The implementation uses the LPUARTx devices. Up to 8 UARTs can be used,
given that the pins are accessible. E.g. 8 on Teensy 4.1, 5 on
MIMXRT1020_EVK.
For Tennsy 4.0 and 4.1 the UART numbers are as printed on the pinout 1..N.
The MIMXRT10xx-EVK boards have only one UART named, which gets the number
1. All other UART are assigned to different Pins:
MIMXRT1010-EVK:
D0/D1 UART 1
D6/D7 UART 2
A0/D4 UART 3
MIMXRT1020-EVK:
D0/D1 UART 1
D6/D9 UART 2
D10/D12 UART 3
D14/D15 UART 4
A0/A1 UART 5
MIMXRT1050-EVK, MIMXRT1060-EVK, MIMXRT1064-EVK:
D0/D1 UART 1
D7/D6 UART 2
D8/D9 UART 3
A1/A0 UART 4
Now a ctrl-C will not stop mpremote, rather this character will be passed
through to the attached device.
The mpremote version is also increased to 0.0.5.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Using just the list of available ports, instead of a hard-coded list of
possible ports, means that all ports will be available for auto connection.
And the order that they will be attempted in will match what's printed by
"mpremote connect list" (and will be the same as before, trying ACMx before
USBx). Auto-connect will also now work on Mac, and will allow all COM
ports on Windows.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
With docs and a multi-test using TCP server/client.
This method is a MicroPython extension, although there is discussion of
adding it to CPython: https://bugs.python.org/issue41305
Signed-off-by: Mike Teachman <mike.teachman@gmail.com>
This fixes error: cast to smaller integer type 'int' from 'pthread_t'.
pthread_t is defined as long, not as int.
Signed-off-by: Pavol Rusnak <pavol@rusnak.io>
The rtc_set_datetime() from pico-sdk will validate the values in the
datetime_t structure and refuse to set the time if they aren't valid. It
makes sense to raise an exception if this happens instead of failing
silently which might be confusing (as an example, see:
https://github.com/micropython/micropython/pull/6928#issuecomment-860166044
).
The supplied value for microseconds in datetime() will be treated as a
starting value for the reported microseconds. Due to internal processing
in setting the time, there is an offset about 1 ms.
This change moves the datetime tuple format back to the one used by all the
other ports:
(year, month, day, weekday, hour, minute, second, microsecond)
Weekday is a number between 0 and 6, with 0 assigned to Monday. It has to
be provided when setting the RTC with datetime(), but will be ignored on
entry and calculated when needed.
The weekday() method was removed, since that is now again a part of the
datetime tuple.
The now() method was updated so it continues to return a tuple that matches
CPython's datetime module.
Initial support for machine.RTC on rp2 port. It only supports datetime()
method and nothing else. The method gets/returns a tuple of 8 items, just
like esp32 port, for example, but the usec parameter is ignored as the RP2
RTC only works up to seconds precision.
The Pico RTC isn't very useful as the time is lost during reset and there
seems to be no way to easily power up just the RTC clock with a low current
voltage, but still there seems to be use-cases for that, see issues #6831,
and a Thonny issue #1592. It was also requested for inclusion on v1.15
roadmap on #6832.
Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Adamski <k@japko.eu>
Changes introduced are:
- the application offset is now loaded from the partition table instead of
being hard-coded to 0x10000
- maximum size of all sections is computed using the partition table
- an error is generated if any section overflows its allocated space
- remaining bytes are printed for each section
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit adds a few math functions to the source list in the Makefile,
and implements the log2f function, so that ulab can be compiled on the nrf
boards. It also addresses part of #5162.
This fix prevents server.wait_closed() from raising an AttributeError when
trying to access server.task. This can happen if it is called immediately
after start_server().
This commit fixes the following problems converting to/from Python integers
and ffi types:
- integers of 8 and 16 bits not working on big endian
- integers of 64 bits not working on 32 bits architectures
- unsigned returns were converted to signed Python integers
Fixes issue #7269.
Currently only advertising and scanning are supported, using the ring
buffer for events (ie not synchronous events at this stage).
The ble_gap_advertise.py multi-test passes (tested on a nucleo_wb55rg
board).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Zephyr's default value for CONFIG_NET_SOCKETS_POSIX_NAMES was changed
from false to true between Zephyr v2.5.0 and v2.6.0. This caused
conflicts in MicroPython, which uses the zsock_ prefixed functions, so
disable it.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
Zephyr's Kconfig symbols and defaults for SDHC/SDMMC disk drivers and
the disk access subsystem were reworked between Zephyr v2.5.0 and
v2.6.0. Update MicroPython accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
Following on from ef16834887, this adds a
coverage build and running of the test suite on an ARM 32-bit Linux-based
architecture.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Prior to this commit, cache flushing for ARM native code was done only in
the assembler code asm_thumb_end_pass()/asm_arm_end_pass(), at the last
pass of the assembler. But this misses flushing the cache when loading
native code from an .mpy file, ie in persistentcode.c.
The change here makes sure the cache is always flushed/cleaned/invalidated
when assigning native code on ARM architectures.
This problem was found running tests/micropython/import_mpy_native_gc.py on
the mimxrt port.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Initial version, using the LP RTC clock. It provides setting the date and
time with rtc.init() or rtc.datetime(), and reading the date and time with
rtc.datetime() or rtc.now(). The method weekday() reports the weekday of
the current date. It starts with 0 for Monday.
The tuple order for datetime() and now() matches the CPython sequence:
(year, month, day, hour, minute, second, microsecond, TZ). TZ is ignored
and reported as None. Microsecond is provided at a best effort.
If a battery is not supplied, the default boot date/time is 1970/1/1 0:0:0.
With a battery, the clock continues to run even when the board is not
powered. The clock is quite precise. If not, using rtc.calibration() may
help.
It supports three hardware timer channels based on the PIT timers of the
MIMXRT MCU. The timer id's are 0, 1 and 2. On soft reboot all active
timers will be stopped via finalisers.
This is required since the Teensy Halfkay loader attempts to erase all of
the flash but fails to do so, at least in my tests. Formatting brings it
back to a known state.
This commit adds full support for a filesystem on all boards, with a block
device object mimxrt.Flash() and uos.VfsLfs2 enabled.
Main changes are:
- Refactoring of linker scripts to accomodate reserved area for VFS. VFS
will take up most of the available flash. 1M is reserved for code. 9K is
reserved for flash configuration, interrupts, etc.
- Addition of _boot.py with filesystem init code, called from main.c.
- Definition of the mimxrt module with a Flash class in modmimxrt.[ch].
- Implementation of a flash driver class in mimxrt_flash.c. All flashing
related functions are stored in ITCM RAM.
- Addition of the uos module with filesystem functions.
- Implementation of uos.urandom() for the sake of completeness of the uos
module.
It uses sample code from CircuitPython supplied under MIT license, which
uses the NXP SDK example code.
Done in collaboration with Philipp Ebensberger aka @alphaFred who
contributed the essential part to enable writing to flash while code is
executing, among other things.