This is a MicroPython-specific module that existed to support the old
version of uasyncio. It's undocumented and not enabled on all ports and
takes up code size unnecessarily.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Applies to drivers/examples/extmod/port-modules/tools.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Updates any includes, and references from Makefiles/CMake.
This essentially reverts what was done long ago in commit
136b5cbd76
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This renames the builtin-modules, such that help('modules') and printing
the module object will show "module" rather than "umodule".
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Updates all `help()` output to use the phrase:
`For online docs please visit http://docs.micropython.org/`
Some ports previously used different wording, some pointed to the wrong
link. Also make all ports use `help.c` for consistency.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Also fix MAX_ENDPOINT definition for G0, which follows G4.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Once all the firmware has been flashed and the final signatures checked,
mboot writes the "all good" byte into the header of the application. This
step uses the buffer firmware_head which, if unaligned in the build, fails
when cast to a uint64_t* in flash.c.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Leech <andrew.leech@planetinnovation.com.au>
These were incorrectly added in d995c01042.
The fix here includes the full differential ADC definitions.
Signed-off-by: brave ulysses <brave_ulysses@email.com>
This fixes:
- type-comparison (E721): do not compare types, use isinstance().
- string-dot-format-missing-arguments (F524): .format call is missing
argument(s) for placeholder(s): {message}.
- f-string-missing-placeholders (F541).
- is-literal (F632): Use != to compare constant literals.
The last one is fixed by just comparing for truthfulness of `state`.
Based on extmod/utime_mphal.c, with:
- a globals dict added
- time.localtime wrapper added
- time.time wrapper added
- time.time_ns function added
New configuration options are added for this module:
- MICROPY_PY_UTIME (enabled at basic features level)
- MICROPY_PY_UTIME_GMTIME_LOCALTIME_MKTIME
- MICROPY_PY_UTIME_TIME_TIME_NS
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This adds a mechanism to track a pending notify/indicate operation that
is deferred due to the send buffer being full. This uses a tracked alloc
that is passed as the content arg to the callback.
This replaces the previous mechanism that did this via the global pending
op queue, shared with client read/write ops.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Helps prevent the filesystem from getting formatted by mistake, among other
things. For example, on a Pico board, entering Ctrl+D and Ctrl+C fast many
times will eventually wipe the filesystem (without warning or notice).
Further rationale: Ctrl+C is used a lot by automation scripts (eg mpremote)
and UI's (eg Mu, Thonny) to get the board into a known state. If the board
is not responding for a short time then it's not possible to know if it's
just a slow start up (eg in _boot.py), or an infinite loop in the main
application. The former should not be interrupted, but the latter should.
The only way to distinguish these two cases would be to wait "long enough",
and if there's nothing on the serial after "long enough" then assume it's
running the application and Ctrl+C should break out of it. But defining
"long enough" is impossible for all the different boards and their possible
behaviour. The solution in this commit is to make it so that frozen
start-up code cannot be interrupted by Ctrl+C. That code then effectively
acts like normal C start-up code, which also cannot be interrupted.
Note: on the stm32 port this was never seen as an issue because all
start-up code is in C. But now other ports start to put more things in
_boot.py and so this problem crops up.
Signed-off-by: David Grayson <davidegrayson@gmail.com>
The following have been tested and are working:
- 550MHz CPU frequency
- UART REPL via ST-Link
- USB REPL and mass storage
- 3x LEDs and 1x user button
- Ethernet
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Changes are:
- Freeze micropython-lib time module to get strftime.
- Reserve the last 1MB of QSPI flash for (optional) WiFi firmware storage.
- Disable SD card mount on boot.
- Enable high-speed BLE firmware download.
This is for boards without networking support so that the default boot.py
continues to work.
Also update boot.py to use network.country and network.hostname instead.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This removes the previous WiFi driver from drivers/cyw43 (but leaves behind
the BT driver), and makes the stm32 port (i.e. PYBD and Portenta) use the
new "lib/cyw43-driver" open-source driver already in use by the rp2 port.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This provides a standard interface to setting the global networking config
for all interfaces and interface types.
For ports that already use either a static hostname (mimxrt, rp2) they will
now use the configured value. The default is configured by the port
(or optionally the board).
For interfaces that previously supported .config(hostname), this is still
supported but now implemented using the global network.hostname.
Similarly, pyb.country and rp2.country are now deprecated, but the methods
still exist (and forward to network.hostname).
Because ESP32/ESP8266 do not use extmod/modnetwork.c they are not affected
by this commit.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Makefile's support "else ifdef", so use it to make the logic clearer.
Also dedent some associated lines for consistency.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This allows:
$ make BOARD_DIR=path/to/board
to infer BOARD=board, rather than the previous behavior that required
additionally setting BOARD explicitly.
Also makes the same change for VARIANT_DIR -> VARIANT on Unix.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Before, both uwTick and mp_hal_ticks_ms() were used as clock source. That
assumes, that these two are synchronous and start with the same value,
which may be not the case for all ports. If the lag between uwTick and
mp_hal_ticks_ms() is larger than the timer interval, the timer would either
rush up until the times are synchronous, or not start until uwTick wraps
over.
As suggested by @dpgeorge, MICROPY_SOFT_TIMER_TICKS_MS is now used in
softtimer.c, which has to be defined in a port's mpconfigport.h with
the variable that holds the SysTick counter.
