 FSNoneNone9-pin (0.1")None3.3V4 MHz0.2 MByte/sNoneLimited
J-Link OB2.0 FSNoneNoneIntegratedNoneIntegrated4 MHz0.2 MByte/sDependsLimited
  • Note: Further models are J-Link LITE ARM, J-Link LITE CortexM, J-Link LITE RX, J-Link OEM.[5]
  • Note: Software options vary by model: J-Flash, J-Flash-SPI, Ozone, RDDI, RDI, Unlimited Flash Breakponts.
  • Note: The EDU & EDU Mini models cannot be used for commercial software development, also doesn't come with J-Flash, J-Flash-SPI, RDDI, RDI options.
  • Note: Adapters and isolators are available to convert the 20-pin 0.1"/2.54mm male shrouded (box) header to another target board connector.[6]
  • Note: The compact variants are functionally identical to the standard variants

See also

References

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