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276 lines
14 KiB
Text
276 lines
14 KiB
Text
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This is outdated.
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---
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INTRODUCTION TO THE proxmark3
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=============================
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The proxmark3 device is designed to manipulate RFID tags in a number of
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different ways. For example, a proxmark3 can:
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* read a low-frequency (~100 kHz) or high-frequency (13.56 MHz) tag,
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including the ISO-standard tags; standards that require
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bidirectional communication between the reader and the tag are
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not a problem
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* emulate a low- or high-frequency tag, in a way very similar to the
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way that a real tag behaves (e.g., it derives its timing from the
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incident carrier)
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* eavesdrop on the signals exchanged between another reader and tag
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* measure the resonant frequency of an antenna, to a certain extent
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(this is a convenience when building a test setup for the previous
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three functions)
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The proxmark3 may be thought of as a direct-sampling software radio.
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There is some complication, though, because of the usual dynamic range
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issue in dealing with signals in RFID systems (large signal due to
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the reader, small signal due to the tag). Some analog processing is
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therefore used to fix this before the signal is digitized. (Although,
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it is possible to digitize the signal from the antenna directly, with
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appropriate population options. It is just not usually a good idea.)
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SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE
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===================
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The ANTENNA sends and receives signals over the air. It is external to
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the board; it connects through SV2. Separate pins on the connector are
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used for the low- and high-frequency antennas, and the analog receive
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paths are separate. The antennas are inductive loops, which are resonated
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by on-board capacitors.
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On the transmit side, the antennas are excited by large numbers of
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paralleled bus driver buffers. By tri-stating some of the buffers, it
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is possible to vary the transmit strength. This may be used to generate
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a modulated carrier. The buffers are driven by signals from the FPGA,
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as are the output enables. The antennas are excited as series circuits,
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which permits a large input power for a relatively small input voltage.
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By driving all of the buffers low, it is possible to make the antenna
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look to the receive path like a parallel LC circuit; this provides a
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high-voltage output signal. This is typically what will be done when we
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are not actively transmitting a carrier (i.e., behaving as a reader).
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On the receive side, there are two possibilities, which are selected by
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RLY1. A mechanical relay is used, because the signal from the antenna is
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likely to be more positive or negative than the highest or lowest supply
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voltages on-board. In the usual case (PEAK-DETECTED mode), the received
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signal is peak-detected by an analog circuit, then filtered slightly,
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and then digitized by the ADC. This is the case for both the low- and
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high-frequency paths, although the details of the circuits for the
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two cases are somewhat different. This receive path would typically
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be selected when the device is behaving as a reader, or when it is
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eavesdropping at close range.
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It is also possible to digitize the signal from the antenna directly (RAW
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mode), after passing it through a gain stage. This is more likely to be
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useful in reading signals at long range, but the available dynamic range
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will be poor, since it is limited by the 8-bit A/D. These modes would be
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very appropriate, for example, for the heavily-discussed attacks in which
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a tag's ID is learned from the data broadcast by a reader performing an
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anticollision loop, because there is no dynamic range problem there. It
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would also be possible to program the proxmark3 to receive broadcast AM
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radio, with certain changes in component values.
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In either case, an analog signal is digitized by the ADC (IC8), and
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from there goes in to the FPGA (IC1). The FPGA is big enough that it
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can perform DSP operations itself. For some high-frequency standards,
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the subcarriers are fast enough that it would be inconvenient to do all
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the math on a general-purpose CPU. The FPGA can therefore correlate for
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the desired signal itself, and simply report the total to the ARM. For
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low-frequency tags, it probably makes sense just to pass data straight
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through to the ARM.
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The FPGA communicates with the ARM through either its SPI port (the ARM
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is the master) or its generic synchronous serial port (again, the ARM
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is the master). The ARM connects to the outside world over USB.
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DETAILS: POWER DISTRIBUTION
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===========================
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I make a half-hearted attempt to meet the USB power specs; this adds a
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bit of complexity. I have not made measurements to determine how close
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I come to succeeding, but I think that the suspend current might turn
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out to be a pain.