Note that it's not possible to switch everything in softtimer.c to use
mp_hal_ticks_ms() because the logic in SysTick_Handler that schedules
soft_timer_handler() uses (eg on mimxrt) the uwTick variable directly
(named systick_ms there), and mp_hal_ticks_ms() uses a different source
timer. Thus it is made fully configurable.
The default now includes all sub-components (security, l2cap, etc)
and using the kwarg options is no longer supported.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This will ensure that any board with networking support gets:
- webrepl
- mip
- urequests
- ntptime
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This drops the `.cpu` directive from the ARM gchelper_*.s files. Having
this directive breaks the linker when targeting older CPUs (e.g. `-mthumb
-mthumb-interwork` for `-mcpu=arm7tdmi`). The actual target CPU should be
determined by the compiler options.
The exact CPU doesn't actually matter, but rather the supported assembly
instruction set. So the files are renamed to *_thumb1.s and *thumb2.s to
indicate the instruction set support instead of the CPU support.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This commit uses the REGION_ALIAS GNU linker command to simplify the linker
snippets and consolidate the duplication.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This was previously implemented by adding additional members to the
mp_obj_type_t defined for each NIC, which is difficult to do cleanly with
the new object type slots mechanism. The way this works is also not
supported on GCC 8.x and below.
Instead replace it with the type protocol, which is a much simpler way of
achieving the same thing.
This affects the WizNet (in non-LWIP mode) and Nina NIC drivers.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Changes in this commit:
- Clear and mask D2 EXTIs.
- Set correct voltage scaling level for standby mode.
- Disable debug MCU (if debugging is disabled), for all MCU series.
The datasheet on page 55 shows PF0 (SDA) and PF1 (SCL) are the pins for
I2C2, but these pins do not work. Checking the MBED pinout for the
NUCLEO-F429ZI shows:
I2C1: PB8 (SCL) and PB9 (SDA).
I2C2: PB10 (SCL) and PB11 (SDA).
Both of these work and can be scanned and find devices connected to them.
Signed-off-by: Dale Weber <hybotics.sd@gmail.com>.
This changes the signatures of QSPI write_cmd_data, write_cmd_addr_data and
read_cmd_qaddr_qdata so they return an error code. The softqspi and stm32
hardware qspi driver are updated to follow this new signature. Also the
spiflash driver is updated to use these new return values.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The STM32H7xx HAL LPUART AF macros are missing the number, this HAL is the
only one that's inconsistent in the way it defines LPUART AF macros, so we
only need to define them for H7.
Prior to this commit, only sector 0 was erase/write protected, which may
not be enough to protect all of mboot (especially if mboot lives at a
higher address than the start of flash).
This commit makes sure all internal flash sectors that mboot lives in are
protected from erasing and writing. The linker script must define
_mboot_writable_flash_start for this to work.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
For STM32L4, hardware I2C can be implemented by using TIMINGR.
This commit enables:
- Use of hardware I2C in machine.I2C.
- Specifying a frequency greater than or equal to 400KHz with pyb.I2C.
For STM32L4 series, the internal sensors are connected to:
- ADC1_IN0: Internal voltage reference
- ADC1_IN17: Temperature sensor
- ADC1_IN18: VBAT battery voltage monitoring
but ADC_CHANNEL_VREFINT, ADC_CHANNEL_VBAT, ADC_CHANNEL_TEMPSENSOR are not
defined as 0, 17, 18.
This commit converts channel 0, 17, 18 to ADC_CHANNEL_x in
adc_get_internal_channel().
Prior to this commit, the actual I2C frequency can be faster than specified
one and it may exceed the I2C's specification for Fast Mode. The frequency
of SCL should be less than or equal to 400KHz in Fast Mode.
This commit fixes this issue for F4 MCUs by rounding up the division in the
frequency calculation.
Excuting the code:
i2c = I2C(1, I2C.CONTROLLER, dma=True)
tmp = i2c.recv(1, i2c_addr)
recv_data = bytearray(56)
i2c.recv(recv_data, i2c_addr)
The second i2c.recv() fails with OSError: [Errno 110] ETIMEDOUT. When
receiving greater than or equal to 2 bytes at first i2c.recv(), the second
i2c.recv() succeeds. This issue does not occur without DMA.
Details of change: when executing I2C with DMA:
- Bit 11 of I2Cx_CR2 (DMA Request Enable) should be 1 to indicate that DMA
transfer is enabled. This bit is set after I2C event interrupt is
enabled in HAL_I2C_Master_Transmit_DMA()/HAL_I2C_Master_Receive_DMA(), so
DMA Request Enable bit might be 0 in IRQHandler.
- In case of data receive:
- When only 1 byte receiption, clear I2Cx_CR1's bit 10 (ACK).
- When only 2 byte receiption, clear I2Cx_CR1's bit 10 (ACK) and set
bit 11 (POS).
- When greater than or equal to 2 byte receiption, bit 12 of I2Cx_CR2
(DMA Last Transfer) should set to generate NACK when DMA transfer
completed.
Otherwise, the I2C bus may be busy after received data from peripheral.
A board can now name the CDC ports, eg:
#define MICROPY_HW_USB_CDC_NUM (3)
#define MICROPY_HW_USB_INTERFACE_CDC0_STRING "REPL"
#define MICROPY_HW_USB_INTERFACE_CDC1_STRING "GDB Server"
#define MICROPY_HW_USB_INTERFACE_CDC2_STRING "UART Port"
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>