mp_kbd_exception is now considered the standard variable name to hold the
singleton KeyboardInterrupt exception.
This patch also moves the creation of this object from pyb_usb_init() to
main().
This is a pure refactoring (and simplification) of code so that stmhal
uses the software SPI class provided in extmod, for the machine.SPI
implementation.
So long as a port defines relevant mp_hal_pin_xxx functions (and delay) it
can make use of this software SPI class without the need for additional
code.
Previous to this patch trying to construct, but not init, a UART that
didn't exist on the target board would actually succeed. Only when
initialising the UART would it then raise an exception that the UART does
not exist.
This patch adds an explicit check that the constructed UART does in fact
exist for the given board.
This follows the pattern of other peripherals (I2C, SPI) to specify the
pins using pin objects instead of a pair of GPIO port and pin number. It
makes it easier to customise the UART pins for a particular board.
The constants MP_IOCTL_POLL_xxx, which were stmhal-specific, are moved
from stmhal/pybioctl.h (now deleted) to py/stream.h. And they are renamed
to MP_STREAM_POLL_xxx to be consistent with other such constants.
All uses of these constants have been updated.
Add 2 macros in mphalport.h that clean and invalidate data caches only on
STM32F7 MCUs. They are needed to ensure the cache coherency before/after
DMA transferts.
* MP_HAL_CLEANINVALIDATE_DCACHE cleans and invalidate the data cache. It
must be called before starting a DMA transfer from the peripheral to the
RAM memory.
* MP_HAL_CLEAN_DCACHE cleans the data cache. It must be called before
starting a DMA transfert from the RAM memory to the peripheral.
These macros are called in sdcard.c, before reading from and writing to
the SDCard, when DMA is used.
The temperature sensor on F4 and F7 MCUs is mostly, but not always, on
channel 16. To retain compatibility across all these MCUs this patch
maps the user-facing channel 16 to the internal temperature sensor.
The "mask" parameter is used to select which pins the ADCAll constructor
will initialise to analog mode. It defaults to all pins (0xffffffff),
which is backwards compatible with previous behaviour.
These were inadvertently removed with a recent upgrade to CMSIS, where
those registers were no longer defined in the CMSIS headers, and hence
no longer extracted.
This allows one to construct an I2C object using ids that are specific
to the stmhal port, eg machine.I2C('X'). Right now the implementation
of I2C uses software I2C but the idea is to just change the C-level I2C
protocol functions to hardware implementations later on.
stdio.h was included in all HAL files only to provide
definition of NULL symbol
"stdio.h" includes "types.h" which contains some conflicting definitions
with "drivers/cc3000/inc/socket.h"
HAL Driver before v1.4.2 had a bug which caused clearing all pending
flags in MSR, TSR, RF0R and RF1R instead of only the requested one.
This is why micropython got away without explicitly clearing flags
in IRQ handler.
Current version of HAL drivers optimize IRQ handler by using precalculated
DMA register address and stream bitshift instead of calculating it on every interrupt.
Since we skip call to `HAL_DMA_Init` on reused DMA, fields StreamBaseAddress and StreamIndex
of DMA handle are not initialized and thus leads to SegFault in `DMA_IRQHandler`.
HAL_DMA_Init is a big routine and we do not need to call it on each use of DMA
(ex.: series of I2C operations) and DMA_CalcBaseAndBitshift is really small and
releasing it increases code size by only 8 bytes.
If a port defines MICROPY_READER_POSIX or MICROPY_READER_FATFS then
lexer.c now provides an implementation of mp_lexer_new_from_file using
the mp_reader_new_file function.
Implementations of persistent-code reader are provided for POSIX systems
and systems using FatFS. Macros to use these are MICROPY_READER_POSIX and
MICROPY_READER_FATFS respectively. If an alternative implementation is
needed then a port can define the function mp_reader_new_file.
Its addition was due to an early exploration on how to add CPython-like
stream interface. It's clear that it's not needed and just takes up
bytes in all ports.
If an I2C send/recv fails then the peripheral is now checked to see if
it's in a "stuck" state waiting for the stop bit, and if so then it is
reset so that the next I2C transaction can proceed.
This patch also de-inits the I2C peripheral in the init() method, before
init'ing it again.
New keyword option in constructor and init() method is "dma=<bool>".
DMA is now disabled by default for I2C transfers because it currently does
not handle I2C bus errors very well (eg if slave device doesn't ACK or
NACK correctly during a transfer).
The DMA state is always HAL_DMA_STATE_RESET because of the memset clearing
all the data, so prior to this patch HAL_DMA_DeInit was never called. Now
it is always called to make sure the DMA is properly reset.
