WCH CH9325

From sigrok
Revision as of 17:05, 6 August 2013 by Bert (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
WCH CH9325 in the UNI-T UT-D04 DMM cable.
WCH CH9325 in the UNI-T UT325 temperature logger.

WCH, also known as Nanjing Qin Heng Electronics, makes a series of microcontrollers, PCI interface chips, and USB interface chips.

The CH9325 is a USB interface chip, which converts data received via UART to USB and vice versa. The chip presents a HID (Human Interface Device) USB profile, in an effort to not require USB driver installation: this is typically handled by the OS kernel. An example of the profile, in Linux 'lsusb' output format, is here.

The chip runs off of a 12MHz oscillator.

Pin layout

1-   O -16
UART TX 2- -15 USB +5V
UART RX 3- -14
4- -13
5- -12
USB D+ 6- -11
USB D- 7- -10 OSC+
GND 8- -9 OSC-

Protocol

Chip configuration

USB packets sent to endpoint 0 are intercepted by the chip, and serve to configure it. A confguration packet consists of 5 bytes:

Byte Description
1-2 UART baudrate, in little-endian order. For example, 60 09 = 0x0960 = 2400. Supported baudrates are 2400, 4800, 9600 and 19200; setting any other rate defaults to 2400 instead.
3
4
5

USB encapsulation

The chip stores bytes received via the UART RX pin into a buffer. It transfers the contents of the buffer to a HID packet at regular intervals (maximum 12ms). The HID packets are always 8 bytes long, with the first byte containing the number of payload bytes. This is encoded as 0xf0 + length. The next 7 bytes contain the payload, padded with zeroes. Thus, even if no data is ever received on the UART, the chip always sends at least one packet every 12ms containing:

f0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00

Here's a packet with 2 bytes payload:

f2 35 41 00 00 00 00 00

Extracting the UART stream on the other side of the USB bus simply entails the reverse process: for every received packet, extract the payload according to the length byte (nibble).