this has the side effect of making some notes more accurate, the new
frequency= value in the test is closer to the true midi frequency of
830.609...Hz.
This class allows much more expressive sound synthesis:
* tremolo & vibrato
* arbitrary frequency
* different evelope & waveform per note
* all properties dynamically settable from Python code
this allows to test how the midi synthesizer is working, without access
to hardware. Run `micropython-coverage midi2wav.py` and it will create
`tune.wav` as an output.
This works for me (tested playing midi to raw files on host computer, as
well as a variant of the nunchuk instrument on pygamer)
it has to re-factor how/when MIDI reading occurs, because reasons.
endorse new test results
.. and allow `-1` to specify a note with no sustain (plucked)
In contrast to MidiTrack, this can be controlled from Python code,
turning notes on/off as desired.
Not tested on real HW yet, just the acceptance test based on checking
which notes it thinks are held internally.
* Enable dcache for OCRAM where the VM heap lives.
* Add CIRCUITPY_SWO_TRACE for pushing program counters out over the
SWO pin via the ITM module in the CPU. Exempt some functions from
instrumentation to reduce traffic and allow inlining.
* Place more functions in ITCM to handle errors using code in RAM-only
and speed up CP.
* Use SET and CLEAR registers for digitalio. The SDK does read, mask
and write.
* Switch to 2MiB reserved for CircuitPython code. Up from 1MiB.
* Run USB interrupts during flash erase and write.
* Allow storage writes from CP if the USB drive is disabled.
* Get perf bench tests running on CircuitPython and increase timeouts
so it works when instrumentation is active.
cpython actually makes sure the newly chained exception doesn't create
a cycle (even indirectly); see _PyErr_SetObject use of "Floyd's cycle
detection algo". We'll go for the simpler solution of just checking
one level deep until it's clear we need to do more.
Closes: #7414
\r\n files must be working due to micropython's built in handling of
text-mode files, I didn't implement it.
\r-only (old mac text-mode files) are explicitly not supported by
the toml format.
While working on adding 0o and 0b literals (which aren't added yet and
may not be) I realized that my approach would likely cause a problem
for the value "0"
* use a virtual fat filesystem during the test
* this makes the file I/O part more closely patch runtime which is nice
* side-steps the need to add a special function for testing
* but test still can't be run on a device, because the vfs calls
are incompatible, and you intentionally can't remount "/" anyway
* and side-steps problems with storing 'bad' toml files
This adds the __cause__, __context__ and __suppress_context__
members to exception objects and makes e.g., `raise exc from cause`
set them in the same way as standard Python.
A task that has been sent to the loop's exception handler due to being
re-scheduled twice will then subsequently cause a `raise None` if it is
subsequently awaited. In the C version of task.py, this causes a segfault.
This makes the await succeed (via raising StopIteration instead).
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This also depends on https://github.com/adafruit/Adafruit_CircuitPython_Ticks/pull/8
otherwise adafruit_ticks is unimportable and the tests are just skipped.
Several of the tests fail, and one runs forever instead of terminating.
We should fix our asyncio until the tests patch, then incorporate this
change.
.. it needs to operate on a FILE* rather than FIL depending on
the build.
Note that this is comparing output to expected, not to cpython dotenv
package. Because run-tests.py starts the CPython interpreter with the
'-S' (skip site initialization) flag, pip-installed packages are
not available for import inside a test file. Instead, the exp
file is generated manually:
```
circuitpython/tests$ python3 circuitpython/dotenv_test.py > circuitpython/dotenv_test.py.exp
```
Unfortunately, the test fails on test e15:
```diff
FAILURE /home/jepler/src/circuitpython/tests/results/circuitpython_dotenv_test.py
--- /home/jepler/src/circuitpython/tests/results/circuitpython_dotenv_test.py.exp 2022-10-04 09:48:16.307703128 -0500
+++ /home/jepler/src/circuitpython/tests/results/circuitpython_dotenv_test.py.out 2022-10-04 09:48:16.307703128 -0500
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
line
e13 e13value
e14 None
-e15 e15value
+e15 None
e16 #
e17 def
e18 #has a hash
```
Formerly, py/formatfloat would print whole numbers inaccurately with
nonzero digits beyond the decimal place. This resulted from its strategy
of successive scaling of the argument by 0.1 which cannot be exactly
represented in floating point. The change in this commit avoids scaling
until the value is smaller than 1, so all whole numbers print with zero
fractional part.
