SEGGER and ARTERY support the AT32 series MCU
ARTERY and SEGGER have announced that SEGGER's J-Link and J-Trace family of debug and trace probes, plus the Flasher family of in-circuit programmers, fully support the ARTERY AT32 MCUs, increasing the speed and efficiency of development and production.
AT32 MCU users can benefit from the entire SEGGER Ecosystem including Embedded Studio (multi-platform IDE with the highly optimising C/C++ SEGGER Compiler), Ozone (full-featured graphical debugger), SystemView (real-time recording and visualisation tool), and software libraries such as embOS-Ultra (with game-changing, energy-saving Cycle-resolution Timing) and emWin (one GUI solution for all applications).
“SEGGER’s high-performance development and debugging platform is efficient and very easy to use,” says ARTERY. “Having the AT32 MCUs fully supported by these professional, user-friendly tools is a great asset for our customers in the product development and mass production process.”
“Through the SEGGER partner program, J-Link Prime, SEGGER and ARTERY have worked together to provide complete programming and debugging tools for AT32 MCUs to enable the user to maximise efficiency,” says SEGGER. “We look forward to providing the same high stability, performance and ease of use for the upcoming low-power series from ARTERY."
SEGGER’s J-Link, the most widely used debug probe on the market, features a download speed of up to 4 MB/s, the ability to set an unlimited number of breakpoints in the flash memory of MCUs, and much more. J-Link comes with free software and firmware updates. All supported devices can be used without the need to buy an additional license – no hidden costs – no future costs.
SEGGER Flashers, a family of professional in-circuit programmers, program the flash (non-volatile) memory of microcontrollers and Systems-on-Chip (SoCs) as well as (Q)SPI flashes. They are designed for use in service environments, prototype programming, and for mass production.