Commit Graph

235 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yonatan Goldschmidt
b2dd443d92 tools/makemanifest.py: Use sys.executable when invoking Python scripts.
So the version of Python used to run makemanifest.py is also used for the
sub-scripts.
2019-11-13 13:44:19 +11:00
Andrew Leech
d2e6cfd8fd tools/makemanifest.py: Skip freezing unsupported files with warning. 2019-11-07 12:34:57 +11:00
Mirko Vogt
2f71d66ef7 tools/makemanifest.py: Follow symlinks when freezing linked directories.
While the new manifest.py style got introduced for freezing python code
into the resulting binary, the old way - where files and modules within
ports/*/modules where baked into the resulting binary - was still
supported via `freeze('$(PORT_DIR)/modules')` within manifest.py.

However behaviour changed for symlinked directories (=modules), as those
links weren't followed anymore.

This commit restores the original behaviour by explicitly following
symlinks within a modules/ directory
2019-11-06 11:41:06 +11:00
Damien George
36c9be6f60 tools/mpy-tool.py: Use "@progbits #" attribute for native xtensa code. 2019-11-04 15:31:42 +11:00
Jim Mussared
8ba963cfa3 tools/makemanifest.py: Eval relative paths w.r.t. current manifest file.
When loading a manifest file, e.g. by include(), it will chdir first to the
directory of that manifest.  This means that all file operations within a
manifest are relative to that manifest's location.

As a consequence of this, additional environment variables are needed to
find absolute paths, so the following are added: $(MPY_LIB_DIR),
$(PORT_DIR), $(BOARD_DIR).  And rename $(MPY) to $(MPY_DIR) to be
consistent.

Existing manifests are updated to match.
2019-10-21 23:01:41 +11:00
Damien George
e81f538e25 tools: Add mechanism to provide a manifest of frozen files.
This introduces a new build variable FROZEN_MANIFEST which can be set to a
manifest listing (written in Python) that describes the set of files to be
frozen in to the firmware.
2019-10-15 21:34:23 +11:00
Damien George
8e8cfa6f53 tools/make-frozen.py: Allow to run with no directory passed in.
In which case it will just emit empty frozen C definitions.
2019-10-15 21:33:49 +11:00
Damien George
23f0691fdd py/persistentcode: Make .mpy more compact with qstr directly in prelude.
Instead of encoding 4 zero bytes as placeholders for the simple_name and
source_file qstrs, and storing the qstrs after the bytecode, store the
qstrs at the location of these 4 bytes.  This saves 4 bytes per bytecode
function stored in a .mpy file (for example lcd160cr.mpy drops by 232
bytes, 4x 58 functions).  And resulting code size is slightly reduced on
ports that use this feature.
2019-10-15 16:56:27 +11:00
Damien George
9adedce42e py: Add new Xtensa-Windowed arch for native emitter.
Enabled via the configuration MICROPY_EMIT_XTENSAWIN.
2019-10-05 13:44:53 +10:00
Damien George
c8c0fd4ca3 py: Rework and compress second part of bytecode prelude.
This patch compresses the second part of the bytecode prelude which
contains the source file name, function name, source-line-number mapping
and cell closure information.  This part of the prelude now begins with a
single varible length unsigned integer which encodes 2 numbers, being the
byte-size of the following 2 sections in the header: the "source info
section" and the "closure section".  After decoding this variable unsigned
integer it's possible to skip over one or both of these sections very
easily.

This scheme saves about 2 bytes for most functions compared to the original
format: one in the case that there are no closure cells, and one because
padding was eliminated.
2019-10-01 12:26:22 +10:00
Damien George
b5ebfadbd6 py: Compress first part of bytecode prelude.
The start of the bytecode prelude contains 6 numbers telling the amount of
stack needed for the Python values and exceptions, and the signature of the
function.  Prior to this patch these numbers were all encoded one after the
other (2x variable unsigned integers, then 4x bytes), but using so many
bytes is unnecessary.

An entropy analysis of around 150,000 bytecode functions from the CPython
standard library showed that the optimal Shannon coding would need about
7.1 bits on average to encode these 6 numbers, compared to the existing 48
bits.

This patch attempts to get close to this optimal value by packing the 6
numbers into a single, varible-length unsigned integer via bit-wise
interleaving.  The interleaving scheme is chosen to minimise the average
number of bytes needed, and at the same time keep the scheme simple enough
so it can be implemented without too much overhead in code size or speed.
The scheme requires about 10.5 bits on average to store the 6 numbers.

