The delay is 1 ms. It avoids the crashes reported by the
issues #8289, #8792 and #9236 with esp-idf versions >= 4.2, but does
not solve an underlying problem in the esp-idf.
The major setting is about the PHY interface configuration. The
configuration matches the Olimex ESP32 Gateway as well.
Tested with esp-idf v4.2.4 and Olimex ESP32 POE boards.
`esp_eth_ioctl(ETH_CMD_S_MAC_ADDR)` sets the MAC address of the hardware
device, but we also need to notify the upper layers of the change so that
e.g. DHCP work properly.
Add support for various SPI-based ethernet chips (W5500, KSZ8851SNL,
DM9051) to the ESP32 port. This leverages the existing support in ESP-IDF
for these chips -- which configures these chips in "MAC raw" mode -- and
the existing support for network.LAN in the ESP32 port. In particular,
this doesn't leverage the wiznet5k support that is used on the rp2 and
stm32 ports (because that's for native use of lwIP).
Tested on the POE Featherwing (with the SJIRQ solder jumper bridged) and a
ESP32-S3 feather.
A note about the interrupt pin: The W5500 implementation within ESP-IDF
relies on hardware interrupt, and requires the interrupt pin from the W5500
to be wired to a GPIO. This is not the case by default on the Adafruit
Ethernet FeatherWing, which makes it not directly compatible with this
implementation.
Both the direction and the Pin used for ref_clk can now be configured. It
Requires at least idf v4.4. The new keyword arguments to the constructor
are:
- ref_clk_mode=mode: with mode being Pin.IN or Pin.OUT. If it is not set,
then the default configuration is used, which may be configured by
kconfig settings.
- ref_clk=pin_obj: which defines the Pin used for ref_clk. This is either
Pin(0), Pin(16) or Pin(17). No check is done for the pin number. If it
is the wrong one, it simply will not work. Besides that, no harm.
LAN8710 uses the same drivers as LAN8720, so this commit just adds the
names. Alternatively, both could be summarised under LAN87xx, like the
esp-idf does.
Pin defines are:
- For Pico define board pins and the default LED pin (WL_GPIO25).
- For Pico-W define board pins, external pins and the default
LED pin (WL_GPIO0).
- For the Nano-RP2040, define board pins, external pins and
the default LED pin (GPIO25)
- For all other boards, the pins.csv defines the LED pin (if any)
for backwards compatibility with code that assumes there's always
an LED pin.
This commit adds support for generating named pin mappings for all pins
including CPU, board-defined, LED and externally controlled pins. CPU pins
are mapped to `pin_GPIO<n>`, externally-controlled pins are mapped to
`pin_EXT_GPIO<n>`, and defined conditionally (up to 10 pins, and can be
expanded in the future), and they are non-const to allow `machine-pin.c` to
write the pin object fields. Both CPU and externally controlled pins are
generated even if there's no board CSV file; if one exists it will just be
added to board pins.
Handle externally controlled GPIO pins more generically, by removing all
CYW43-specific code from `machine_pin.c`, and adding hooks to initialise,
configure, read and write external pins. This allows any driver for an
on-board module which controls GPIO pins (such as CYW43 or NINA), to
provide its own implementation of those hooks and work seamlessly with
`machine_pin.c`.
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>
To allow the USB to work in cases where there is a lot of filesystem
access, in particular on boot.
For example, registering of the USB CDC interface may fail if:
- the board file system is lfs2 (default), and
- sys.path contains entries for the local file system (default), and
- files are imported by boot.py or main.py from frozen bytecode of the file
system (common) and the file system contains many files, like 100.
In that case the board is very busy with scanning LFS, and registering the
USB interface seems to time out. This commit fixes this by allowing the
USB to make progress during filesystem reads.
Also switch existing MICROPY_EVENT_POLL_HOOK uses in this file to
MICROPY_EVENT_POLL_HOOK_FAST now that the latter macro exists.
When switching from a special function like SPI to an input or output,
there was a brief period after the function was disabled but before the
pin's I/O state was configured, in which the state would be poorly defined.
This fixes the problem by switching off the special function after fully
configuring the I/O state.
Fixes#10226.
Signed-off-by: Paul Grayson <pdg@alum.mit.edu>
There were several places where 32-bit integer could overflow with
frequencies of 2^28 Hz or above (~268 MHz). This fixes those overflows and
also introduces rounding for more accurate duty_ns computations.
Signed-off-by: Paul Grayson <pdg@alum.mit.edu>
This changes the freq() and duty_u16() functions to use more simpler, more
accurate formulas, in particular increasing the frequency accuracy from a
few percent to a fraction of a percent in many cases.
Signed-off-by: Paul Grayson <pdg@alum.mit.edu>
This commit prevents the device from "hanging" when using lightsleep while
the WiFi chip is active.
Whenever the WiFi chip wants to interrupt the microcontroller to notify it
for a new package, it sets the CYW43_PIN_WL_HOST_WAKE pin to high,
triggering an IRQ. However, as polling the chip cannot happen in an
interrupt handler, it subsequently notifies the pendsv-service to do a poll
as soon as the interrupt handler ended. In order to prevent a new
interrupt from happening immediately afterwards, even before the poll has
run, the IRQ handler disables interrupts from the pin.
