Commit Graph

11989 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Reinhard Feger
cd61fc8e44 stm32/boards/stm32h743.ld: Enable D2 RAM and add eth-buffer section. 2020-12-08 15:27:27 +11:00
Glenn Ruben Bakke
d0b8554df4 nrf: Change selected boards to utilize pre-flashed bootloader.
The nrf52840-mdk-usb-dongle and pca10050 comes with a pre-flashed
bootloader (OpenBootloader).

This commit updates the boards "mpconfigboard.mk" to use DFU as
default flashing method and set the corresponding BOOTLOADER
settings such that nrf52840_open_bootloader_1.2.x.ld linker
script is used.

The default DFU flashing method can be disabled by issuing "DFU=0"
when invoking make. This will lead to "segger" being used as default
flashing tool. When using "DFU=0", the linker scripts will not
compensate for any MBR and Bootloader region being present, and might
overwrite them if they were present.

The commit also removes the custom linker script specific to
nrf52840-mdk-usb-dongle as it now points to a generic.

Updated nrf52840-mdk-usb-dongle's README.md to be more clear on
how to deploy the built firmware.

The port README.md has also been updated. In the list of target
boards a new column has been added to indicate which bootloader
is present on the target board. And for consistency, changed all
examples in the README.md to use "deploy" instead of "flash".
2020-12-07 20:04:50 +01:00
Glenn Ruben Bakke
7f405236a3 nrf/boards: Add linker script for nrf52840 Open Bootloader 1.2.0. 2020-12-07 20:04:50 +01:00
Glenn Ruben Bakke
634f6df324 nrf/Makefile: Add support for flashing with nrfutil.
An additional Makefile parameter NRFUTIL_PORT can be set in order
to define the serial port to used for the DFU (Default: /dev/ttyACM0).

The "nrfutil" that is used as flasher towards OpenBootloader is
available for installation through Python "pip".

In case of SD=s140, SoftDevice ID 0xB6 is passed to nrfutil's package
generation which corresponds to SoftDevice s140 v6.1.1.
2020-12-07 20:04:50 +01:00
Glenn Ruben Bakke
718397a37d nrf/Makefile: Add bootloader specific section.
Add the option for "mpconfigboard.mk" to define whether the
board hosts a bootloader or not. The BOOTLOADER make variable
must be set to the name of the bootloader.

When the BOOTLOADER name is set it is also required to supply
the BOOTLOADER_VERSION_MAJOR and the BOOTLOADER_VERSION_MINOR
from the "mpconfigboards.mk". These will be used to resolve which
bootloader linker script that should be passed to the linker.

The BOOTLOADER section also supplies the C-compiler with
BOOTLOADER_<bootloader name>=<version major><version minor>
as a compiler define. This is for future use in case a bootloader
needs to do modification to the startup files or similar (like
setting the VTOR specific to a version of a bootloader).
2020-12-07 20:04:50 +01:00
Glenn Ruben Bakke
2489688635 nrf/boards: Update memory.ld to include bootloader offsets.
Adding variables that can be set from other linker scripts:

- _bootloader_head_size:
    Bootloader flash offset in front of the application.

- _bootloader_tail_size:
    Bootloader offset from the tail of the flash.
    In case the bootloader is located at the end.

- _bootloader_head_ram_size:
    Bootloader RAM usage in front of the application.

Updated calculations of application flash and RAM.
2020-12-07 20:04:50 +01:00
Joris Peeraer
5020b14d54 py/mpprint: Fix length calculation for strings with precision-modifier.
Two issues are tackled:

1. The calculation of the correct length to print is fixed to treat the
   precision as a maximum length instead as the exact length.
   This is done for both qstr (%q) and for regular str (%s).

2. Fix the incorrect use of mp_printf("%.*s") to mp_print_strn().

   Because of the fix of above issue, some testcases that would print
   an embedded null-byte (^@ in test-output) would now fail.
   The bug here is that "%s" was used to print null-bytes. Instead,
   mp_print_strn is used to make sure all bytes are outputted and the
   exact length is respected.