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The +3V3 rail is always powered, whenever we are plugged in to USB. This
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is generated by an LDO, which burns a quiescent current of 150 uA
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(typical) already. The only thing powered from the +3V3 rail is the ARM,
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which can presumably do smart power control when we are in suspend.
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The ARM generates two signals to switch power to the rest of the board:
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FPGA_ON, and NVDD_ON. When NVDD_ON goes low, the Vdd rail comes up to
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about five volts (the filtered-but-unregulated USB voltage). This powers
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most of the analog circuitry, including the ADC and all of the opamps
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and comparators in the receive path, and the coil drivers as well. Vdd
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also feeds the +3V3-FPGA and +2v5 regulators, which power only the
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FPGA. These regulators are enabled by FPGA_ON, so the FPGA is powered
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only when NVDD_ON is asserted low, and FPGA_ON is asserted high.
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DETAILS: FPGA
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=============
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The FPGA is a Spartan-II. This is a little bit old, but it is widely
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available, inexpensive, and five-volt tolerant. For development, the FPGA
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is configured over JTAG (SV5). In operation, the FPGA is configured in
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slave serial mode by the ARM, from a bitstream stored in the ARM's flash.
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Power to the FPGA is managed by regulators IC13 and IC12, both of which
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have shutdown. These generate the FPGA's VCCO (+3v3) and VCCINT (+2v5)
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supplies. I am a little bit worried about the power-on surge, since we
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run off USB. At the very minimum, the FPGA should not get power until
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we have enumerated and requested the full 500 mA available from USB. The
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large electrolytic capacitors C37 and C38 will presumably help with this.
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The logic is written in Verilog, of course for webpack. I have structured
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the FPGA in terms of `major modes:' the FPGA's `major mode' determines
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which of several modules is connected to the FPGA's I/O pins. A separate
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module is used for each of the FPGA's function; for example, there is
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now a module to read a 125 kHz tag, simulate a 125 kHz tag, transmit to
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an ISO 15693 tag, and receive from an ISO 15693 tag.
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DETAILS: ANALOG RECEIVE PATH
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============================
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For `slow' signals, I use an MCP6294 opamp. This has a GBW of 10 MHz,
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which is more than enough for the low-frequency stuff, and enough for
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all of the subcarrier frequencies that I know of at high frequency. In
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practice, the `slow' signals are all the signals following the peak
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detector. These signals are usually centred around the generated
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voltage Vmid.
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For `fast' signals, I use an AD8052. This is a very fast voltage-feedback
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amplifier (~100 MHz GBW). I use it immediately after the antenna for
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both the low- and high-frequency cases, as a sort of an ugly LNA. It is
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not optimal, but it certainly made the design easy.
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An ordinary CD4066 is used to multiplex the four possible signals
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(low/high frequency paths, RAW/PEAK-DETECTED). There is a potential
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problem at startup, when the ARM is in reset; there are pull-ups on the
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lines that control the mux, so all of the switches turn on. This shorts
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the four opamp outputs together through the on-resistance of the switch.
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All four outputs float to the same DC voltage with no signal, however,
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and the on-resistance of the switches is fairly large, so I don't think
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that will be a problem in practice.
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Comparators are used to generate clock signals when the device is
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emulating a tag. These clock signals are generated from the signal on the
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antenna, and therefore from the signal transmitted by the reader. This
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allows us to clock ourselves off the reader, just like a real tag would.
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These signals go in to the FPGA. There is a potential problem when the
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FPGA is powered down; these outputs might go high and try to power the
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FPGA through the protection diodes. My present solution to this is a
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couple of resistors, which is not very elegeant.
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The high-frequency peak-detected receive path contains population options
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for many features that I do not currently use. A lot of these are just
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me guessing that if I provide options for different series and shunt
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passives, perhaps it will come in handy in some way. The Zener diodes D10
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and D11 are optional, but may protect the front end from an overvoltage
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(which will fry the peak detector diodes) when the `simulated tag'
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is read by a powerful reader.
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DETAILS: ANALOG TRANSMIT PATH
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=============================
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The coil drivers are just ACT244 bus buffers. I parallel eight of them
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for each antenna (eight for the high-frequency antenna, eight for the
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low-frequency antenna). This should easily provide a hundred milliamps
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coil drive or so, which is more than enough for anything that I imagine
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doing with the device. The drivers hit the coil with a square wave
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voltage, however, which means that it is only the bandpass filter effect
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of a resonant antenna that suppresses the odd harmonics. In practice it
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would probably take heroic efforts (high antenna Q) to meet the FCC/CE
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harmonic specs; and in practice no one cares.
