I have a lot of adafruit boards and now none of them are working with arduino, I checked my arduino with a uno r3 and a 2560 and they both show up on the ports. I have a mac 12-4 OS, every thing was working before i upgraded now only adafruit boards are not working. It has to be some thing with a driver. I ls /dev/* to see a complete listing and when a adafruit board is plugged into the usb port it does not show up.
I could use some help and it seems like other people are running into similar problems.
Adafruit boards not working with arduino on Mac
Moderators: adafruit_support_bill, adafruit
Please be positive and constructive with your questions and comments.
- smitheken
- Posts: 6
- Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2021 5:48 pm
- tepalia02
- Posts: 104
- Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2022 6:53 am
Re: Adafruit boards not working with arduino on Mac
Hi, which boards are making trouble exactly?
- smitheken
- Posts: 6
- Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2021 5:48 pm
Re: Adafruit boards not working with arduino on Mac
The boards I used to are as fillows
1. Itsy bitsy 5.v
2. Metro MO express
3. metro ESP32-S2
4. Huzzah
all boards had program on them.
all of the boards were working before the upgrade to mac 12.4. This is the only change.
A Uno r3 works, 2560 works. Just none of the adafruit boards.
I figure it must be a driver issue and mac has eliminated some thing on there upgrade.
1. Itsy bitsy 5.v
2. Metro MO express
3. metro ESP32-S2
4. Huzzah
all boards had program on them.
all of the boards were working before the upgrade to mac 12.4. This is the only change.
A Uno r3 works, 2560 works. Just none of the adafruit boards.
I figure it must be a driver issue and mac has eliminated some thing on there upgrade.
- adafruit_support_mike
- Posts: 67485
- Joined: Thu Feb 11, 2010 2:51 pm
Re: Adafruit boards not working with arduino on Mac
Some of the boards you listed use generic USB firmware, and others use the CP2104 USB-to-Serial converter. There's no common driver for them.
Try putting a cheap/old USB-2 hub between the Mac and the microcontrollers. USB-3 begins its hardware recognition process with a burst of 480MHz data. That's enough faster than the CPU clock of any microcontroller you listed to look like random noise. Sometimes that can make a bootloader's USB code crash. The hub will block those high-speed signals, giving the microcontrollers a better environment.
Try putting a cheap/old USB-2 hub between the Mac and the microcontrollers. USB-3 begins its hardware recognition process with a burst of 480MHz data. That's enough faster than the CPU clock of any microcontroller you listed to look like random noise. Sometimes that can make a bootloader's USB code crash. The hub will block those high-speed signals, giving the microcontrollers a better environment.
- freddyboomboom
- Posts: 267
- Joined: Wed Feb 16, 2022 7:55 pm
Re: Adafruit boards not working with arduino on Mac
Crossposted to three other places.
On viewtopic.php?f=8&t=191776&p=927893#p927893 OP says he had bad cables.
On viewtopic.php?f=8&t=191776&p=927893#p927893 OP says he had bad cables.
Please be positive and constructive with your questions and comments.