Test-cases are added for both %s and %q with a combination of precision
and padding specifiers.
2020-12-07 23:32:06 +11:00
Jonathan Bruchim
dde0735ac1 zephyr: Guard I2C code with appropriate ifdef config.
To reduce binary code size when not using I2C.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Bruchim <yonbruchim@gmail.com>
2020-12-07 23:11:00 +11:00
Maureen Helm
92a5ee6ac1 zephyr: Replace broken shell_net_iface() with more general shell_exec().
The zephyr function net_shell_cmd_iface() was removed in zephyr v1.14.0,
therefore the MicroPython zephyr port did not build with newer zephyr
versions when CONFIG_NET_SHELL=y. Replace with a more general
shell_exec() function that can execute any zephyr shell command. For
example:

>>> zephyr.shell_exec("net")

Subcommands:
  allocs     :Print network memory allocations.
  arp        :Print information about IPv4 ARP cache.
  conn       :Print information about network connections.
  dns        :Show how DNS is configured.
  events     :Monitor network management events.
  gptp       :Print information about gPTP support.
  iface      :Print information about network interfaces.
  ipv6       :Print information about IPv6 specific information and
              configuration.
  mem        :Print information about network memory usage.
  nbr        :Print neighbor information.
  ping       :Ping a network host.
  pkt        :net_pkt information.
  ppp        :PPP information.
  resume     :Resume a network interface
  route      :Show network route.
  stacks     :Show network stacks information.
  stats      :Show network statistics.
  suspend    :Suspend a network interface
  tcp        :Connect/send/close TCP connection.
  vlan       :Show VLAN information.
  websocket  :Print information about WebSocket connections.

>>> zephyr.shell_exec("kernel")

kernel - Kernel commands
Subcommands:
  cycles   :Kernel cycles.
  reboot   :Reboot.
  stacks   :List threads stack usage.
  threads  :List kernel threads.
  uptime   :Kernel uptime.
  version  :Kernel version.

Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
2020-12-07 23:01:00 +11:00
Damien George
cb1bb7592e stm32/Makefile: Change -O0 to -Og for DEBUG=1 builds.
The -Og optimisation level produces a more realistic build, gives a better
debugging experience, and generates smaller code than -O0, allowing debug
builds to fit in flash.

This commit also assigns variables in can.c to prevent warnings when -Og is
used, and builds a board in CI with DEBUG=1 enabled.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-07 22:27:38 +11:00
Damien George
1e4e2644ec stm32: Add support for a board to reserve certain peripherals.
Allows reserving CAN, I2C, SPI, Timer and UART peripherals.  If reserved
the peripheral cannot be accessed from Python.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-07 17:22:08 +11:00
Damien George
4ce6427bd7 stm32/i2c: Factor I2C finding code to i2c_find_peripheral function.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-07 17:21:36 +11:00
iabdalkader
7dc2f4ed38 stm32/powerctrl: Ensure SysTick is disabled on STOP mode entry for H7.
Even though IRQs are disabled this seems to be required on H7 Rev Y,
otherwise Systick interrupt triggers and the MCU leaves the stop mode
immediately.
2020-12-07 17:00:56 +11:00
iabdalkader
7b9b6d080a stm32/powerctrl: Set H7 RTC wakeup flags. 2020-12-07 17:00:42 +11:00
iabdalkader
8add94e94e stm32/powerctrl: Disable RTC write protection before changing flags. 2020-12-07 17:00:21 +11:00
iabdalkader
463a275bc4 stm32/powerctrl: On H7, re-enable disabled OSCs/PLLs on exit from STOP.
This commit saves OSCs/PLLs state before STOP mode and restores them on
exit.  Some boards use HSI48 for USB for example, others have PLL2/3
enabled, etc.
2020-12-07 16:58:38 +11:00
iabdalkader
3e5dd2dbcc stm32/powerctrl: Fix STOP mode voltage scaling on H7 REV V devices. 2020-12-07 16:58:00 +11:00
iabdalkader
e9e619fa24 stm32/powerctrl: Define RCC_SR_SFTRSTF flag for H747. 2020-12-07 16:57:29 +11:00
iabdalkader
ce9197eb20 stm32/Makefile: Disable text compression in debug builds.
Otherwise the flash overflows.

