Thanks to @turbinenreiter for the first work on this.
I heavily modified it to work with a circular RX buffer of configurable size. The main API is the same as the stream API and is a subset of upstream's machine.UART.
Fixes#46
This is required to avoid extra level of output "cooking" ("\r\r\n") and
make test infrastructure work. On the other hand, this breaks somewhat
Zephyr console abstraction.
Defining and initialising mp_kbd_exception is boiler-plate code and so the
core runtime can provide it, instead of each port needing to do it
themselves.
The exception object is placed in the VM state rather than on the heap.
mp_kbd_exception is now considered the standard variable name to hold the
singleton KeyboardInterrupt exception.
This patch also moves the creation of this object from pyb_usb_init() to
main().
Previous to this patch pyboard.py would open a new serial connection to
the target for each script that was run, and for any command that was run.
Apart from being inefficient, this meant that the board was soft-reset
between scripts/commands, which precludes scripts from accessing variables
set in a previous one.
This patch changes the behaviour of pyboard.py so that the connection to
the target is created only once, and it's not reset between scripts or any
command that is sent with the -c option.
When printing exceptions from files sent to a target by pyboard.py the
filename in the exception is <stdin>, which differs to when running the
script on the PC. So we strip out the filename to make the outputs the
same on all targets (see also misc/print_exception.py test).
sys.exit() is an important function to terminate a program. In particular,
the testsuite relies on it to skip tests (i.e. any other functionality may
be disabled, but sys.exit() is required to at least report that properly).
The new sequence is as follows:
* Solid blue during the boot/settings script.
* Solid green during the main/code script.
* After main while waiting to enter repl or reset:
* Fading green once main is done successfully.
* On error produce a series of flashes:
* Long flash color of script.
* Long flash color of error:
* Green = IndentationError
* Cyan = SyntaxError
* White = NameError
* Orange = OSError
* Yellow = Other error
* Line number of the exception by digit. Number of flashes represents value.
* Thousands = White
* Hundreds = Blue
* Tens = Yellow
* Ones = Cyan
* Off for a period and then repeats.
At any point a write to the flash storage will flicker red.
Fixes#63