Now, to use frozen bytecode all a port needs to do is define
FROZEN_MPY_DIR to the directory containing the .py files to freeze, and
define MICROPY_MODULE_FROZEN_MPY and MICROPY_QSTR_EXTRA_POOL.
In order to have more fine-grained control over how builtin functions are
constructed, the MP_DECLARE_CONST_FUN_OBJ macros are made more specific,
with suffix of _0, _1, _2, _3, _VAR, _VAR_BETEEN or _KW. These names now
match the MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ macros.
In particular, this makes the L4 .isr_vector section 16K in size so it's
the same as the F4/F7 MCUs. The patch also moves the L4 filesystem to
the end of flash, which allows for 512K filesystem on the 1Mb devices
like the STM32L476DISC.
The delay_half parameter must be specified by the port to set up the
timing of the software SPI. This allows the port to adjust the timing
value to better suit its timing characteristics, as well as provide a
more accurate printing of the baudrate.
It's simpler to just default to always using software SPI if no specific
peripheral id/name is given. To use hardware SPI users must specify a
hardware peripheral id as the first parameter to the SPI constructor.
There is no need to take src_len and dest_len arguments. The case of
reading-only with a single output byte (originally src_len=1, dest_len>1)
is now handled by using the output buffer as the input buffer, and using
memset to fill the output byte into this buffer. This simplifies the
implementations of the spi_transfer protocol function.
To reset the flags we should write to the single bit only, not the entire
register (otherwise all other settings in the register are cleared).
Fixes#2457.
UART1 can be used even if the switch is enabled. The schematics for this
board make I2C1 available on PB8/PB9, even though it can also be mapped
to PB6/PB7.
See #2396 and #2427.
If a user tries to call `swint()` while interrupt is disabled the flag in
SWIER is set but the interrupt is not triggered and therefore the SWIER bit
is not cleared. When the interrupt is again enabled the next call to
`swint()` won't trigger the IRQ because a 0 to 1 transition will not occur.
The LCD interface library fails to deassert the chip select of the LCD
after an SPI transmission. Consequently using the SPI with other
peripherals disturbs the state of the LCD. This patch changes
lcd.lcd_out() to deassert CS after each transmission to the LCD.
machine.POWER_ON is renamed to machine.PWRON_RESET to match other
reset-cause constants that all end in _RESET. The cc3200 port keeps a
legacy definition of POWER_ON for backwards compatibility.
This new config option allows to control whether MicroPython uses its own
internal printf or not (if not, an external one should be linked in).
Accompanying this new option is the inclusion of lib/utils/printf.c in the
core list of source files, so that ports no longer need to include it
themselves.
This extra forward slash for the starting-point directory is unnecessary
and leads to additional slashes on Max OS X which mean that the frozen
files cannot be imported.
Fixes#2374.
This patch makes second and next calls to <socket>.close() a no-op.
It prevents GC from closing the underlying resource after user
already used <socket>.close() explicitly.
fixes#2355
It turns out that TIM1 and TIM8 have their own Capture/Compare
interrupt vector. For all of the other timers, the capture/compare
interrupt vector is the same as the update vector.
So we need to add handlers for these vectors and enable them
when using capture/compare callbacks.
During testing of this, I also found that passing a channel callback
into the channel constructor would not enable interrupts properly.
I tested using:
```
>>> pyb.Timer(1, freq=4).channel(1, pyb.Timer.OC_TOGGLE, callback=lambda t: print('.', end=''))
```
I tested the above with channels 1, 4, and 8
This type was used only for the typedef of mp_obj_t, which is now defined
by the object representation. So we can now remove this unused typedef,
to simplify the mpconfigport.h file.
Fixing Issue #2243. Main problems were:
- HAL_ADC_GetState(adcHandle) may return other bits set (not only
HAL_ADC_STATE_EOC_REG) when called - so I AND-ed it out as proposed by
mattbrejza in Issue #2243.
- ADC Pin has to be configured as GPIO_MODE_ANALOG_ADC_CONTROL not only
GPIO_MODE_ANALOG.
- Resolved ADC resolution L4 specific (Use L4 define ADC_RESOLUTION_12B).
- Changed setting of Init.EOCSelection toADC_EOC_SINGLE_CONV for L4.
- Added call to ADC_MultiModeTypeDef as this is done on a STM32Cube
generated project too.
- Clean up: Configuration of ADC is done only in ONE function not the same
is done in two functions.
Test is done on PA5 pin of STM32L4Discovery-Kit which is connected to the
DOWN button.
Thanks to mattbrejza for discovering the bug.