Fixes issue #6653.
2020-12-07 16:45:15 +11:00
iabdalkader
849748873c stm32/modmachine: Add device and revision ids to machine.info(). 2020-12-07 16:39:18 +11:00
Damien George
c8b0557178 tests/multi_bluetooth: Add multitests for BLE pairing and bonding.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-02 14:44:55 +11:00
Jim Mussared
d79b9c6c7c extmod/nimble: Generate and persist a unique IRK.
This provides a workaround for
https://github.com/apache/mynewt-nimble/issues/887.

Without this, all devices would share a fixed default IRK.

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:44:39 +11:00
Jim Mussared
68136eb4ba docs/library/ubluetooth.rst: Add passkey docs.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:44:36 +11:00
Jim Mussared
f6fd46c402 examples/bluetooth: Add bonding/passkey demo.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:44:00 +11:00
Jim Mussared
e4f27cbee7 extmod/modbluetooth: Add support for passkey authentication.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:43:32 +11:00
Jim Mussared
4bcbbfdb6c extmod/modbluetooth: Simplify synchronous invoke_irq_handler signature.
Rather than dealing with the different int types, just pass them all as a
single array of mp_int_t with n_unsigned (before addr) and n_signed (after
addr).

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:43:01 +11:00
Jim Mussared
b799fe1421 docs/library/ubluetooth.rst: Add bonding docs.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:42:46 +11:00
Jim Mussared
c4d08aa4e3 extmod/modbluetooth: Add support for bonding (key persistence).
This adds `_IRQ_GET_SECRET` and `_IRQ_SET_SECRET` events to allow the BT
stack to request the Python code retrive/store/delete secret key data.  The
actual keys and values are opaque to Python and stack-specific.

Only NimBLE is implemented (pending moving btstack to sync events).  The
secret store is designed to be compatible with BlueKitchen's TLV store API.

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:41:41 +11:00
Jim Mussared
fff634e031 docs/library/ubluetooth.rst: Add gap_pair() docs.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:41:36 +11:00
Jim Mussared
801e8ffacf extmod/modbluetooth: Add gap_pair(conn_handle) func to intiate pairing.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:41:26 +11:00
Jim Mussared
f822557cbb docs/library/ubluetooth.rst: Add pairing/bonding config docs.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:41:21 +11:00
Jim Mussared
a1fcf30121 extmod/modbluetooth: Allow configuration of pairing/bonding parameters.
This allows setting the security and MITM-protection requirements.

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:40:49 +11:00
Andrew Leech
05fef8c6a4 extmod/modbluetooth: Add _IRQ_ENCRYPTION_UPDATE event.
This allows the application to be notified if any of encrypted,
authenticated and bonded state change, as well as the encryption key size.

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:40:15 +11:00
Jim Mussared
ac89267fef extmod/modbluetooth: Add compile-config flag to enable pairing/bonding.
Enable it on STM32/Unix NimBLE only (pairing/bonding requires synchronous
events and full bindings).

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:39:41 +11:00
Jim Mussared
5e20f689ad docs/library/ubluetooth.rst: Update read request IRQ docs.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:39:17 +11:00
Jim Mussared
60830bcba4 extmod/modbluetooth: Allow user-specified reason in read request IRQ.
Instead of returning None/bool from the IRQ, return None/int (where a zero
value means success).  This mirrors how the L2CAP_ACCEPT return value
works.