The first problem occurs, when a WiFi package arrives while the main loop
is in cyw43-code. In order to prevent concurrent access of the hardware,
the network code blocks pendsv from running again while entering lwIP code.
The same holds for direct cyw43 code (like changing the cyw43-gpios, i.e.
the LED on the Pico W). While the pendsv is disabled, interrupts can still
occur to schedule a poll (and disable further interrupts), but it will not
run. This can happen while the microcontroller is anywhere in rp2040 code.
In order to preserve power while waiting for cyw43 responses,
cyw43_configport.h defines CYW43_DO_IOCTL_WAIT and
CYW43_SDPCM_SEND_COMMON_WAIT to __WFI(). While this might work in most
cases, there are 2 edge cases where it fails:
- When an interrupt has already been received by the cyw43 stack, for
example due to an incoming ethernet packet.
- When the interrupt from the cyw43 response comes before the
microcontroller entered the __WFI() instruction.
When that happens, wfi will just block forever as no further interrupts are
received. The only way to safely use wfi to wake up from an interrupt is
inside a critical section, as this delays interrupts until the wfi is
entered, possibly resuming immediately until interrupts are reenabled and
the interrupt handler is run. Additionally this critical section needs to
check whether the interrupt has already been disabled and pendsv was
triggered, as in such a case, wfi can never be woken up, and needs to be
skipped, because there is already a package from the network chip waiting.
Note that this turns cyw43_yield into a nop (and thereby the cyw43-loops
into busy waits) from the second time onwards, as after the first call, a
pendsv request will definitely be pending. More logic could be added, to
explicitly enable the interrupt in this case.
Regarding lightsleep, this code has a similar problem. When an interrupt
occurs during lightsleep, the IRQ and pendsv handler and thereby poll are
run immediately, with the clocks still disabled, causing the SPI transfers
to fail. If we don't want to add complex logic inside the IRQ handler we
need to protect the whole lightsleep procedure form interrupts with a
critical section, exiting out early if an interrupt is pending for whatever
reason. Only then we can start to shut down clocks and only enable
interrupts when the system is ready again. Other interrupt handlers might
also be happy, that they are only run when the system is fully operational.
Tested on a Pico W, calling machine.lightsleep() within an endless loop and
pinging from the outside.
This required to add two functions down the stack to uart.c and ra.sci.c.
- One for telling, whther the transmission is busy.
- One for reporting the size of the TX buffer.
Tested with a EK-RA6M2 board.
See the previous commit, except in this case the customisation didn't
actually do anything so can just be removed.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
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.
It keeps compatibility with the XIAO bootloader by:
- using Soft Device 7.3.0
- reserving 48k memory for the bootloader.
So on double reset a drive pops for uploading an uf2 image or a nrfutil zip
pkg file. Instructions to create it from a hex file are included. The
bootloader can as well be activated with the touch 1200 option of nrfutil.
The script download_ble_stack.sh has been adapted to get the version 7.3.0
soft device files. It may have to be executed once before building.
The file system is set to 256k and the pin definitions are adapted.
Besides that, it has the common functionality and omissions. The on-board
sensors and additional flash can be supported by Python scripts.
This was introduced by 35fb90bd57, but
it is much simpler and essentially the same to just use
`tud_cdc_n_connected()`.
The only difference is that tud_cdc_n_connected() only checks for DTR,
but this is correct anyway: DTR indicates device presence, RTS indicates
that the host wants to receive data.
Signed-off-by: Damien Tournoud <damien@platform.sh>
usocket_events_deinit will only be available if MICROPY_PY_USOCKET_EVENTS
is enabled (which is only enabled when webrepl is enabled).
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
ADC: The argument of vref=num is an integer. Values for num are:
SAMD21:
0 INT1V 1.0V voltage reference
1 INTVCC0 1/1.48 Analog voltage supply
2 INTVCC1 1/2 Analog voltage supply (only for VDDANA > 2.0V)
3 VREFA External reference
4 VREFB External reference
SAMD51:
0 INTREF internal bandgap reference
1 INTVCC1 Analog voltage supply
2 INTVCC0 1/2 Analog voltage supply (only for VDDANA > 2.0v)
3 AREFA External reference A
4 AREFB External reference B
5 AREFC External reference C (ADC1 only)
DAC: The argument of vref=num is an integer. Suitable values:
SAMD21:
0 INT1V Internal voltage reference
1 VDDANA Analog voltage supply
2 VREFA External reference
SAMD51:
0 INTREF Internal bandgap reference
1 VDDANA Analog voltage supply
2 VREFAU Unbuffered external voltage reference (not buffered in DAC)
4 VREFAB Buffered external voltage reference (buffered in DAC).
Changes in this commit:
- Do not deinit IRQ when uart.deinit() is called with an inactive object.
- Remove using it for the finaliser. There is another machanism for soft
reset, and it is not needed otherwise.
- Do not tag the UART buffers with MP_STATE_PORT, it is not required.
Clearing the DRE flag for the transmit interrupt at the end of a
uart.write() also cleared the RXC flag disabling the receive interrupt.
This commit also changes the flag set/clear mechanism in the driver for SPI
as well, even if it did not cause a problem there. But at least it saves a
few bytes of code.
Applies to both SPI and I2C. The underflow caused high baudrate settings
resulting in the lowest possible baudrate. The overflow resulted in
erratic baudrates, not just the lowest possible.