As a result most functions which originally took 6 bytes to encode these 6
numbers now need only 1 byte (in 80% of cases).
2019-10-01 12:26:22 +10:00
Damien George
5716c5cf65 py/persistentcode: Bump .mpy version to 5.
The bytecode opcodes have changed (there are more, and they have been
reordered).
2019-09-26 16:39:37 +10:00
Josh Lloyd
7d58a197cf py: Rename MP_QSTR_NULL to MP_QSTRnull to avoid intern collisions.
Fixes #5140.
2019-09-26 16:04:56 +10:00
Damien George
1f7202d122 py/bc: Replace big opcode format table with simple macro. 2019-09-26 15:27:11 +10:00
Damien George
5889cf58db py/bc0: Order opcodes into groups based on their size and format. 2019-09-26 15:27:10 +10:00
Damien George
c69f58e6b9 tools/mpy-tool.py: Fix freezing of non-bytecode funcs with settrace.
Only bytecode functions can be profiled at this stage.  Native functions
(eg inline assembler) may not even have a valid prelude.

Fixes issue #5075.
2019-09-06 23:55:15 +10:00
Damien George
b29fae0c56 py/bc: Fix size calculation of UNWIND_JUMP opcode in mp_opcode_format.
Prior to this patch mp_opcode_format would calculate the incorrect size of
the MP_BC_UNWIND_JUMP opcode, missing the additional byte.  But, because
opcodes below 0x10 are unused and treated as bytes in the .mpy load/save
and freezing code, this bug did not show any symptoms, since nested unwind
jumps would rarely (if ever) reach a depth of 16 (so the extra byte of this
opcode would be between 0x01 and 0x0f and be correctly loaded/saved/frozen
simply as an undefined opcode).

This patch fixes this bug by correctly accounting for the additional byte.
        .
2019-09-02 13:30:16 +10:00
Damien George
4691b43c8a tools/mpy-tool.py: Add initial support for frozen with settrace. 2019-08-30 16:49:13 +10:00
Milan Rossa
498e35219e tests: Add tests for sys.settrace feature. 2019-08-30 16:48:22 +10:00
Jim Mussared
0bd1eb80ff qemu-arm: Add testing of frozen native modules.
- Split 'qemu-arm' from 'unix' for generating tests.
- Add frozen module to the qemu-arm test build.
- Add test that reproduces the requirement to half-word align native
  function data.
2019-08-20 15:14:08 +10:00
Jim Mussared
4ab5156c01 tools/mpy-tool.py: Force native func alignment to halfword/word on ARM.
This is necessary for ARMV6 and V7.  Without this change, calling a frozen
native/viper function that is misaligned will crash.
2019-08-20 15:13:17 +10:00
Damien George
4d94fae833 tools/pyboard.py: Add filesystem commands to ls/cat/cp/rm remote files.
Use "-f" to select filesystem mode, followed by the command to execute.
Optionally put ":" at the start of a filename to indicate that it's on the
remote device, if it would otherwise be ambiguous.

Examples:

    $ pyboard.py -f ls
    $ pyboard.py -f cat main.py
    $ pyboard.py -f cp :main.py .   # get from device
    $ pyboard.py -f cp main.py :    # put to device
    $ pyboard.py -f rm main.py
2019-07-25 15:56:01 +10:00
Damien George
f073f2b543 tools: Add uf2conv.py from Microsoft/uf2 repository.
Repository https://github.com/Microsoft/uf2 commit
19615407727073e36d81bf239c52108ba92e7660
2019-07-01 17:18:44 +10:00
Jun Wu
b152bbddd1 py: Define EMIT_MACHINE_CODE as EMIT_NATIVE || EMIT_INLINE_ASM.
The combination MICROPY_EMIT_NATIVE || MICROPY_EMIT_INLINE_ASM is used in
many places, so define a new macro for it.
2019-06-28 13:54:45 +10:00
Damien George
9d3031cc9d tools/mpy-tool.py: Fix linking of qstr objects in native ARM Thumb code.
Previously, when linking qstr objects in native code for ARM Thumb, the
index into the machine code was being incremented by 4, not 8.  It should
be 8 to account for the size of the two machine instructions movw and movt.
This patch makes sure the index into the machine code is incremented by the
correct amount for all variations of qstr linking.

See issue #4829.
2019-06-11 11:36:39 +10:00
Damien George
faf3d3e9e9 tools/mpy-tool.py: Fix linking qstrs in native code, and multiple files.
Fixes errors in the tool when 1) linking qstrs in native ARM-M code; 2)
freezing multiple files some of which use native code and some which don't.

