ADC Niose test Connect four analog signals to your MBED. and then run the Windows app. The four traces are displayed on an oscilloscope like display. I have used a USB HID DEVICE link, so connections to D+, D- are required. The MBED code is otherwise quite basic, So you can modify it to your own test needs. Additionaly, there is a 16 bit count value, in my MBED code Mainly to test if MSB & LSB are correct.

Dependencies:   mbed

Revision:
0:cbe01b678bd4
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/HID/USBEndpoints.h	Sat Nov 19 22:54:22 2011 +0000
@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
+/* USBEndpoints.h */
+/* USB endpoint configuration */
+/* Copyright (c) 2011 ARM Limited. All rights reserved. */
+
+#ifndef USBENDPOINTS_H
+#define USBENDPOINTS_H
+
+/* SETUP packet size */
+#define SETUP_PACKET_SIZE (8)
+
+/* Options flags for configuring endpoints */
+#define DEFAULT_OPTIONS     (0)
+#define SINGLE_BUFFERED     (1U << 0)
+#define ISOCHRONOUS         (1U << 1)
+#define RATE_FEEDBACK_MODE  (1U << 2) /* Interrupt endpoints only */
+
+/* Endpoint transfer status, for endpoints > 0 */
+typedef enum {
+    EP_COMPLETED,   /* Transfer completed */
+    EP_PENDING,     /* Transfer in progress */
+    EP_INVALID,     /* Invalid parameter */
+    EP_STALLED,     /* Endpoint stalled */
+} EP_STATUS;
+
+/* Include configuration for specific target */
+#if defined(TARGET_LPC1768) || defined(TARGET_LPC2368)
+#include "USBEndpoints_LPC17_LPC23.h"
+#elif defined(TARGET_LPC11U24)
+#include "USBEndpoints_LPC11U.h"
+#else
+#error "Unknown target type"
+#endif
+
+#endif