Thanks!  It never would have occurred to me that a resistive load in this 
context is a "driver".  Lesson learned!

Greg

On Monday, April 18, 2016 at 8:26:47 PM UTC-4, Harvey White wrote:
>
> On Mon, 18 Apr 2016 17:12:37 -0700 (PDT), you wrote: 
>
> >I'm trouble shooting a problem on a simple cape for a BeagleBone Black. 
> > 
> >I have a bipolar switch for an LED, very similar to that used for the 
> "User 
> >LEDS". 
> >So I have added an approximately 10Kohm load to one of the "boot pins", 
> >which 
> >in header lingo is P8_44. 
> > 
> >P8_44 is also one of the "boot" pins.  I'm interesting in using the PRU 
> >connection mode of this pin. 
> > 
> >The System Reference Manuals says the boot pins must not be *driven* 
> prior 
> >to coming out of reset (SYS_RESET goes high). 
> > 
> >So maybe my understanding of the term "driven" in this context is 
> >incorrect, and it could also be interpreted as "loading", 
> >as in excessive resistive loading? 
>
> Driven in this case (and lots of others) means a signal connected to 
> that pin. 
>
> A resistor going to VCC or ground does indeed "drive" that signal.   
>
> BOOT pins must completely float until the boot process is done, *then* 
> you can do something with them. 
>
> A good idea is to avoid boot pins 
> Another good idea is to use tri-state drivers on those pins, and turn 
> them on ONLY when the boot process is done. 
>
> There are a number of threads discussing this. 
>
> However, nobody has specifically said that resistors effectively drive 
> boot pins.  They do. 
>
> Harvey 
>
>
> > 
> >I tried an experiment on both BBB and BBG with a 10kohm resistor to 
> ground 
> >on P8_44.  Both refused to boot up and run. 
> >So is it a requirement to keep resistive loads off this pin during the 
> boot 
> >process? 
> > 
> >Regards, 
> >Greg 
>
>

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