Fixes issue #4829.
2019-06-04 22:21:01 +10:00
Damien George
993ca572ca tools/upip.py: Add support for multiple index URLs with custom default.
The user can now select their own package index by either passing the "-i"
command line option, or setting the upip.index_urls variable (before doing
an install).

The https://micropython.org/pi package index hosts packages from
micropython-lib and will be searched first when installing a package.  If a
package is not found here then it will fallback to PyPI.
2019-05-15 15:46:16 +10:00
Damien George
56f6ceba7f tools/pyboard.py: Don't accumulate output data if data_consumer used.
Prior to this patch, when a lot of data was output by a running script
pyboard.py would try to capture all of this output into the "data"
variable, which would gradually slow down pyboard.py to the point where it
would have large CPU and memory usage (on the host) and potentially lose
data.

This patch fixes this problem by not accumulating the data in the case that
the data is not needed, which is when "data_consumer" is used.
2019-04-25 13:24:32 +10:00
Damien George
74ed06828f tools/mpy-tool.py: Fix init of QStrWindow, and remove unused variable.
The qstr window size is not log-2 encoded, it's just the actual number (but
in mpy-tool.py this didn't lead to an error because the size is just used
to truncate the window so it doesn't grow arbitrarily large in memory).

Addresses issue #4635.
2019-04-08 15:24:24 +10:00
Damien George
643d2a0e86 tools/mpy-tool.py: Adjust use of super() to make it work with Python 2.
Fixes the regression introduced in ea3c80a514
2019-04-08 11:21:18 +10:00
rhubarbdog
869a8b70ce tools/pyboard.py: Add missing line from example usage comments. 2019-03-26 16:52:41 +11:00
Andrew Leech
89ff506513 py: Update and rework build system for including external C modules.
How to use this feature is documented in docs/develop/cmodules.rst.
2019-03-08 22:58:42 +11:00
Ayke van Laethem
2e516074da py: Implement a module system for external, user C modules.
This system makes it a lot easier to include external libraries as static,
native modules in MicroPython.  Simply pass USER_C_MODULES (like
FROZEN_MPY_DIR) as a make parameter.
2019-03-08 22:49:00 +11:00
Damien George
6e11d86318 tools/upip.py: Use "raise arg" instead of no-arg raise form, for native. 2019-03-08 16:51:09 +11:00
Damien George
9a5f92ea72 py/persistentcode: Bump .mpy version to 4. 2019-03-08 15:53:05 +11:00
Damien George
ea3c80a514 tools/mpy-tool.py: Add support for freezing native code.
This adds support to freeze .mpy files that contain native code blocks.
2019-03-08 15:53:05 +11:00
Damien George
636ed0ff8d py/emitglue: Remove union in mp_raw_code_t to combine bytecode & native. 2019-03-08 15:53:04 +11:00
Damien George
4f0931b21f py/persistentcode: Define static qstr set to reduce size of mpy files.
When encoded in the mpy file, if qstr <= QSTR_LAST_STATIC then store two
bytes: 0, static_qstr_id.  Otherwise encode the qstr as usual (either with
string data or a reference into the qstr window).

Reduces mpy file size by about 5%.
2019-03-05 16:32:05 +11:00
Damien George
992a6e1dea py/persistentcode: Pack qstrs directly in bytecode to reduce mpy size.
Instead of emitting two bytes in the bytecode for where the linked qstr
should be written to, it is now replaced by the actual qstr data, or a
reference into the qstr window.

Reduces mpy file size by about 10%.
2019-03-05 16:27:34 +11:00
Damien George
5996eeb48f py/persistentcode: Add a qstr window to save mpy files more efficiently.
This is an implementation of a sliding qstr window used to reduce the
number of qstrs stored in a .mpy file.  The window size is configured to 32
entries which takes a fixed 64 bytes (16-bits each) on the C stack when
loading/saving a .mpy file.  It allows to remember the most recent 32 qstrs
so they don't need to be stored again in the .mpy file.  The qstr window
uses a simple least-recently-used mechanism to discard the least recently
used qstr when the window overflows (similar to dictionary compression).
This scheme only needs a single pass to save/load the .mpy file.