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:37:55 +11:00
Jim Mussared
89553997b8 docs/library/ubluetooth.rst: Update char/desc flags.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:37:45 +11:00
Andrew Leech
1697ff335d extmod/modbluetooth: Allow setting char/desc enc/auth options.
This widens the characteristic/descriptor flags to 16-bit, to allow setting
encryption/authentication requirements.

Sets the required flags for NimBLE and btstack implementations.

The BLE.FLAG_* constants will eventually be deprecated in favour of copy
and paste Python constants (like the IRQs).

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:36:50 +11:00
Jim Mussared
7a9aa49595 docs/library/ubluetooth.rst: Add _IRQ_CONNECTION_UDPATE docs.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:36:41 +11:00
Andrew Leech
c70665fb0b extmod/modbluetooth: Add _IRQ_CONNECTION_UPDATE event.
This allows the application to be notified of changes to the connection
interval, connection latency and supervision timeout.

Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:35:39 +11:00
Jim Mussared
f2a9a0ac41 extmod/nimble: Fail read if the characteristic is too big.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2020-12-02 14:35:17 +11:00
Damien George
b505971069 extmod/uasyncio: Fix cancellation handling of wait_for.
This commit switches the roles of the helper task from a cancellation task
to a runner task, to get the correct semantics for cancellation of
wait_for.

Some uasyncio tests are now disabled for the native emitter due to issues
with native code generation of generators and yield-from.

Fixes #5797.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-02 12:31:37 +11:00
Damien George
309dfe39e0 extmod/uasyncio: Add Task.done() method.
This is added because task.coro==None is no longer the way to detect if a
task is finished.  Providing a (CPython compatible) function for this
allows the implementation to be abstracted away.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-02 12:07:06 +11:00
Damien George
ca40eb0fda extmod/uasyncio: Delay calling Loop.call_exception_handler by 1 loop.
When a tasks raises an exception which is uncaught, and no other task
await's on that task, then an error message is printed (or a user function
called) via a call to Loop.call_exception_handler.  In CPython this call is
made when the Task object is freed (eg via reference counting) because it's
at that point that it is known that the exception that was raised will
never be handled.

MicroPython does not have reference counting and the current behaviour is
to deal with uncaught exceptions as early as possible, ie as soon as they
terminate the task.  But this can be undesirable because in certain cases
a task can start and raise an exception immediately (before any await is
executed in that task's coro) and before any other task gets a chance to
await on it to catch the exception.

This commit changes the behaviour so that tasks which end due to an
uncaught exception are scheduled one more time for execution, and if they
are not await'ed on by the next scheduling loop, then the exception handler
is called (eg the exception is printed out).

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-02 12:07:06 +11:00
Damien George
a14ca31e85 docs/reference/repl.rst: Add information about new raw-paste mode.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-01 22:35:13 +11:00
Damien George
a59282b9bf tools/pyboard.py: Add fast raw-paste mode.
This commit adds support to pyboard.py for the new raw REPL paste mode.

Note that this new pyboard.py is fully backwards compatible with old
devices (it detects if the device supports the new raw REPL paste mode).

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-01 22:35:13 +11:00
Damien George
bb24c69b90 lib/utils/pyexec: Add stdin-reader on raw REPL with flow control.
Background: the friendly/normal REPL is intended for human use whereas the
raw REPL is for computer use/automation.  Raw REPL is used for things like
pyboard.py script_to_run.py.  The normal REPL has built-in flow control
because it echos back the characters.  That's not so with raw REPL and flow
control is just implemented by rate limiting the amount of data that goes
in.  Currently it's fixed at 256 byte chunks every 10ms.  This is sometimes
too fast for slow MCUs or systems with small stdin buffers.  It's also too
slow for a lot of higher-end MCUs, ie it could be a lot faster.

