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SW4STM32 and SW4Linux fully supports the STM32MP1 asymmetric multicore Cortex/A7+M4 MPUs

   With System Workbench for Linux, Embedded Linux on the STM32MP1 family of MPUs from ST was never as simple to build and maintain, even for newcomers in the Linux world. And, if you install System Workbench for Linux in System Workbench for STM32 you can seamlessly develop and debug asymmetric applications running partly on Linux, partly on the Cortex-M4.
You can get more information from the ac6-tools website and download (registration required) various documents highlighting:

System Workbench for STM32


USB driver problem

Hi,
I have installed SW4STM32 V2.2 onto a Windows 10 64bit PC including the drivers required for the ST-LINK debugging and programming interface. I am intending to work with the NUCLEO-L476RG board which I will have shortly. In the meantime, to test the interface, I attached an ST-LINK/V2 device to a USB port and Windows displays the following message.

USB device not recognised
The last device you connected to this computer malfunctioned ...

In device manager, under Universal Serial Bus Controllers, I see a device that is marked as Unknown USB Device (Device Descriptor Request Failed). As far as I remember in the past this should show as an ST labelled device (cannot remember the exact naming).

Just wanted to verify that the ST-LINK/V2 will work with a USB3 port?

Also I have a Silicon Labs device driver installed for a USB connection that I make to a Digilent Zybo board using Vivado and wondered if this could be conflicting with the functionality of the ST device driver?

Have also installed the ST-LINK utility V4.1 in an attempt to connect to the ST-LINK/V2 device but it reports that it is unable to connect (as to be expected since the USB devcie driver is not working).

Does the ST-LINK/V2 need to be powered before it is recognised by Windows?

Any help would be appreciated.

Regards
FarmerJo