This simplifies allocating outside of the VM because the VM doesn't
take up all remaining memory by default.
On ESP we delegate to the IDF for allocations. For all other ports,
we use TLSF to manage an outer "port" heap. The IDF uses TLSF
internally and we use their fork for the other ports.
This also removes the dynamic C stack sizing. It wasn't often used
and is not possible with a fixed outer heap.
Fixes#8512. Fixes#7334.
complete pin mapping for Feather pins
stubbed out files needed for complilation. still to be modified
0 out all CPY modules in mpconfigboard.mk until we get the build running
add csv for pin generation for STM32L4R5
add F4R5 references in peripherals files
refactored out board files BECAUSE I AM AN IDIOT; add L4 series system clocks file from CubeMX
took a guess at the number of USB endpoint pairs to get the build done
guess was close, but wrong. It is 8
clean up peripheral DEFs
Fixes build error:
```
In file included from ../../py/mpstate.h:33,
from ../../py/mpstate.c:27:
../../py/misc.h: In function 'vstr_str':
../../py/misc.h:196:1: sorry, unimplemented: Thumb-1 hard-float VFP ABI
static inline char *vstr_str(vstr_t *vstr) {
^~~~~~
```
Sleuthing steps:
* verify that the feather_stm32f4_express board builds correctly
* put a `#error` at the bottom of the `mpstate.c` file.
* build for the feather and swan boards, with V=2 to capture the build command for that file.
* use a differencing tool to inspect the differences between the two invocations
* inspecting the differences, I saw a missing `-mcpu=cortex-m4` I tested by adding that to the Swan build command. The file built fine (stopping at the hard error, but no other warnings.)
A grep through the sources revealed where this flag was being set for the stm ports.
With this commit, the build gets further, but does not complete. The next exciting episode in this unfolding coding saga is just a commit away!
working build with minimal set of modules for the Blues Swan r5
chore:change header copyright name to Blues Wireless Contributors
USB operational. Fixed up clocks to be hardwired for LSE no HSE case. (Trying to combine HSE in there made the code much more complex, and I don't have a board to test it out on.)
USART working
adds support for `ENABLE_3V3` and `DISCHARGE_3V3` pins. I am surprised that pin definitions are quite low-level and don't include default direction and state, so the code currently has to initialize `ENABLE_3V3` pin as output. The LED takes over a second to discharge, so I wonder if the board startup code is not having the desired affect.
short circuit implementation of backup memory for the STM32L4
all the ports
remove company name from board name to be consistent with the Arduino board definition.
add default pins for I2C, SPI and UART, so that `board.I2C` et al. works as expected. Confirmed I2C timing.
fix board name
fix incorrect pin definition. add test to allow manual check of each output pin
analog IO
code changes for WebUSB. Doesn't appear to work, will revisit later.
ensure that `sys.platform` is available
checkin missing file
feat: make room for a larger filesystem so the sensor tutorial will fit on the device.
fix:(stm32l4r5zi.csv): merged AF0-7 and AF8-15 into single lines and removed extraneous headers mixed in with the data.
fix(parse_af_csv.py): pin index in the csv is 0 not 1, and AF index made 1 larger
chore(Swan R5): update peripherals pins from `parse_af_csv.py` output
optimize flash sector access
This started while adding USB MIDI support (and descriptor support is
in this change.) When seeing that I'd have to implement the MIDI class
logic twice, once for atmel-samd and once for nrf, I decided to refactor
the USB stack so its shared across ports. This has led to a number of
changes that remove items from the ports folder and move them into
supervisor.
Furthermore, we had external SPI flash support for nrf pending so I
factored out the connection between the usb stack and the flash API as
well. This PR also includes the QSPI support for nRF.