This commit adds a new raw REPL mode which includes flow control: the
device will echo back a character after a certain number of bytes are sent
to the host, and the host can use this to regulate the data going out to
the device.  The amount of characters is controlled by the device and sent
to the host before communication starts.  This flow control allows getting
the maximum speed out of a serial link, regardless of the link or the
device at the other end.

Also, this new raw REPL mode parses and compiles the incoming data as it
comes in.  It does this by creating a "stdin reader" object which is then
passed to the lexer.  The lexer requests bytes from this "stdin reader"
which retrieves bytes from the host, and does flow control.  What this
means is that no memory is used to store the script (in the existing raw
REPL mode the device needs a big buffer to read in the script before it can
pass it on to the lexer/parser/compiler).  The only memory needed on the
device is enough to parse and compile.

Finally, it would be possible to extend this new raw REPL to allow bytecode
(.mpy files) to be sent as well as text mode scripts (but that's not done
in this commit).

Some results follow. The test was to send a large 33k script that contains
mostly comments and then prints out the heap, run via pyboard.py large.py.

On PYBD-SF6, prior to this PR:

$ ./pyboard.py large.py
stack: 524 out of 23552
GC: total: 392192, used: 34464, free: 357728
 No. of 1-blocks: 12, 2-blocks: 2, max blk sz: 2075, max free sz: 22345
GC memory layout; from 2001a3f0:
00000: h=hhhh=======================================hhBShShh==h=======h
00400: =====hh=B........h==h===========================================
00800: ================================================================
00c00: ================================================================
01000: ================================================================
01400: ================================================================
01800: ================================================================
01c00: ================================================================
02000: ================================================================
02400: ================================================================
02800: ================================================================
02c00: ================================================================
03000: ================================================================
03400: ================================================================
03800: ================================================================
03c00: ================================================================
04000: ================================================================
04400: ================================================================
04800: ================================================================
04c00: ================================================================
05000: ================================================================
05400: ================================================================
05800: ================================================================
05c00: ================================================================
06000: ================================================================
06400: ================================================================
06800: ================================================================
06c00: ================================================================
07000: ================================================================
07400: ================================================================
07800: ================================================================
07c00: ================================================================
08000: ================================================================
08400: ===============================================.....h==.........
       (349 lines all free)

(the big blob of used memory is the large script).

Same but with this PR:

$ ./pyboard.py large.py
stack: 524 out of 23552
GC: total: 392192, used: 1296, free: 390896
 No. of 1-blocks: 12, 2-blocks: 3, max blk sz: 40, max free sz: 24420
GC memory layout; from 2001a3f0:
00000: h=hhhh=======================================hhBShShh==h=======h
00400: =====hh=h=B......h==.....h==....................................
       (381 lines all free)

The only thing in RAM is the compiled script (and some other unrelated
items).

Time to download before this PR: 1438ms, data rate: 230,799 bits/sec.

Time to download with this PR: 119ms, data rate: 2,788,991 bits/sec.

So it's more than 10 times faster, and uses significantly less RAM.

Results are similar on other boards. On an stm32 board that connects via
UART only at 115200 baud, the data rate goes from 80kbit/sec to
113kbit/sec, so gets close to saturating the UART link without loss of
data.

The new raw REPL mode also supports a single ctrl-C to break out of this
flow-control mode, so that a ctrl-C can always get back to a known state.
It's also backwards compatible with the original raw REPL mode, which is
still supported with the same sequence of commands.  The new raw REPL
mode is activated by ctrl-E, which gives an error on devices that do not
support the new mode.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-11-30 11:37:44 +11:00
Damien George
f7225d1c95 github/workflows: Run unix and qemu-arm workflows when tests change.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-11-30 10:48:41 +11:00
Damien George
2f723d83c0 README: Update badges for new GitHub Actions workflows.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-11-30 10:48:41 +11:00
Damien George
02b44a0154 tests/run-tests: Update skipped tests on CI for GitHub Actions.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-11-30 10:48:41 +11:00