Fixes issue #4212.
Signed-off-by: Dan Ellis dan.ellis@gmail.com
The sys.tracebacklimit feature has changed semantics a bit from CPython 3.7
(in the way it modifies the output), so provide a .exp file for the test so
it doesn't rely on CPython.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Support for architecture-specific qstr linking was removed in
d4d53e9e11, where native code was changed to
access qstr values via qstr_table. The only remaining use for the special
qstr link table in persistentcode.c is to support native module written in
C, linked via mpy_ld.py. But native modules can also use the standard
module-level qstr_table (and obj_table) which was introduced in the .mpy
file reworking in f2040bfc7e.
This commit removes the remaining native qstr liking support in
persistentcode.c's load_raw_code function, and adds two new relocation
options for constants.qstr_table and constants.obj_table. mpy_ld.py is
updated to use these relocations options instead of the native qstr link
table.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This works if your network is pre-configured in boot.py as an object called
"nic". Without this, multitests expects to access the WLAN/LAN class which
isn't always correct.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Leech <andrew@alelec.net>
This fixes the cases where the task being waited on finishes just before or
just after the wait_for itself is cancelled.
Fixes issue #8717.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
And make it so this test can run on any target.
LED and time testing has been removed from this test, that can now be
tested using: ./run-tests.py --via-mpy --emit native.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
If a port is not using internal error numbers, which match both lwIP and
Linux error numbers, ENTOCONN from standard libraries errno.h equals 128,
not 107.
This enables the new `-X realtime` runtime option when running tests on
macOS. This causes MicroPython to configure all threads to be high
priority so that they are allowed to use high precision timers. This
makes tests that depend on the passage of time more likely to succeed.
CI tests that were disabled because of this are now enabled again.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
The performance benchmark tests now support `--via-mpy` and `--emit native`
on remote targets. For example:
$ ./run-perfbench.py -p --via-mpy --emit native 100 100
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This adds support for the `--via-mpy` and `--emit native` options when
running tests on remote targets (via pyboard.py). It's now possible to do:
$ ./run-tests.py --target pyboard --via-mpy
$ ./run-tests.py --target pyboard --via-mpy --emit native
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Now that constant tuples are supported in the parser, eg (1, True, "str"),
it's a small step to allow anything that is a constant to be used with the
pattern:
from micropython import const
X = const(obj)
This commit makes the required changes to allow the following types of
constants:
from micropython import const
_INT = const(123)
_FLOAT = const(1.2)
_COMPLEX = const(3.4j)
_STR = const("str")
_BYTES = const(b"bytes")
_TUPLE = const((_INT, _STR, _BYTES))
_TUPLE2 = const((None, False, True, ..., (), _TUPLE))
Prior to this, only integers could be used in const(...).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Because the test modifies the (now) bytearray object, and if it's a bytes
object it's not guaranteed that it can be modified, or that this constant
object isn't used elsewhere.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Prior to this commit, all qstrs were required to be allocated (by calling
mp_emit_common_use_qstr) in the MP_PASS_SCOPE pass (the first one). But
this is an unnecessary restriction, which is lifted by this commit.
Lifting the restriction simplifies the compiler because it can allocate
qstrs in later passes.
This also generates better code, because in some cases (eg when a variable
is closed over) the scope of an identifier is not known until a bit later
and then the identifier no longer needs its qstr allocated in the global
table.
Code size is reduced for all ports with this commit.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Prior to this commit, even with unicode disabled .py and .mpy files could
contain unicode characters, eg by entering them directly in a string as
utf-8 encoded.
The only thing the compiler disallowed (with unicode disabled) was using
\uxxxx and \Uxxxxxxxx notation to specify a character within a string with
value >= 0x100; that would give a SyntaxError.
With this change mpy-cross will now accept \u and \U notation to insert a
character with value >= 0x100 into a string (because the -mno-unicode
option is now gone, there's no way to forbid this). The runtime will
happily work with strings with such characters, just like it already works
with strings with characters that were utf-8 encoded directly.
This change simplifies things because there are no longer any feature
flags in .mpy files, and any bytecode .mpy will now run on any target.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Non-real-time systems like Windows, Linux and macOS do not have reliable
timing, so increase the sleep intervals to make these tests more likely to
pass.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
When in a class body or at the module level don't implicitly close over
variables that have been assigned to.
Fixes issue #8603.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>