Great Scott Gadgets' Cynthion Is a Flexible FPGA-Powered Tool for USB Analysis and Experimentation

Now in general availability, following a crowdfunding campaign, Cynthion is ready to fulfill all your USB hacking needs.

Great Scott Gadgets' Elizabeth Hendrex has announced general availability of Cynthion, a field-programmable gate array (FPGA)-powered gadget designed to let you peer into the world of the Universal Serial Bus (USB) for less — from packet capture all the way to new device creation.

"This FPGA-based hardware platform from Great Scott Gadgets powered by LUNA gateware is your new go-to tool for discovering and exploring the world of USB at a fraction of the cost of commercial USB analyzers," Hendrex explains of the Cynthion. "Whether you’re experienced with USB or you're new and learning about it, Cynthion is a great multipurpose addition to your hardware experimentation toolbox!"

Great Scott Gadgets' USB tool Cynthion is now listed for purchase at resellers worldwide, including Adafruit. (📷: Adafruit)

LUNA is Great Scott Gadgets' Amaranth HDL library of working with USB through an FPGA, with Cynthion serving as a first-class hardware platform for same. The company has also released two Cynthion-compatible tools, to demonstrate what's possible: Packetry, which turns the Cynthion into a USB Low-, Full-, or High-Speed man-in-the-middle packet capture and analysis tool priced considerably below rival designs; and Moondancer, a backend for Facedancer — a tool that lets you implement your own custom USB devices in Python.

"Combined with our LUNA gateware and Facedancer libraries, Cynthion becomes a versatile USB research and development tool," Hendrex explains. "Facedancer makes it quick and easy to create or tamper with real USB devices — not just emulations — even if you don't have experience with digital-hardware design, HDL, or FPGA architecture!"

Following a successful crowdfunding campaign on Crowd Supply, Cynthion is now listed for sale at Great Scott Gadgets' resellers for between $199.99 and $210 with aluminum enclosure, or as low as $149.99 as a bare board; links to global stockists can be found on the company's website. Design files, meanwhile, are available on GitHub under the permissive variant of the CERN Open Hardware License Version 2.

ghalfacree

Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.

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