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The tx strength, given good antenna tuning, is determined by the series
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resistors. Choose the ratios to stay within the rated current of the
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buffers, and to achieve the desired power ratios by enabling or disabling
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nOEs for the desired modulation index. It is useful to populate one of the
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resistors as a high value (~10k) for the simulated tag modes; this allows
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us to look at the incident carrier without loading the reader very much.
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DETAILS: ARM
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============
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Atmel makes a number of pin-compatible ARMs, with slightly different
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peripherals, and different amounts of flash and RAM. It is necessary
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to choose a device with enough flash not just for the ARM's program,
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but also for the FPGA image (which is loaded by the ARM).
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The ARM is responsible for programming the FPGA. It also supplies a
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clock to the FPGA (although the FPGA clock can also run off the 13.56
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MHz clock not used for anything else, which is obviously asynchronous
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to anything in the ARM).
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It is necessary to use JTAG to bring the ARM for the first time; at
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that point you can load a bootrom, and subsequently load new software
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over USB. It might be possible to use the ARM's pre-loaded bootloader
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(see datasheet) instead of JTAG, but I wanted the JTAG anyways for
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debugging, so I did not bother. I used a Wiggler clone, with Macraigor's
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OCD Commander. More expensive tools would work as well.
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USB SOFTWARE
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============
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At present I enumerate as an HID device. This saves me writing a driver,
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but it forces me to do interrupt transfers for everything. This limits
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speed and is not very elegant. A real USB driver would be nice, maybe
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even one that could do stuff like going isochronous to stream samples
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from the A/D for processing on the PC.
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PRETENDING TO BE A TAG
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======================
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It is not possible, with the given topology, to open-circuit the antenna
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entirely and still look at the signal received on it. The simulated tag
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modes must therefore switch between slight loading and heavy loading,
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not open- and short-circuts across the antenna, evening though they do
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not depend upon the incident carrier for power (just timing information).
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RECEIVING SIGNAL STRAIGHT FROM THE ANTENNAS
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===========================================
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There is a path straight from the antenna to the A/D, bypassing the peak
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detector assembly. This goes through a gain stage (just a fast voltage
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feedback opamp), and from there straight in to the mux.
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It is necessary to energize the relay to connect these paths. If the
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coil is driven (as if to excite and read a tag) while these paths are
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connected, then damage will probably result. Most likely the opamp
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will fry.
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READING A TAG
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=============
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The tag is excited by a carrier transmitted by the reader. This is
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generated by IC9 and IC10, using some combination of buffers. The transmit
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power is determined by selecting the right combination of PWR_OEx pins;
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drive more of them low for more power. This can be used to modulate the
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transmitted signal, and thus send information to the tag.
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The received signal from the antenna is first peak-detected, and then
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high-pass filtered to reject the unmodulated carrier. The signal is
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amplified a bit, and goes in to the A/D mux from there. The A/D is
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controlled by the FPGA. For 13.56 MHz tags, it is easiest to do everything
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synchronous to the 13.56 MHz carrier.
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INTERFACE FROM THE ARM TO THE FPGA
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==================================
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The FPGA and the ARM can communicate in two main ways: using the ARM's
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general-purpose synchronous serial port (the SSP), or using the ARM's
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SPI port. The SPI port is used to configure the FPGA. The ARM writes a
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configuration word to the FPGA, which determines what operation will
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be performed (e.g. read 13.56 MHz vs. read 125 kHz vs. read 134 kHz
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vs...). The SPI is used exclusively for configuration.
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The SSP is used for actual data sent over the air. The ARM's SSP can
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work in slave mode, which means that we can send the data using clocks
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generated by the FPGA (either from the PCK0 clock, which the ARM itself
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supplies, or from the 13.56 MHz clock, which is certainly not going to
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be synchronous to anything in the ARM), which saves synchronizing logic
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in the FPGA. The SSP is bi-directional and full-duplex.
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