Reduces mpy file size by about 25% with a window size of 32.
2019-03-05 16:25:07 +11:00
Damien George
5a2599d962 py: Replace POP_BLOCK and POP_EXCEPT opcodes with POP_EXCEPT_JUMP.
POP_BLOCK and POP_EXCEPT are now the same, and are always followed by a
JUMP.  So this optimisation reduces code size, and RAM usage of bytecode by
two bytes for each try-except handler.
2019-03-05 16:09:58 +11:00
Dave Hylands
c932639063 tools/pydfu.py: Fix regression so tool runs under Python 2 again.
Under python3 (tested with 3.6.7) bytes with a list of integers as an
argument returns a different result than under python 2.7 (tested with
2.7.15rc1) which causes pydfu.py to fail when run under 2.7.  Changing
bytes to bytearray makes pydfu work properly under both Python 2.7 and
Python 3.6.
2018-12-30 01:20:48 +11:00
Dave Hylands
39eef27083 tools/mpy-tool.py: Fix build error when no qstrs present in frozen mpy.
If you happen to only have a really simple frozen file that doesn't contain
any new qstrs then the generated frozen_mpy.c file contains an empty
enumeration which causes a C compile time error.
2018-12-15 14:36:08 +11:00
Damien George
814d580a15 tools/mpy-tool.py: Fix calc of opcode size for opcodes with map caching.
Following an equivalent fix to py/bc.c.  The reason the incorrect values
for the opcode constants were not previously causing a bug is because they
were never being used: these opcodes always have qstr arguments so the part
of the code that was comparing them would never be reached.

Thanks to @malinah for finding the problem and providing the initial patch.
2018-12-13 01:26:55 +11:00
Damien George
4f25a8b6a4 tools/pydfu.py: Improve DFU reset, and auto-detect USB transfer size.
A DFU device must be in the idle state before it can be programmed, and
this requires either clearing the status or aborting, depending on its
current state.  Code is added to do this.  And the USB transfer size is now
automatically detected so devices with a size less than 2048 bytes work
correctly.
2018-11-27 16:19:27 +11:00
Martin Dybdal
7795b2e5c3 tools/pyboard.py: In TelnetToSerial.close replace try/except with if.
Some Python linters don't like unconditional except clauses because they
catch SystemExit and KeyboardInterrupt, which usually is not the intended
behaviour.
2018-10-19 23:46:10 +11:00
Andrew Leech
a2703649ea tools/pydfu: Workaround stdio flush error on Windows with Python 3.6.
There appears to be an issue on Windows with CPython >= 3.6,
sys.stdout.flush() raises an exception:

    OSError: [WinError 87] The parameter is incorrect

It works fine to just catch and ignore the error on the flush line.  Tested
on Windows 10 x64 1803 (Build 17134.228), Python 3.6.4 amd64.
2018-09-21 11:57:24 +10:00
Martin Dybdal
5ed8226e02 tools/pyboard.py: Change base class of PyboardError to Exception.
Following standard practice for defining custom exceptions.
2018-08-10 16:23:38 +10:00
Ayke van Laethem
0d7a088039 tools/pyboard: Run exec: command as a string.
The Python documentation recommends to pass the command as a string when
using Popen(..., shell=True).  This is because "sh -c <string>" is used to
execute the command and additional arguments after the command string are
passed to the shell itself (not the executing command).

https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/subprocess.html#subprocess.Popen
2018-08-04 15:45:23 +10:00
Rich Barlow
6e5a40cf3c tools/mpy-tool: Set sane initial dynamic qstr pool size with frozen mods
The first dynamic qstr pool is double the size of the 'alloc' field of
the last const qstr pool. The built in const qstr pool
(mp_qstr_const_pool) has a hardcoded alloc size of 10, meaning that the
first dynamic pool is allocated space for 20 entries. The alloc size
must be less than or equal to the actual number of qstrs in the pool
(the 'len' field) to ensure that the first dynamically created qstr
triggers the creation of a new pool.

When modules are frozen a second const pool is created (generally
mp_qstr_frozen_const_pool) and linked to the built in pool. However,
this second const pool had its 'alloc' field set to the number of qstrs
in the pool. When freezing a large quantity of modules this can result
in thousands of qstrs being in the pool. This means that the first
dynamically created qstr results in a massive allocation. This commit
sets the alloc size of the frozen qstr pool to 10 or less (if the number
of qstrs in the pool is less than 10). The result of this is that the
allocation behaviour when a dynamic qstr is created is identical with an
without frozen code.

Note that there is the potential for a slight memory inefficiency if the
frozen modules have less than 10 qstrs, as the first few dynamic
allocations will have quite a large overhead, but the geometric growth
soon deals with this.
2018-08-01 18:59:31 +10:00