If there's no port_config.py file, or it lacks WEBREPL_PASS variable,
"initial setup mode" will be entered on first WebREPLconnection. User
will be asked for password, which will be written to
port_config.WEBREPL_PASS, and system restarted to work in normal mode
with password active.
Changes are:
- added OneWireError exception and used where errors can occur
- renamed read/write functions to use same names as C _onewire funcs
- read_bytes is now read, write_bytes is now write
- add ability to read/write DS18B20 scratch pad
- rename start_measure to convert_temp (since that's what it does)
- rename get_temp to read_temp (consistency with other read names)
- removed test function
All functionality of the pyb module is available in other modules, like
time, machine and os. The only outstanding function, info(), is
(temporarily) moved to the esp module and the pyb module is removed.
All Flash sans firmware at the beginning and 16K SDK param block at the
end is used for filesystem (and that's calculated depending on the Flash
size).
Most pin I/O can be done just knowing the pin number as a simple
integer, and it's more efficient this way (code size, speed) because it
doesn't require a memory lookup to get the pin id from the pin object.
If the full pin object is needed then it can be easily looked up in the
pin table.
Use the machine.deepsleep() function to enter the sleep mode. Use the
RTC to configure the alarm to wake the device.
Basic use is the following:
import machine
# configure RTC's ALARM0 to wake device from deep sleep
rtc = machine.RTC()
rtc.irq(trigger=rtc.ALARM0, wake=machine.DEEPSLEEP)
# do other things
# ...
# set ALARM0's alarm to wake after 10 seconds
rtc.alarm(rtc.ALARM0, 10000)
# enter deep-sleep state (system is reset upon waking)
machine.deepsleep()
To detect if the system woke from a deep sleep use:
if machine.reset_cause() == machine.DEEPSLEEP_RESET:
print('woke from deep sleep')
Flash size as seen by vendor SDK doesn't depend on real size, but rather on
a particular value in firmware header, as put there by flash tool. That means
it's user responsibility to know what flash size a particular device has, and
specify correct parameters during flashing. That's not end user friendly
however, so we try to make it "flash and play" by detecting real size vs
from-header size mismatch, and correct the header accordingly.